Home Improvement Thread
Posted: Tue Oct 22, 2019 3:11 pm
In the grand scheme of things, it's not a big deal at all, and certainly better than paying rent.
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We basically have one house that checks all the boxes minus the fenced in yard for the dog, and is sitting at a good price. It's been up for about 60 days and just had an open house. My thoughts is its going to sell soon after this open house. We have two others that we both like alot, and then about 5 or so that we want to see, but not in love with. If the first one goes soon then I think that changes our plan a bit to wait unless something else we really love hits the market.For me, it's worth it if that's going to be your 'forever' home and checks all of the boxes. I was prepared to do everything necessary for our house - including paying full price and asking for no seller assist when the market was such that sellers were throwing piles of cash to buyers.
Nothing is set with regards fees other than the agent's ask and usually around 1% for deed transfer. Everything else is fixed cost.what's a general percentage for fees if you're selling a home? I know 6% typically for the agents but I've heard 10% in total with other bs, true?
My wife loves to paint. She also loves weird colors. Yellow accent wall in the living room, two greenish walls in the dining room...two teal colored walls in the office. Takes a few coats to cover up those colors haha.Most sellers pay between 1-4%; I've never heard of anyone spending more than that, personally.
skull: My wife finished painting the final room in our house last weekend, eight years after moving in.
We were in a similar boat with our kitchen/hallway/etc. due to the open concept of the house. We chose a color that worked in the kitchen and hallway, and wound up running it all the way up the stairs and ending at the top. It actually worked out nicely.Last winter I painted our bedroom, which took almost 3 gallons of paint. This winter I was planning on tackling our living room/kitchen which should be even more epic. There is no obvious way to separate the rooms by paint, so it has to all be done at once with the same paint. My wife and I are horrible at not only determining what basic color we want, but which shade, etc. My wife has already started thinking we also need to paint the cabinets, change the floor, get new countertops in the kitchen, add a backsplash, etc.
In almost the same exact boat, especially with the heated floor. Eventually I want to finish our basement as well, and heated flooring is something I've considered. If I had a million dollars....We were in a similar boat with our kitchen/hallway/etc. due to the open concept of the house. We chose a color that worked in the kitchen and hallway, and wound up running it all the way up the stairs and ending at the top. It actually worked out nicely.Last winter I painted our bedroom, which took almost 3 gallons of paint. This winter I was planning on tackling our living room/kitchen which should be even more epic. There is no obvious way to separate the rooms by paint, so it has to all be done at once with the same paint. My wife and I are horrible at not only determining what basic color we want, but which shade, etc. My wife has already started thinking we also need to paint the cabinets, change the floor, get new countertops in the kitchen, add a backsplash, etc.
The last thing we want to do is the kitchen flooring, but since I basically want to both tile it and run heating in the floor (undecided on hot water pex in the basement or an electric grid), I know it'll cost more than I'm willing to spend. And the area is far too big for me to consider spending the time to tile it myself.
What is it like living inside a sauna?I put in tongue and groove pine a while ago. I know it's not for most folks, but I never have to paint again. And it's glorious.
I used Sherwin Williams but still needed 2 coats.Paint is such a "get what you pay for" thing.
If you buy the 20 dollar a gallon stuff from home depot, you're gonna need 2-3 coats.
If you buy the 75 a gallon stuff from sherwin williams (which they almost monthly offer at 40% off) you can get away with one coat. Of course if you're going from dark green to lavender, YMMV.
Same here. It's going to be quite a few years down the road before I finish my basement. The kids love playing hockey/matchbox cars down there now, so finishing it would be dumb. If #3 is a boy, I may never finish it as I'll be close to retired before he graduates high school.Yeah, I’d probably go the electric route for those reasons alone. The benefit of that route for me would be that I could add it right now myself, without the need for a contractor, since I have full access to the joists from my basement. The systems are stupid easy to install.
I have no intention of ever finishing it. We use it for storage, the utilities, and our cat’s litter boxes. If we were short on space on the other two floors, maybe, but I like having it bare. It definitely comes in handy when I decide to run Ethernet, Romex, etc. through the house for something.Same here. It's going to be quite a few years down the road before I finish my basement. The kids love playing hockey/matchbox cars down there now, so finishing it would be dumb. If #3 is a boy, I may never finish it as I'll be close to retired before he graduates high school.Yeah, I’d probably go the electric route for those reasons alone. The benefit of that route for me would be that I could add it right now myself, without the need for a contractor, since I have full access to the joists from my basement. The systems are stupid easy to install.
I envision having a kickass theater system down there someday. Would be the only reason to finish it. And with access to the joists, I can run whatever I want through the ceiling and walls first, then finish it.I have no intention of ever finishing it. We use it for storage, the utilities, and our cat’s litter boxes. If we were short on space on the other two floors, maybe, but I like having it bare. It definitely comes in handy when I decide to run Ethernet, Romex, etc. through the house for something.Same here. It's going to be quite a few years down the road before I finish my basement. The kids love playing hockey/matchbox cars down there now, so finishing it would be dumb. If #3 is a boy, I may never finish it as I'll be close to retired before he graduates high school.Yeah, I’d probably go the electric route for those reasons alone. The benefit of that route for me would be that I could add it right now myself, without the need for a contractor, since I have full access to the joists from my basement. The systems are stupid easy to install.
Which line? I used Cashmere all through my house and was 1 coat only (after using Loxon primer). I still had almost $2,000 in paint alone though.I used Sherwin Williams but still needed 2 coats.Paint is such a "get what you pay for" thing.
If you buy the 20 dollar a gallon stuff from home depot, you're gonna need 2-3 coats.
If you buy the 75 a gallon stuff from sherwin williams (which they almost monthly offer at 40% off) you can get away with one coat. Of course if you're going from dark green to lavender, YMMV.
Yeah, that's their "sell it at lowes" line of paint so I'd say it's very cheaply made.85% of our house was painted with Valspar, 10% Baer, and 5% SW (HGTV labeled). The latter will never be used in our house again, as it was the worst paint I have ever used. I can only assume that SW subbed it out to Bob’s Paint Company or something.
If I ever finished my basement (and it's a toss up if I'll do that or just build a garage-man cave) I'd probably go the 'industrial' look and paint the ceiling black, leaving everything exposed. I like the look, I'm already at 9 foot ceilings, and I'd still have access to everything. I couldn't imagine putting drywall on a basement ceiling, and suspended ceilings look like poop.I have no intention of ever finishing it. We use it for storage, the utilities, and our cat’s litter boxes. If we were short on space on the other two floors, maybe, but I like having it bare. It definitely comes in handy when I decide to run Ethernet, Romex, etc. through the house for something.Same here. It's going to be quite a few years down the road before I finish my basement. The kids love playing hockey/matchbox cars down there now, so finishing it would be dumb. If #3 is a boy, I may never finish it as I'll be close to retired before he graduates high school.Yeah, I’d probably go the electric route for those reasons alone. The benefit of that route for me would be that I could add it right now myself, without the need for a contractor, since I have full access to the joists from my basement. The systems are stupid easy to install.