Category Archives: decorating

Furnishings and Decor to Reduce Indoor Air Pollution

Building, renovating and decorating our homes involves making thousands of choices, and trying to choose healthy furnishings and décor can make the process even more complicated. Unfortunately, many home décor products are mass-produced with chemical-laden synthetic materials and little to no regard for the health threats they can pose. While in most cases safer alternatives exist, they can often be more expensive or more difficult to find, and even most furnishings designed with health and sustainability in mind are imperfect. But any shade of green—especially when it comes to indoor air quality and your health—is better than brown. Be informed. Start small. And make the best choices whenever you can.

Does reduced indoor air pollution add value to your home?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your value questions.

One of the best ways to improve the health of our homes is to remove sources of indoor air pollution—but identifying them can be tricky. Toxic chemicals lurk in everything from shower curtains and sheets to couch cushions and the carpet beneath your feet. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) warns that thousands of items, many of them common household products, furnishings and building materials, emit volatile organic compounds (VOCs), chemicals that are released into the air at room temperature. Breathing these pollutants is linked to myriad health problems including sore eyes, burning in the nose and throat, headaches, fatigue, reproductive disorders, respiratory illnesses, heart disease, cancer and other serious long-term conditions. To help improve the quality of your indoor air and protect your family’s health, choose materials and products that release the fewest possible pollutants. Here are some guidelines to help you create a home that is beautiful, sustainable and safe.

Read more: http://www.naturalhomeandgarden.com/green-homes/decor/healthier-home-indoor-air-pollution-zmfz12mjzmel.aspx#ixzz1tA6KEHFy

 
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Streamline Your Home Like Martha Stewart – Reduce, Reuse, Recycle !!!

Even Martha Stewart, whose storied collections of glassware, table linens, vases and more stretch across her multiple homes, a magazine and television show and straight into our houses via her product lines, would agree. Why? The answer is simple — woven through all of Stewart’s glossy-magazine lifestyle advice is a core idea that many people overlook while gaping at the contents of her latest butler’s pantry: If you choose your practical things carefully, you don’t need a lot of stuff to have a beautiful home.

“I have always been an accumulator of beautiful things” says Stewart, “but if you come and look at my things you’d see that I don’t have a lot of ornate florals, the very decorated Spode, that sort of thing. It’s elegant but simple and it’s all edited.”

She might have made her name on her perfectly set tables, but Stewart gets simplicity. “There are lots of ways to be organized and simple,” she says, “but still when people come they say ‘Oh you really know how to do this, you really have great style.’ And that’s the goal.” So, whether you’re drowing in heirloom collections or just trying to choose your first set of flatware, Martha has advice on keeping your home simple and beautiful. “You have to look at and evaluate every object,” she says. “Is it beautiful? Do you use it? Do you like it? Is it important? Is it practical?” Choosing with care when you decide what should be in your home can lead to living well, but more simply.

Aim to make everything a multi-tasker. Practical things should also look good, and vice versa. So if you need a new can opener, buy one that pleases your eye and opens your canned tomatoes. Have one set of dishes that you love — and use them for everything. “I have drabware, it’s my favorite pattern, and bone handled flatware. I use it every day,” says Stewart. “My daughter Alexis, who is a very organized person, chose the simplest wide band china and she uses it every day, for dinner parties, for everything. She’s had it for 15 years.”

Read more:  http://www.chicagotribune.com/classified/realestate/home/sc-home-0409-simplify-20120417,0,7871112.story

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