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Top 12 Remodeling Tips
and other Style Ideas
by Joetta
Moulden of ShelterStyle.com
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1). Be
consistent.
Study your hardware. If you have chrome hinges and knobs on your outside
doors, install chrome pulls, knobs, towel bars and hardware throughout the
entire house. It is permissible to mix cool metals – like brushed nickel
– with chrome, but please don't mix brass, antique brass and chrome
together.
2). Buy major
appliances in the same color, preferably white, if you have a white
kitchen.
White is a proven classic. Stainless steel refrigerators might look good
to your eyes today, but how do you know they won't become the avocado
green and turquoise of the future? Even better: Install a custom trim kit
on a new counter-depth refrigerator and integrated dishwasher and insert
matching cabinet door fronts – to make appliances blend invisibly into
your cabinetry.
3). Get the most bang
for your buck.
If you like the layout of your kitchen, instead of replacing your
cabinets, consider painting or re-facing the doors. Replace the cabinet
hardware and install invisible hinges and full-extension drawer glides.
Retrofit the corner cabinets with lazy Susans. Take the money you save and
buy a new counter depth refrigerator, preferably with custom panels that
match your new cabinet fronts. And buy a sleek dishwasher with hidden
control panels, also trimmed with custom panels that match your new
cabinet fronts and drawers. |
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4). Limit your
flooring selections.
In older homes, often there is a marble entry, a carpeted living room and
dining room and a hardwood family room floor – all visible from the
front door. Be consistent: if you like the entry floor but don't want it
everywhere else, select one additional flooring for the other rooms, but
commit. Just because previous owners had three floors off the entry
doesn't mean you have to. Better yet, select just one flooring, entry
included, to fully expand the sense of space and flow.
5). Just say no to
installing wallpaper everywhere.
Wallpaper is the first thing you change when you buy a house, so why
install it in the first place? The powder room is one thing, but the
bathrooms, kitchen and dining room, too? Wallpaper can be painted if it is
not buckling. First, float the seams with joint compound. Sand, and repeat
floats until the seam is buried. Next, prime with a special primer made
for wallpaper. Then paint as usual.
6). Don't tear out
the tub; refinish it.
If your porcelain-coated, cast iron bathtub is worn, refinish it. Check
the Yellow Pages for companies that will repaint your tub (and the dated
tile and grout above it), and it will look like new and wear like iron. I
had my tub refinished years ago, and it still shines like new. |
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7). Float out ugly
ceiling texture.
"Loud" ceiling texture can really date a house. Since the
purpose of heavy texture is to hide inferior sheetrock work, bury the
texture under several smooth floats of joint compound. Hold a bright work
light at a severe angle near the ceiling to check the smoothing progress.
Gently sand the floats as 'smooth as a baby's bottom' with a barely damp
scrub sponge. Prime with latex wall primer and paint a pretty color.
8). Add wood trim for
architectural interest.
Many builder homes do not have any wood trim around windows or crown
molding. Installing trim adds both style and resale value to your home.
9). Play it safe with
big-ticket, "permanent" surfaces.
Let's face it: replacing countertops, flooring and backsplashes is costly.
For resale, don't get all crazy with wild primary colors on
"permanent" surfaces that involve massive tear out to
"fix". Select classic, neutral colors and fuel your desire for
color in less "permanent" ways with art, window treatments,
paint and accessories. A buyer probably will shy away from your magenta
solid surfacing countertops and floor and buy the calmer house down the
street instead.
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10). Test- drive
paint colors.
We have all seen it. The "taupe" house that is actually mauve,
or the "navy blue" shutters that are actually intense, royal
blue .... right there on the street for neighbors to cringe at and
passersby to laugh at. Many paint manufacturers now offer small
"testers" that you can paint onto white poster board. Tape a
sample to the wall and check the color in the morning, in full sunlight,
on a rainy day, at dusk – before you paint the entire house. Stand way
back – at the street – to look at the color, then move in and place it
next to the brick and grout. This applies indoors to wall and ceiling
colors as well. This tip will save you both time and costly mistakes.
11). Hire a
professional for an overall plan.
You wouldn't plan an extensive road trip without a map, so why would you
invest thousands of dollars in a remodeling without an overall plan? An
architect is necessary for major structural changes, and a design
professional should be consulted for color and surface selections. A
one-hour consultation is an affordably wise first step that will pay for
itself in preventing unnecessary expenditures and costly mistakes.
12). Don't
"overbuild" your neighborhood.
Most Realtors agree that a well-executed kitchen, bath and laundry room
remodeling will elevate your home's value. You probably will not get a
full return on your investment by adding on a study with floor to ceiling
bookcases, but a tasteful, professional remodeling in the "wet"
areas of your home is a wise expenditure, particularly if you are savvy
about what homes in your neighborhood are selling for. In other words, it
probably would not be wise to plan a $70,000 kitchen remodeling if homes
nearby are selling for $90,000. |
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Houston, Texas based stylist Joetta Moulden offers home makeovers using your own home furnishings to create the home you’ve
always dreamed of. Joetta believes your pieces that have been collected through the years are a
reflection of your personality and can be artfully arranged.
Her ability to focus on your personal style and not let her own preferences influence the design
of your home makes her unique. See more makeovers on her Web site at www.shelterstyle.com,
email her at joetta@shelterstyle.com or call 713.461.2063.
Article photography by Brad Simmons and Hal Lott. |
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