Tag Archives: diy

Install a Ceiling Fan – Keep Cool, Keep Electricity Consumption Down

When you want to install a ceiling fan in a room, you’ll find a dazzling array of styles, shapes and sizes sold at lighting retailers and home centers. Before you choose a fan, measure the room’s length, width and ceiling height. Those dimensions will help you select the correct size fan that will do the best job of cooling the room.

According to the Alliance to Save Energy (http://www.ase.org), a ceiling fan will reduce your energy bills by providing additional cooling and better circulation so you can cut down air conditioning costs. When you’re looking at fans, choose one that’s Energy Star-certified because it’ll move air up to 20 percent more efficiently than a conventional model.

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

An electrician will charge $238 to install a moderately priced 52-inch fan in a room with an existing overhead light fixture in the correct position. If the electrical box is not designed to support a fan you must install a fan bracket that is secured to the ceiling joists. Assuming you have experience with electrical projects, you can buy the fan and bracket for $165 and install it yourself, saving 31 percent.

Read more at: http://www.chicagotribune.com/classified/realestate/sns-201306271230–tms–doityrslmsdiy-a20130708-20130708,0,1462654.story

DIY Kitchen; No Designer, No Problem

kitchen

It all started with the dishwasher.

Ours was a giant, energy-sucking sprinkler system that took nearly three hours to cycle through its uselessness. And then there was the floor beneath it. All vintage and no charm, it looked to be the 120-year-old house’s original maple slats which, after a century of supporting heavy foot traffic in the busiest room in the house, had inched apart from one another leaving unsightly gaps, black with a century’s worth of crud.

Will remodeling your kitchen add value to your home?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for you value questions.

Those two aspects of our Logan Square Victorian’s vintage kitchen would have been easy enough to replace. But after consulting with a general contractor about the floor — and then allowing the conversation to wander to the rest of the room — my fiancé and I were convinced: tackling all of the issues, from literally unhinged mid-century cabinetry to the greasy pink wall-to-wall tile, would be most cost-effective if addressed, and replaced, in one major remodel.

Go with custom cabinets if your budget allows. “The word custom historically scares people off; don’t let it do that,” Lewis says. “There are many cabinet companies that work with the public and cater to lower price points. You’ll get far more bang for your buck both aesthetically and functionally.” This route allows you to truly customize the cabinets to fit your space as opposed to working within set box sizes, which can be tricky for older homes with odd measurements. Lewis recommends spending a bit more for slow-close hinges and various inserts for cutlery and flatware — modestly priced finishing details that go a long way toward everyday practicality and enjoyment.

Assess your lighting situation. “If you’re ripping out your kitchen, you should have the appropriate light to showcase your new space,” Lewis says. She suggests LED lighting strips as under-cabinet lighting. “Not only are they environmentally friendly, the light they cast is really warm and you’ll never have to change a light bulb.” In the rest of the space, Lewis recommends peppering in decorative lighting to bring scale and personality. To avoid tearing up our entire ceiling to reposition an ill-placed overhead socket, we followed Lewis’s advice and used it to anchor an extra-long pendant lamp, its slack neatly hooked to the ceiling directly over our kitchen table at an intimate height for dining in.

Read more at: http://www.chicagotribune.com/classified/realestate/home/sc-home-0325-kitchen-reno-20130424,0,3127161.story

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

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