Showing posts with label home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label home. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Donald Trump's childhood digs now available to rent on Airbnb | Home and Garden

Read article : Donald Trump's childhood digs now available to rent on Airbnb | Home and Garden

Looking for a rental home? Now you can stay at Donald Trump’s place.

No, not 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.—but Trump’s childhood home in Queens, New York, now available on Airbnb.

Trump’s father Fred built the 5-bedroom, 3 1/2-bath home, dubbed “Jamaica Estates.” The circa 1940 Tudor-style house is available for $725 a night. “Not much has been changed since the Trumps lived here,” the listing reads.

“The kitchen is original and the opulent furnishings represent the style and affluence in which the Trumps would have lived. This is a unique and special opportunity to stay in the home of a sitting president.”

Get home and garden tips sent to your email inbox

The listing boasts an amenity you probably won’t find anywhere else: a giant cut out of the president in the living room, “a great companion for watching Fox News late into the night.”

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Modern Furniture and Decor for your Home and Office

Read article : Modern Furniture and Decor for your Home and Office

To proceed, please verify that you are not a robot.




Why was I sent here?

Our systems have detected unusual traffic from your computer network. This page checks to see if it's really you sending the requests and not a robot.

Friday, February 16, 2018

Home Of Ultra Slide Rail Kit MP with Multi-function Water Saving Handset Outlet Elbow

Read article : Home Of Ultra Slide Rail Kit MP with Multi-function Water Saving Handset Outlet Elbow

At JT SPAS we understand the importance of online security and we want you to feel 100% safe, secure and confident when shopping with us at JTSpas.com.

In order to achieve this we maintain the highest levels of security. 

We have partnered with SagePay the UK's Leading Online Payment Provider

SagePay's system is Fully PCI Compliant and use a High Grade RC4 128bit SSL Padlock which exceeds the Online Banking Industry Standards.

You know you are safe and secure with JtSpas & SagePay

“We Offer a 14 Days Returns Policy, on all standard items*
To change or cancel an order: e-mail us immediately sales@jtspas.co.uk.
To Learn More Please Click Here
(*Bespoke or Customised items are not included)”

Monday, February 12, 2018

Part 5: Making room for our home’s hiding places

Read article : Part 5: Making room for our home’s hiding places

As we put the finishing touches on the plans for our home, our dreams of dinner parties in the finished open kitchen, of repurposed original sconces and refurbished original details, gave way to a less sexy obsession. The mop, the vacuum, our winter coats, the laundry. Specifically: Where would they all go and how could we banish them from sight?

In the New York prewar apartments we’d lived in for years, closets were strictly optional and washer-dryers were nonexistent. What made glossy interior photos appealing, I came to realize, was what you didn’t see, because it was tucked into a hidden closet or built-in cabinet. Renovating our house gave us a shot at discreet convenience.

Entering the first-floor apartment, pre-renovation, meant coming face-to-face with a faux-wood-grained cabinet door—in actuality, a false front. It was an arguably clever way to bump out the bathroom on the other side to make room for a turquoise jacuzzi-shaped tub. Otto’s initial plan for the enlarged bathroom included a non-aqua, 6-foot tub. But what we really wanted was an entryway closet. With a standard 5-foot tub, we gained a proper foyer and a narrow coat closet on the other side of the wall.

First-floor square footage was valuable, but we admitted to ourselves we would be much likelier to stay on top of the wash if it were integrated into kitchen chores and didn’t involve trekking up and down stairs. So Otto designed a new pantry/washer-dryer closet in the kitchen with an automatic light and stacking electric Miele washer-dryer. The same closet, which my partner later fitted with an Ikea Norberg table and some Elfa wire shelves, would also hold cleaning supplies and dog food.

The closets pre-renovation.
The laundry pantry in progress.

One of our favorite ideas from Otto: Since our ceilings are 10 feet high, he suggested additional closet doors above both the entryway closet and pantry. The mini-closet above the pantry alone would provide an additional 15 square feet of storage. Our contractor, CNS, priced out the additional closet framing and custom doors at a very reasonable $600.

We could have added traditional closets to the bedroom. But we wanted to keep the non-utility rooms flexible, in case we add to our family or otherwise change how we used the house. The windowless room between the living room and bedroom would make a perfect walk-through closet.

Using left-behind plastic garment racks upstairs convinced me that I did not want open storage. Open storage is for the preternaturally tidy, which I am not, and I wanted seamlessness and harmony. Generally, getting to “seamless” means custom cabinetry. Otto estimated a wall of built-in clothes closets with nice doors could run around $6,000. Or we could hack some Ikea for less than a third of that.

The Ikea PAX wardrobe boxes in the closet area.Devon Banks

We thought we’d left Ikea behind with our futon days. But that was before we had a designer who knew how to use its modular components precisely, or how to hack cabinet frames with custom doors. For the storage that was really going to put in the work, the old blue-and-yellow big box was it. With Otto’s help, we were soon on a first-name basis with the Ikea catalog.

Naturally, there are no short trips to Ikea. Not with the cavernous dimensions, the waits for returns, and the inescapable, interminable “full-service” pickup. It frayed domestic relations. “I feel so basic getting into a fight on the Ikea line,” said my partner, as we traded apologies on what felt like our 50th visit. By then, paying the impressively responsive Perfect Assembly $50 to $149 to shop and deliver from a New Jersey Ikea seemed worth every penny. (They also will put it together for you for a reasonable fee.)

We got lucky with Ikea’s ubiquitous PAX wardrobe boxes: three PAX frames in a row (small, medium, and large widths) just fit the walk-through closet space when bolted to the wall—no fill-in molding required. But my partner disdained the PAX doors: They were cheap-looking without even being that cheap.

Enter Semihandmade,* which makes a variety of doors for PAX frames that start at just $40 more a door than Ikea’s Hemnes doors, though you have to factor in production times and shipping from California.

We were trying to be disciplined about the finishes, sticking to neutrals knowing that color variation would come later with removable items like rugs and art. We sought to limit the number of wood tones we chose, settling on matte white oak (the same wood as the original staircase and the one we chose for the floors) and a darker walnut and mahogany. We promptly fell in love with Semihandmade’s flat-sawn walnut doors, which fit the moodier, cocoon-like feel we were going for in the bedroom suite.

The completed and stocked laundry pantry in the kitchen. Devon Banks

We wanted a similar aesthetic consistency on all the house’s hardware: Almost everything new would be either antique brass to match the house’s original hardware, including the snakelike exterior door handle, or a more transitional matte black. (For the uninitiated, “transitional” is what bath and hardware manufacturers came up with to describe fittings that aren’t sleekly modern or fussily traditional, but streamlined enough to fit in with either decor.) For the closet doors, we picked inexpensive brass tab pulls whose clean lines didn’t compete with the beautiful walnut grain.

For the walls, we tried to be strict about sticking to white and three shades of gray, one of which, the blue-green-gray Night Train, we used in a glossier exterior finish (called Grand Entrance) that would only be found in the outer vestibule and door. We went with Benjamin Moore—already Otto’s go-to paint brand—who generously provided product.** After at least a dozen sample pots, we settled on Brushed Aluminum, the ideal ambiguous, warmer sage gray for key moldings and our foyer.

To hide television cords, we went back to Semihandmade for a $20 wall-mounted Besta frame topped with a DIY slab door ($44). Late one night when the contractors were gone, we painted the Besta door the same white we’d chosen for the living room and dining room, Benjamin Moore’s Snowfall White, in the hope it would simply recede into the wall. We added a matte-black handle from Atlas Homewares I’d ordered on Amazon as a sample for the kitchen.

New to Benjamin Moore is the velvety Century line. Unlike the bajillion colors available in Moore’s other paint lines, Century is a much smaller selection of highly saturated colors—intriguing but intimidating—that have to be seen in person to be understood. My partner was averse to truly dark colors, so my love for dark teal would be limited to the office. After spending time with all the emerald tones, I picked Light Beryl.

For the bedroom area—both walk-through closet and bedroom—we chose Marcasite, which would also visually separate it from the sunny white of the more public rooms of the house.

Another cheap trick to attain the visual smoothness of built-ins: Painting Ikea Tarva furniture, made of unfinished pine, with the same Marcasite paint and then upgrading the hardware. It took all freaking night, what with two disassembled dressers and two nightstands, but in the end, we would have our “built-in” furniture at a fraction of the price.

*Semihandmade partnered with the homeowners on this project; they received a 50 percent discount on cabinet fronts.

**This project is sponsored in part by Benjamin Moore, who provided the Century paint.

Next week, onRenovation Diary:

Our intrepid homeowner finds out what happens when you try to carry slabs of marble on your own—and a peek at the finished bathroom.

Friday, January 19, 2018

Easy and Cheap Bathroom Updates - Charlotte at Home - May 2017

Read article : Easy and Cheap Bathroom Updates - Charlotte at Home - May 2017

A whole new space with so little effort.

By Alyssa Ruane

Published: 2017.05.31 09:52 PM


Whether you've been in your home for 20 years or you just bought your abode last month, we all come to a moment when we're looking for a little refresh. Sometimes your design taste changes, and sometimes you're a serial redecorator. No matter which camp you fall into, there's no shame in wanting to update your spaces.

3 Easy and Cheap Bathroom Updates You Can Do Yourself

Today, we're talking specifically about the bathroom. The bathroom is seldom the star of the home, but that doesn't mean it has to get left out when you're purchasing new home accessories. To make this oft-forgotten spot feel brand-new, there are plenty of little updates you can make without a big fuss. No need to pull out the reserve credit card for these changes, either, because they're actually affordable.

1. New Accent Features

If you had to choose just one feature to replace, go for the mirror. Mirrors are usually the focal point of the bathroom, so when you're craving change, it's a smart switch to make. Consider picking one in an unexpected shape or color to really shake things up. Other accent features you can replace for a more modernized look are the towel bars, shelving, and even a new toilet seat.

2. Refinish Cabinets

There's no need to purchase new cabinets if your current ones aren't awful and get the job done. Instead of going crazy at the home improvement store, just pick up another stain or paint color to transform the style. And if your cabinets have already been previously stained, just sand the old stain off before you apply the new one. As for an updated paint coat: Sand off the gloss, prime the surface, paint it, then finish with a topcoat.

3. The Little Things

So you want to do as little physical work as possible? No problem—this tip is for you. Just head to your favorite home goods store and grab a cart. Pick out a dramatically different shower curtain (if applicable), hand towels, and maybe even some new artwork to complete the updated theme. Sometimes the little things can make the biggest difference.

Thursday, January 18, 2018

Home For Sale Tbb 1675 Lodge Pole Court, Traverse City, MI

Read article : Home For Sale Tbb 1675 Lodge Pole Court, Traverse City, MI

More information about this $1,500,000 Single Family Home at TBB 1675 Lodge Pole Court

This $1,500,000 Single Family Home at TBB 1675 Lodge Pole Court in Traverse City, MI is presented by Mark Hagan. This $1,500,000 Single Family Home, located in the 49686 zip code, has the following property features: Central Air, Additional Areas, Garage, Property Type. This TBB 1675 Lodge Pole Court Single Family Home, located in Grand Traverse County , is listed under MLS listing number 1830793, has 3 beds, 3 baths, and has a listing price of $1,500,000. You can find more TRAVERSE CITY homes for sale here.

Wednesday, December 27, 2017

Home-improvement dilemmas answered

Read article : Home-improvement dilemmas answered

Kamla and Alex Millson took inspiration from a distinctive hotel suite to transform their space.

Kamla Millson, owner

Fact file

The owners: Kamla Millson (right), a contract officer for adult social care, lives here with her husband Alex, who runs his own joinery business
The property: A four-bedroom converted bungalow, built in 1928
The location: Leeds, West Yorkshire
What they spent: The couple’s bathroom project cost around £11,500 as part of their loft conversion

A renovation project

After five years of making do with an original 90-year-old bathroom, we were ready for a bit of luxury,’ explains Kamla. ‘But it wasn’t until we stayed in a hotel with a fabulous open-plan bedroom and bathroom suite that we knew how we wanted our bathroom to look.’

Having put their modern townhouse on the market, Kamla and husband Alex looked for a project that would give them more space, and creating an opulent bathroom was at the top of their wishlist. A detached bungalow they found on the outskirts of Leeds, dating back to 1928, fitted the bill perfectly. ‘The house was like a time capsule, and hadn’t been touched for years,’ recalls Kamla. ‘The old lady who sold it to us had been living there since it was built – in fact, her father had built it. The property had lots of potential and, as Alex is a joiner, we were keen to take on a big renovation.’

It was five years, however, before the couple were ready to start work on creating a new master bedroom and en suite, plus a small home office next to the triangular window in the gable.

Hotel inspiration

‘We’d been to our friends’ wedding in nearby Harrogate, and the fabulous loft bedroom and en suite in the hotel gave us the inspiration to start work on ours,’ says Kamla. ‘Originally, we had planned to open up the loft to create two bedrooms, each with its own en suite, but the hotel suite we had stayed in made us rethink this. We thought it would be better to have one luxurious bedroom and bathroom space, with no door between the two areas.

‘We already knew that we wanted a dark bathroom, as we liked the idea of contrasting white sanitaryware with dark tiles,’ she continues, ‘but we decided that if we were going to use dark tiles, we wouldn’t want the space to feel confined.’

Before they could start thinking about the dĂ©cor and fittings, there was some major work to be done in the roof space. With a background in design and boat building, self-confessed perfectionist Alex was confident about tackling the loft conversion himself. ‘By doing all the work, I could be sure that we got exactly what we wanted,’ he says. ‘Kamla and I had a shared vision and we didn’t mind putting in the effort because we knew we would get something great at the end of it.’

Planning the design

Before starting the project or ordering fixtures and fittings for the new bathroom, Alex used the online planning tool SketchUp to make sure he knew exactly how the space would look when it was finished, and to ensure that key components were in the correct position. Although not one to settle for an easy option, he explains that the high-gabled roofline made planning the loft conversion much simpler. ‘Most of the purlins were high enough to walk under, and we designed the space so that the bath was under the lowest beam,’ he says.

Alex did all the building work for the loft conversion and most of the plumbing himself, but enlisted the help of friends and other tradespeople when needed. ‘Putting up plasterboard is definitely not a one-man job,’ says Kamla, ‘so Alex got a friend to help him. In fact, I also helped before going off to work in the morning. There was no staircase, so it was just a question of me putting on my grippy gloves and passing up the huge boards into the void!’

Alex marked out the positions of pipes and electrics on the plasterboard, before laying tiles straight on to it. ‘You achieve a better fix that way,’ he says. A friend then plastered the ceiling and the couple employed an electrician. Kamla and Alex decided to position the rooflights directly above the bath – perfect for combining bathing with stargazing. All the work in the loft had to be completed before a spiral staircase went in, so Alex found himself running up and down a ladder with all the materials he needed, including the couple’s choice of dark brown wall and floor tiles. It took one month of working late into the evenings to finish the tiling alone. Besides looking stylish, the large-format tiles and tile spacers also had the advantage of limiting the amount of grouting that was required.

Decorating the space

With the dark tiles covering the walls and floors, Kamla and Alex wanted to make a contrast of colour and materials, and commissioned bespoke bookmatched walnut cabinets with three drawers to house twin basins. Finished with a red Silestone countertop, it makes a stunning feature and adds further interest to the space. Two angular basins are set into the countertop and a third basin is fitted in the separate WC area.

Coming in at around £1,500, the whirlpool bath, complete with massage jets and radio, nearly pushed the couple over their budget; they avoided any cash flow problems by completing one area at a time. Kamla also reasoned that they had managed for so long with the old bathroom downstairs that a touch of extra luxury was long overdue. Getting the new bath up to the loft, however, proved to be quite a challenge. ‘We wrapped up the bath in bubble wrap so it didn’t get damaged, and Alex and two friends had to carefully lift it through the void where the staircase was going to go. It was really heavy with the motor for all the jets and electrics,’ she explains.

The finished room

More delicate manoeuvring was required to get the shower screen in place. ‘We wanted just one solid piece of glass with no joins, so we ended up having to use the scaffolding to put it through the triangular window at the front of the house,’ explains Kamla. Happily, the glass stayed in one piece, ready for Alex to install the rainwater showerhead and hand shower. Last to go into the new space above the vanity unit were two mirrored bathroom cabinets, which have integrated LED lighting, creating a soft glow in the bathroom. This has proved essential for minimising disturbance at night, as there is no door between the bathroom and bedroom areas, although there is one separating the WC.

Now that their loft project is finished, Kamla and Alex are proud of what they have achieved. It has amounted to hundreds of hours of labour for Alex, but the couple have saved tens of thousands of pounds by doing the build themselves. Ever the perfectionist, Alex concludes: ‘You get the best results and the best finish by doing things yourself.’

The costs

Bathroom fittings and fixtures£8,843
 Tiles£2,000
 Labour costs (electrics, plumbing and plastering)£600
 Underfloor heating£200
TOTAL£11,643

Featured image: Rooflights by Okpol have been positioned directly above a freestanding back-to-wall Hydra Pro bath from Taps4less. A white tripod chair from Christopher Pratts sits perfectly against the dark interior

Saturday, December 9, 2017

Prevent Slips and Falls at Home | Editorials

Read article : Prevent Slips and Falls at Home | Editorials

Six out of every 10 falls happen at home, where we spend much of our time. Many falls could be prevented by making simple changes.

Last week, we looked at general precautions for your home, this week, we will focus on making your bathroom safer.

• Properly placed grab bars in your tub and shower, and next to the toilet, can help you avoid falls. Have grab bars installed, and use them every time you get in and out of the tub or shower. Be sure the grab bars are securely attached to the wall.

• You might find it helpful to rearrange often-used items in your home to make them more accessible. Store bathroom items, towels, washcloths, toilet paper, etc., within easy reach. This simple change could prevent a fall that might come from standing on a stool to get to an item.

Hancock County Health System's Rehabilitation Department will be hosting a seven-week program called Stepping On with the goal of preventing falls for the elderly. Classes start in September and there is limited room in the class.

For more information about the program or fall prevention, call 641-843-5500.

Friday, November 24, 2017

Modern Furniture and Decor for your Home and Office

Read article : Modern Furniture and Decor for your Home and Office

To proceed, please verify that you are not a robot.




Why was I sent here?

Our systems have detected unusual traffic from your computer network. This page checks to see if it's really you sending the requests and not a robot.

Saturday, November 11, 2017

Home of Ultra Chrome flume Mono Basin Mixer without Waste

Read article : Home of Ultra Chrome flume Mono Basin Mixer without Waste

At JT SPAS we understand the importance of online security and we want you to feel 100% safe, secure and confident when shopping with us at JTSpas.com.

In order to achieve this we maintain the highest levels of security. 

We have partnered with SagePay the UK's Leading Online Payment Provider

SagePay's system is Fully PCI Compliant and use a High Grade RC4 128bit SSL Padlock which exceeds the Online Banking Industry Standards.

You know you are safe and secure with JtSpas & SagePay

“We Offer a 14 Days Returns Policy, on all standard items*
To change or cancel an order: e-mail us immediately sales@jtspas.co.uk.
To Learn More Please Click Here
(*Bespoke or Customised items are not included)”

Wednesday, November 1, 2017

70 Washington Street, Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY - Home for Sale

Read article : 70 Washington Street, Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY - Home for Sale
Rarely available, spacious 1675 sq. ft. two bedroom plus study, three full bath corner apartment at 70 Washington Street, the prewar full service luxury loft condominium building in the heart of Dumbo, Brooklyn. Bask in the gorgeous natural light from the twelve oversized windows with eastern and northern exposures. A beautiful open chef's kitchen faces the living & dining area, and boasts white custom cabinetry, urban dark granite countertops and top-of-the-line stainless steel appliances. Enjoy the full master suite and five-fixture master bath with a double sink vanity, jacuzzi soaking tub and separate shower. An additional full bedroom with en suite bath, a study currently being used as a bedroom and a third full bath add to the versatile floor plan. Soaring 11 ft. original beamed ceilings, bamboo wood flooring, newly installed hvac heating and air conditioning system, numerous custom closets and a laundry room with new Bosch washer and dryer and a utility sink complete the space.
Building amenities include: 24 hr. concierge, fitness room and beautifully landscaped common roof deck. Just moments away from beautiful Brooklyn Bridge Park and many great cafes, galleries, and boutiques, DUMBO is the first stop in Brooklyn on the F, A,C, 2 and 3 subway lines.

REBNY Residential Listing Service. ©2017. All Rights Reserved.

Monday, October 30, 2017

Modern Furniture and Decor for your Home and Office

Read article : Modern Furniture and Decor for your Home and Office

To proceed, please verify that you are not a robot.




Why was I sent here?

Our systems have detected unusual traffic from your computer network. This page checks to see if it's really you sending the requests and not a robot.

Wednesday, September 20, 2017

These bathing products will make your soak plenty of fun and bring the spa to you at home

Read article : These bathing products will make your soak plenty of fun and bring the spa to you at home

If you’ve made the commitment to take a bath, you might be contemplating products that will transform your soak, mimicking the luxurious atmosphere of a spa or the meditative possibilities of a sauna. Or perhaps you're nostalgic for the fragrances and bubbles associated with childhood. Here are few suggestions.

Did somebody say, “Swedish spa”? Open a jar of L:A Bruket No. 065 Bath Salt (Mint) and don't be surprised if you start thinking about the ocean — and seaweed — all fairly appropriate considering the line is based in Sweden, a country known for its saunas, massages and embrace of wellness. L:A Bruket No. 065 Bath Salt (Mint), $35, sportique.com.

Barr-Co. <a href=Bath Original Scent Bath Soak and L:A Bruket No. 065 Bath Salt (mint)." class="trb_em_ic_img" title="Barr-Co. Bath Original Scent Bath Soak and L:A Bruket No. 065 Bath Salt (mint)." src="src" />

Why you should pass on jumping in the shower and instead take a nice, hot soak in a tub »

The tonic line is part of the Clarins family, and one product in particular —  the Tonic Body Treatment Oil — has inspired some beauty bloggers to write about its usefulness in preventing “the appearance of stretch marks.” One thing we can say with certainty? Its fragrance is phenomenal. Tonic Body Treatment Oil, $60, sephora.com and clarinsusa.com; Tonic Daily Polisher, $41, clarinsusa.com; Tonic Bath & Shower Concentrate, $29, clarinsusa.com.

Lush Fresh Handmade Cosmetics offers a bath box that might inspire memories of grade-school reports on the planets and shooting stars. The Astronomical wrapped gift of bath bombs includes an Intergalactic Bath Bomb, Twilight Bath Bomb, Big Bang Bubble Bar, Ickle Baby Bot Bath Bomb and the Experimenter Bath Bomb. Let the space exploration begin. Astronomical wrapped gift, $39.95, lushusa.com.

If you haven't experienced a bubble bath since you were, say, 6, Library of Flowers might lure you into the tub with the Forest Bubble Bath, although its hints of white sage, Arctic moss and oak bark are nothing like the bubble gum or grape fragrances you might associate with bubble baths of yore. Library of Flowers’ the Forest Bubble Bath, $36, libraryofflowers.com.

Fresh's Sake Bath, Library of Flowers’ the <a href=Forest Bubble Bath, Clarins Tonic Body Treatment Oil and Tonic Daily Polisher." class="trb_em_ic_img" title="Fresh's Sake Bath, Library of Flowers’ the Forest Bubble Bath, Clarins Tonic Body Treatment Oil and Tonic Daily Polisher." src="src" />

Sometimes a long soak requires breakfast foods. Barr-Co. Bath Original Scent Bath Soak, produced by St. Louis-based K. Hall Designs, has an ingredient list that includes oatmeal, vanilla and milk. (The only thing missing is, perhaps, a cup of Lucky Charms.)  Barr-Co. Bath Original Scent Bath Soak, $32, Khalldesigns.com and anthropologie.com.

For many of us, the post-bath ritual includes lotion. Earth Tu Face, a San Francisco-based company that understands what “made in California” is all about (labels include ingredients and phrases such as “GMO free” and “cruelty free”), offers botanicals to ease dry skin. Rosemary + Salt Lotion, $38, luckyscent.com and earthtuface.com; Jasmine Blossom Lotion, $58, earthtuface.com and otherwild.com.

An <a href=astronomical wrapped gift from Lush Fresh Handmade Cosmetics." class="trb_em_ic_img" title="An astronomical wrapped gift from Lush Fresh Handmade Cosmetics." src="src" />

Sake is an ingredient used in various soaking products and D.I.Y. formulas, touted for its detoxifying properties. Was sake used in beauty rituals observed by Japanese geisha? Perhaps, but at the very least, 21st century users can count on a fragrant experience. Fresh's Sake Bath is made with ginger root, radish root and peach fruit extracts — in addition to sake. Fresh Sake Bath, $49 and $82, fresh.com.

image@latimes.com

A previous version of this story said Earth Tu Face is based in San Francisco. The company is based in Oakland.

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Designer Bathroom Updates | Luxury DIY Showerheads, Mixer Taps & More @ The Home

Read article : Designer Bathroom Updates | Luxury DIY Showerheads, Mixer Taps & More @ The Home

Luxury DIY Showerheads, Mixer Taps & More

Remove the hassle of renovations and the expense of numerous contractors from your next home makeover. Skip the renos altogether with this range of elegant chrome fixtures and some easy DIY! This collection is overflowing with sleek chrome fixtures for your bathroom complete with instructions and hardware for DIY installation. With cascading rain showerheads, waterfall taps and heated towel rails, this is your chance to transform your bathroom into your own personal day spa!

Saturday, August 19, 2017

Living large in a small barn | Home and Garden

Read article : Living large in a small barn | Home and Garden

Starting out, Ryan and Kim Woodward didn't intend to live in the upstairs of a small barn.

They had purchased 17 acres of grass and trees in rural Geneseo, Ill., as a site for the building of their dream home, and the reconstruction of a small barn on the property was just intended to provide them with a storage shed.

But as the barn relocation project progressed — Ryan deconstructed the barn from the property of friends' parents in Davenport — they began talking about making it their temporary home.

Doing so would have certain advantages, they reasoned.

They could sell the Rock Island home they were living in and use the freed-up money toward their dream home.

And because Ryan was going to build as much of the new home as possible with his own two hands, living on-site would be vastly more convenient than driving back and forth to the Quad-Cities every time he wanted to work. Convenient — and with much less time and gas money spent on commuting.

So sometime in 2013, the Woodwards decided they would create a 320-square-foot living space in the second floor of the barn, complete with a living room area, a kitchen, a bathroom and a small bedroom for their son, Henry, who is now 3.

In drawing up a floor plan, there were a couple of "non-negotiables," as Kim calls them. There had to be a bathtub for Henry, and he had to have his own room, no matter how small. And Kim needed a real kitchen.

Walk into the space today and you'll see that they achieved all that and more. In fact, most people say the space is bigger than they imagined, she said.

And it's not makeshift. This is a real home, with drywall and paint, a full bath and air-conditioning.

It's just that there are no closets, which is one of the drawbacks. To compensate, the couple has been as creative as possible with storage. They've also tucked away about 85 percent of their belongings off-site.

In the living area, an Ikea daybed — a sofa by day and a bed for Ryan and Kim by night — has drawers underneath that hold Ryan's clothes.

On the opposite wall is a built-in stock storage cabinet that contains everything from socks to electronics. A flat-screen television is mounted on the front.

The kitchen contains a butcher block table/island that also serves as Kim's office and Henry's play area, with storage space below. Appliances include a microwave, refrigerator and stove. The sink is a one-well model intended for a bar, but it's sufficient. Above is shelving holding dishes, with hooks below for containers of silverware and other kitchen items.

The back area contains Henry's room — the couple thought it was more important for him to have personal space than themselves — and a bath with a tub and a shower.

The couple used recycled materials as much a possible throughout. The cherry hardwood floor, for example, came from Ryan's parents, who had taken it out in a remodeling project.

Recessed fixtures, a skylight and windows on either end provide plenty of light.

A major drawback to the small space is there's no place to "get away," Kim said. If one wants to be alone, well, that's not really possible.

But in the short-term it's very doable, and in some ways it's liberating, she said.

By paring down, they have realized what everyone in the "small house" movement understands: One needs far fewer possessions than one has. It's amazing "how few things I miss," Kim said.

Cleaning goes quickly because there's so little to clean.

"And the view is worth it all," she says, referring to the panoramic view of the countryside from their deck. 

Speaking of the deck, it nearly doubles their space in nice weather, so that helps.

And the barn's ground floor is a regular garage, with a niche for their washer and dryer as well as space for storing all the tools Ryan needs for home-building.

Ryan, 32, is a 2007 graduate of Western Illinois University and works in product development for Deere & Co. in Silvis.

Kim, 31, is a 2006 graduate of Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville and a former public relations specialist for Modern Woodmen in Rock Island. She now works as a mom, on home and garden projects, and writes a blog in addition to freelance projects.

Modern Furniture and Decor for your Home and Office

Read article : Modern Furniture and Decor for your Home and Office

To proceed, please verify that you are not a robot.




Why was I sent here?

Our systems have detected unusual traffic from your computer network. This page checks to see if it's really you sending the requests and not a robot.

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Home | Makro Online

Read article : Home | Makro Online

Home | Makro Online Your browser is not supported on this site, pleaseclick here to update.

Makro Pick-Up lockers

You can collect your order from a locker near you

Free click and collect

Nationwide delivery

Makro Pick-Up lockers

You can collect your order from a locker near you

Free click and collect

Order online and collect from your favourite store

Nationwide delivery

We'll deliver to your door, nationwide

This week's deals

Price 99900
Price 4 49900Was 4 99900

Accepted online payments
  • Mastercard
  • EFT
  • UCount
  • eBucks
  • RCS
  • Makro Credit

Sunday, August 13, 2017

California drought spurring ‘grey water’ recycling at home

Read article : California drought spurring ‘grey water’ recycling at home

BERKELEY >> Showering during California’s drought is a guilt-free experience for homeowners Catarina Negrin and Noah Friedman.

The Berkeley couple — she runs a preschool, he’s an architect — are early adopters of a home plumbing do-over that’s becoming more popular during California’s record four-year dry stretch.

California, like many states, long required all water used in homes to be piped out with the sewage, fearing health risks if water recycling is done clumsily.

Since 2010, however, the increasingly dry state has come around, and now even encourages the reuse of so-called gray water, which typically includes the gently-used runoff from bathroom sinks, showers, bathtubs and washing machines.

As mandatory conservation kicked in statewide this month, forcing many of California’s 38 million people to face giving up on greenery, these recycling systems have become attractive options in new homes, right along with granite countertops. California Building Industry Association executive Robert Raymer rattles off the drought-conscious top builders that now routinely offer in-home water recycling.

And California’s building codes are catching up as well, allowing owners of existing homes to create the simplest systems for the safest gray water without a permit.

So while others think about hauling buckets to catch stray drips from their sinks and tubs, Negrin and Friedman can relax: Each gallon they use in the shower means another for the butterflies that duck and bob over their vegetable garden, for the lemon tree shading the yard, and for two strutting backyard chickens busily investigating it all.

“I love a lush garden, and so it seems like why not, right? I could have a lush garden if it doesn’t go into the sewer system,” Negrin said. “So, yes, “I’m going to take a shower.”

Because pathogens swimming in untreated gray water can transmit disease if humans ingest them, most modern health and building codes have long made recycling it impractical. Many families did it anyway, without official oversight or permits. Greywater Action, a group that promotes household water recycling and trains families and installers on the do’s and don’ts, estimates that more than a million Californians had illegal systems before plumbing codes were updated.

But interest in doing it the right way has soared since April 1, when Gov. Jerry Brown ordered a 25-percent cut in water use by cities and towns. Palo Alto gray-water system installer Sassan Golafshan saw his website crash within a day from the surge in traffic.

“There’s huge interest,” said Laura Allen, a co-founder of Greywater Action. Contractors “told us they’re getting so many more calls than before.”

Water savings could be significant. A 2009 study by the University of California at Los Angeles found that if everyone in the southern part of the state recycled the water that currently goes down drains from their showers and washing machines, there would be enough to satisfy Southern California’s entire outdoor residential water use needs.

At the California Water Resources Board’s recycled water unit, chief Randy Barnard is fielding many calls from homeowners desperate to save their beloved lawns and gardens. “If they’ve got a prize fruit tree they’ve been babying for years, they don’t want to lose that tree,” he said.

But for many, he has some bad news to share. Recycling water at home is not as easy as just hooking your shower up to the lawn sprinklers, and recycled water probably won’t save the lawn.

“Just like there’s no one sure way to fight the drought, there’s no one sure way for gray-water treatment,” the state gray-water chief said. “Everybody has to look at all the options and figure out what works for them.”

Water from toilets is considered “black” water and sent straight to wastewater treatment plants. Many states also bar water from kitchen sinks, since homeowners may have contaminated it by washing raw meat.

In California, homeowners are now allowed to irrigate with untreated water straight from bathroom sinks, washing machines and bathtubs, as long as — among other requirements — the water lines run beneath soil or mulch, so as not to come in contact with people. That rules out using untreated gray water on lawns, which typically need above-ground spray heads or sprinklers.

Gray water can even go to vegetable gardens like Negrin’s and Friedman’s, as long as it doesn’t touch root vegetables or any other plant part that’s eaten. Tomatoes are fine, but forget about carrots.

The latest plumbing-code changes have enabled families to install these straightforward laundry-to-landscape systems without a permit, sending wash water into the yard with a valve to divert it back into the sewage system when needed. A handy homeowner can do it with no more than a couple hundred of dollars of piping and parts.

More complicated systems, involving automation, filters and pumps, can top out at $30,000, contractors said.

About 20 states now allow gray-water recycling, and around the country, Arizona has some of the friendliest laws. California still has more to do, Allen and other advocates say. Raymer, at the building trade group, hopes for more legal changes in the coming years to align state gray-water codes with the rules of hundreds of cities and towns.

AP Video journalist Haven Daley contributed to this report.

Sunday, July 9, 2017

Calatlantic Homes’ new home in Menifee celebrate model grand opening, Aug. 19

Read article : Calatlantic Homes’ new home in Menifee celebrate model grand opening, Aug. 19
Courtesy photoCourtesy photo

MENIFEE – Already a popular choice among home seekers who have pre-qualified to purchase one of CalAtlantic Homes’ gorgeous single-family, detached new homes, Parkview and Newport at Heritage Lake in Menifee will celebrate the official model grand opening Saturday, Aug. 19. The exciting event will offer guests food, festivities and the exciting opportunity to tour eight professionally landscaped and decorated models.

To join in the fun from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., visit the Parkview Sales Center at 29643 Canyonlands Drive and the Newport Sales Center at 29537 Caravel Drive, in Menifee. For more information, visit www.calatlantichomes.com or call the Parkview Sales Center at (951) 246-7210 and the Newport Sales Center at (951) 672-7773.

Limited to just 69 residences, Parkview is attractively priced from the low $400,000s, making it easy for a broad spectrum of buyers to enjoy upscale living without an upscale price. A quartet of generously proportioned floor plans range in size from approximately 2,659 to 3,928 square feet and showcase up to six bedrooms, two-and-one-half to four-and-one-half baths, open-concept designs, versatile dens and lofts and three- and four-car garages.

Parkview’s grand one- and two-story home designs features great rooms, formal dining rooms, optional California rooms, classic front porches, optional lofts or bonus rooms per plan and distinctive Spanish, Traditional and Craftsman-inspired architecture.

Impressive kitchens boast stainless steel appliances, hand-selected designer finishes, breakfast areas, islands and walk-in pantries. Expansive master suites display resort-inspired baths with up to two spacious walk-in closets, separate soaking tubs, walk-in showers and dual vanities.

Home shoppers will be thrilled to discover Newport’s open and inviting floor plans, which perfectly complement Southern California’s world-famous lifestyle. Priced from the $400,000s, four contemporary one- and two-story designs measuring approximately 2,550 to 3,511 square feet feature up to five bedrooms, as many as three-and-one-half baths, two- and three-car garages, great rooms, formal dining rooms and fully appointed gourmet kitchens with islands, stainless steel appliances and walk-in pantries.

Varying designs offer versatile bonus rooms, lofts, optional dens and California rooms. Every residence hosts a master suite with walk-in closet, large soaking tub and separate shower.

The amenity-rich, master-planned community of Heritage Lake features a 25-acre catch-and-release lake, clubhouse, splash park, tot lot, waterfront swimming pool and two elementary schools. It offers easy access to Interstate 15 and Interstate 215, as well as California Citrus Heritage State Park, Diamond Valley Lake and Temecula Valley’s wine country.

Monday, June 19, 2017

'MLS #M4703616753 in West Bridgewater, MA 02379 - Home for Sale and Real Estate Listing'

Read article : 'MLS #M4703616753 in West Bridgewater, MA 02379 - Home for Sale and Real Estate Listing'

While there is no listed address, we can tell you that this 3-bedroom home is listed at $$424,900 for 1,662 square feet of space. Search property listings here to find photos and more details about this and other listed homes.

This West Bridgewater, MA 02379 home has no address, but we've got details to set it apart. Plus we can get you connected to a REALTOR® in just a few clicks - a REALTOR® who can get you even more useful information.

'The details about this home (MLS #M4703616753) are here on realtor.com®.
'