Category Archives: decorating

DIY Low Cost Decorating Tips

living

HOME TOUR, ROOM BY ROOM
LIVING ROOM

The living room is the first place guests see when they walk in the house, coming into our small entryway and looking throughout the whole first floor. Being a townhouse, the place is pretty skinny, so the living room is narrow, and I didn’t want the eye to miss it by looking past to the dining room and kitchen. We started the room with our dream sofa that we got at a good price (the Henry sofa from West Elm) and a statement rug from Overstock.com that ties in the dark gray couch and the pale gray walls (Sherwin-Williams “Snowfall”). Finding curtains was one of the biggest challenges, since I wanted to put the curtain rods up as high and as wide as possible — this really makes the windows look huge. I wound up making the 108-inch-high, 78-inch-wide curtains for the living room myself from pale pink crepe I found on clearance at Jo-Ann, combining it with curtain lining fabric. That’s 7 yards of fabric for each panel, by the way. Phew!

Will nice decor add value to your home?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your value questions.

HOMEGOODS
Sisal rug, $20
Round gold mirror, $40
Glass cake stand and bowl stand, $9 and $13
Pineapple cookie jar, $7
Hot pink picture frame, $6
ROSS
White planter, $15
Banana leaf storage basket, $8
Gold vase, $4
Mercury glass candleholders (10 or so of them), $1-$4
Square gold metal frame mirror, $5
White circle mirror, $7, DIY project
White/gold zigzag lamp, $25
Pink velveteen ruched throw pillows, $4 each
Pink and aqua square painting, $10

TARGET
Rectangle shade, $13
Gold candelabras, $5 each
Standing tripod lamp, $30 online
Turquoise cake stand, $5
White comforter cover/shams, $35
Matching white lamps, $20 each
Sunburst mirrors above beds, $9 and $6

Read entire article at: http://www.oregonlive.com/hg/index.ssf/2013/02/diy_low-cost_decorating_puts_a.html

10 Fabulously Fanciful Bedrooms

bed

See all at: http://sfgate.houzz.com/ideabooks/6461212/list/10-Fabulously-Fanciful-Bedrooms/w/sid=1

Disclaimer: for entertainment and information purposes only

Trends in Bathroom Remodeling

Tubs are mostly a thing of the past, at least when it comes to master bathrooms. For families with kids, a tub in the hall bathroom is still a necessity, but in a master bathroom, the tub has become a space-wasting nuisance.

That’s what Jeff Pregman of Two Poor Teachers told me when I met him on Saturday afternoon at the Home and Remodeling Show at Dulles Expo Center in Chantilly. The exhibit hall was packed with exhibitors showcasing the latest in home renovation.

If you don’t take a bath in your master bathroom, there’s no law in Virginia that says you’ve got to have a tub in there,” Pregman said. “Now, if you have a massive bathroom, it makes sense to have a tub because it looks funny if you don’t. But if it’s a medium-sized bathroom, and it felt cramped in there before, let’s get rid of the tub that you don’t use. Let’s make it a bigger, spa-style shower.”

Bathroom remodels are big business for Two Poor Teachers. Founded in 1999 by two Fairfax County teachers — Ken Nies and Tom Pennell — the Annandale-based full-service residential construction company does about 300 bathrooms, 30 kitchen and 15 basement renovations a year in northern Virginia.

Will remodeling your bath add value?  Contact the appraisers at www.scapprasals.com for your value questions

I asked Jeff if most people were remodeling their homes these days in order to sell them or if they were making the renovations for themselves. He said about 30 percent of the work Two Poor Teachers does are for people who are looking to sell their homes. But he expects that percentage to increase as home prices rise.

Two Poor Teachers doesn’t use subcontractors. They do all their own carpentry, plumbing and electrical work. They take pride in their ability to turnaround their jobs quickly. Pregman boasts that the firm can redo a bathroom in a week or less and a kitchen in two weeks or less.

“We’re not the high high or the low low,” Pregman said. “We want to be in the middle. Our average kitchen project is [$30,000 to $40,000] complete.”

Read more at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/where-we-live/post/trends-in-bathroom-remodeling/2013/01/20/58812a30-634d-11e2-9e1b-07db1d2ccd5b_blog.html

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only