Natter 63: Life after PuppyCam
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
sara, I'm sorry to hear about your colleague. yikes!
I kinda get the bathroom, especially when it comes to adding one (I will someday do that here, in the basement) but if the kitchen is functional, I don't get it. But then, I'm not a big cook or anything. I appreciate a well organized and laid out kitchen, but when I was looking, brand new kitchen was not a selling point with me.
After helping to design one for myself and getting it brand new I can't imagine ponying up to pay for a new one that someone else made the decisions about!
Am still at work...close to being done though. sheesh. proposals.
The thing is, with houses in my price range, the remodel seems to entail replacing the cabinets with some "oak" cabinets, and nothing else. I would rather have vintage.
love the house.
I'm a sucker for a good kitchen, but as long as it has what it needs, I have cooked in some far from ideal conditions
That is shocking. What a way to find out about it.
I think that there are many, many craptastic kitchens that are poorly laid out, have neither enough storage space or counter space that it totally makes sense to me that good kitchens bring money.
Having spent the past two springs looking at apartments and houses, "new kitchen" does not mean "good kitchen". Just about every renovated kitchen I saw, with their fancy marble counter tops, state-of-the-art dishwashers and ovens and new cabinets and hardwood floors, were still poorly laid out, lacking in taste (or, *my* taste) and all around pretentious. I'd rather put the money in directing how the kitchen looks, rather than swallow someone else's disinterested style.
When we were selling the house in Long Island, the realtor told us to fix what was broken, but don't sink any money into aesthetic renovations.
The cats are smooshed together face-to-face, snoozing away, and I want to squish them so very badly.
I think that there are many, many craptastic kitchens that are poorly laid out, have neither enough storage space or counter space that it totally makes sense to me that good kitchens bring money.
My kitchen, in terms of the quality of most of the materials, is quite good, but its layout is spectacularly bad. It's a good sized kitchen with not enough linear counter space in usable places, a miserable work triangle, too much space between the cooktop and the sink, but not enough room to put a work island in the middle to create an alternate work triangle or double triangle.
But like I said, the quality of materials is very good (and pretty and in my taste) so I don't want to go tearing it up in order to make it more usable. The one thing I'm probably going to do in the next few months is get a new dishwasher, since the one we have is crap.
I was shocked to see, in those house-flipping shows, how renovating the kitchen always brought in more money than the renovations cost.
I was shocked to see, in those house-flipping shows, how renovating the kitchen always brought in more money than the renovations cost.
You can make a kitchen *look* fabulous for very cheap without making any actual functional improvements - refacing cabinets instead of replacing them, swapping in a stainless-steel anything for generic beige, etc.
My current kitchen had brand new looking cabinets when we bought. Unfortunately, the insides are CRAP. The shelves are all the wrong height and I'm constantly having to pop drawer bottoms back in after they collapse under the apparently enourmous weight of my silverware.
What Jessica describes is why I was always leery. Plus, if it is new, let it be my way. One of the reasons I didn't want the seller touching the deck and frankly, wish he hadn't replaced the one door he did. As it is, I'm dealing with a lousy paint job on the trim (no priming) and frankly, some interesting sill replacements. Those I might have to sand in situ or just replace altogether.
T and her dad stopped by. It was great. I'm gonna have to get her here alone, cause he's a rather dominant personality, and of course, she's a teenager. Lots of eyerolling from her. Heh. But he really wants to help too. I swore he was about to install my a/c right then and there. He works for Public Works, in the water division, so was all absorbed in the pipes in the basement. Anyway, it was nice to get to show the house off to them. T knows the busline that stops at the end of my street, so I should see more of her, especially once school starts, since she's going nearby.
Suggestions solicited. These windows: [link]
I want something I can drop in the summer afternoons, because it gets intense. But I like 'em blank. I don't really want blinds there (or I would have ordered them) so what are my other options? Curtains, meh. I was thinking roman blinds, if I could get them to mostly disappear in the valance. If that, I could put something in fairly bold in color, which would just be an accent when raised. Or I could do boring blinds.Or cellular in a rich color that would be hidden when raised. I like the light it lets in when it isn't full on western exposure, so I think I'd want whatever I put in to be fairly invisible when I'm not using them (which is partly why I didn't get blinds. The glory of blinds is to adjust light/privacy and I just don't see them as a benefit here. Either all or nothing. Ditto normal curtains. I'd like to be able to cover just the top half.)