Last year, after owning this house for 8 years, Mr. Ken mentioned that he never knew what needed to be done to keep it up. He wanted a honey-do list, so we went around the house and made a list of what needed to be done - projects, maintenance, upgrades and the like.
One item on the list - certainly not the most pressing or important - was to replace all the antique brass finished door hardware (doorknobs and deadbolts and such) with polished brass.
(Yes, I know brushed nickel is the current Look, but I don't like brushed nickel and I do like polished brass, and I'm not planning on selling the house anytime soon.)
Anyway, that's the item Mr. Ken decided to tackle first, only he decided to start by replacing the hinges on the side door, which is the one we prefer to use. When he finished replacing the hinges, it was late and dark and the french doors were just off-kilter enough that once we wrestled them closed and locked, we stopped using them until we could fix the problem. (Actually, we had to stop using them. Somehow, the latch no longer lined up enough to keep the door closed, and the deadbolt was broken in this upgrade as well.)
Fast forward to this afternoon. I came in to a wonderful clean house (thank you Emma and Arturo!) and a note which said "we couldn't get the front door to lock so it's closed but still open". I checked the front door, which we never use, and it was locked and OK. Then I noticed the chair up against the side door. It was holding the door closed, because they hadn't been able to wrestle the lock back into place!
Fortunately, we had a lockset purchased months ago when this project was started. I did get the deadbolt replaced and functional so the house is secure. Tomorrow I'm going to attempt to re-align the one door that's most out of alignment and then replace the handleset. Of course, the keys won't match the others, but that's a minor issue.
At the moment I'm happy enough. Replacing the deadbolt was easy peasy once I remembered to use the long funny screw-like things and not the long screws. And most important, the deadbolt no longer requires a key to open it from the inside.
This honey-do list is working really well.