Pages

Monday, 15 April 2013

LIGHTING FOR INTERIOR CEILINGS


When it comes to lighting your home from the ceiling, you can choose styles ranging from chandeliers to recessed lighting, track lighting, fluorescent bars and more. Each style has its own way of lighting a room, so you'll want to choose the fixture based on a mixture of functionality and design, depending on the room.

Chandeliers

Chandeliers provide a large, central fixture. They commonly appear in entryways, but you may find them in dining rooms, bedrooms or any area where there is a wide-open space and sufficient ceiling height to allow for the chandelier to be hung and still provide clearance for individuals walking through. One way to tie in chandeliers with the overall design of the home is to use them in conjunction with centralized floor patterns, such as a hardwood floor inset in the middle of a living room or a natural stone tile medallion set in the center of an entryway.

Track Lighting

Track lighting can be on stable tracks, hung from flexible cables, be straight or spiraled, have open bulbs or be encased. One way to use track lighting is above a stand-alone bar, such as in the kitchen or a finished basement, with the lighting focusing directly downward onto the surface. The earliest versions of track lighting were straight tracks, but modern variants can include complex patterns and lights that are set at different heights. Many track lighting systems are fully adjustable so you can point the lights in the direction you desire.

Ceiling Fan Combo

A ceiling fan and light combination is more useful in bedrooms and small areas as opposed to wide-open spaces. Ceiling fans often are mounted in a centralized location, and if you are working with a single unit, you are limited by however many light fixtures that particular ceiling fan has. However, multi-fixture units are available that disperse more light. In addition, if you are working in a larger, more open space and have the room to mount more than one ceiling fan, you can generate more light than just a single unit. On top of the light provided, you have the dual-purpose benefit of air circulation, which can help circulate cold or warm air depending on the direction of the fan blades, helping you be warmer or cooler.

Recessed Lighting

Recessed lighting is more for design purposes than for actually lighting an entire room. Because human beings perceive light based upon vertical surfaces more than horizontal, recessed lighting -- also known as can lighting -- does not always provide the most illumination. However, it is ideal for areas where the light specifically shines down onto a surface, such as a desk, shower or bar top. Recessed lights do little toward providing lighting for an entire room, but they create a certain visual appeal that may help define a space within a room while a chandelier or drop-down light fixture provides illumination for the rest of the room.

Saturday, 6 April 2013

WHY INTERIOR DESIGN IS VERY ESSENTIAL WHEN SELLING YOUR HOME

The decision to list your home for resale is a big one. No doubt it came about after much thought, weighing pros and cons, and series of long discussions. However, once you decide to put your home on the market, get ready for the next big discussion: interior design.
Many times sellers assume that interior design is a waste. If you are look to get as much money as possible out of your home, why would you put money back into it just to make look prettier for the new owners?
While this line of thinking seems reasonable at first, listing a home without at least tweaking the interior design can seriously harm your chances of finding a buyer and lower your final profit. Read on to find out why interior design is essential when listing your home.

Interior Design Generates Traffic
The first step toward putting any home up for sale is marketing it. When potential buyers look for a home, they are sent listings via email. Each property listing includes a short bio of the home, figures about how many bedrooms/bathrooms/square feet, etc, and some photos. Based on this information, the buyers decide which homes they would like to see.
Since buyers often look at multiple listings at once, it’s critical that you make your property stand out in the crowd – and that’s where interior design comes into play.
There are often lots of homes with similar in terms of square footage and number of bedrooms, so the choice to view one home over another comes down to the photos. Given the choice of two like properties, would choose the one that has newer appliances and a cohesive design or the one that looks like it hasn’t been updated in over a decade?
At the end of the day, interior design helps bring traffic to your property. The greater the number of people that view your home, the more likely it is that someone will submit an offer to purchase. Why not use interior design to give you that extra edge? 

Interior Design Defines Purpose
After all the years spent living in your home, you undoubtedly have a pretty solid idea of how to use the space. For instance, you may know that your kitchen table will comfortably seat four, but for anything bigger you need to use the dining room. Or, that your spare bedroom is the perfect spot for a home office.
Potential buyers want you to share that knowledge. When they look at a home during a showing, they are looking for visual clues on how to use the space most effectively. If they aren’t clues, that confusion can cause them to look toward another property. Use interior design to make sure they get a clear picture.
When working on your interior design for resale. Make sure to give every room a specific purpose. Leave only the furniture, appliances, and accessories needed to communicate that purpose in the room and get rid of any clutter.

Interior Design Adds a Fresh Approach
Yes, since your home has been previously owned, potential buyers should walk in expecting to see a certain amount of wear and tear. If they are opposed to that, they should be looking exclusively at new construction. That said, taking the time to spruce things up may generate more offers.
Think about if you were to buy a used car. Before you drive it off the lot, you’d expect the dealership to have washed and buffed the exterior, vacuumed out the inside, and even taken the time to spray some of that infamous “new car smell”. And, rightly so. You wouldn’t want to purchase a car that was full of someone else’s food crumbs and muddy footprints, would you?
Revamping the interior design in your home works in much the same way. Though you are still leaving the bones of the house intact, a new coat of paint or some fresh carpeting will leave the home feeling fresh and new, which will leave buyers feeling better about the final product they’ll receive for the (considerably large) amount of money they’re about to spend. That comfort level could generate more offers.

Interior Design Adds Value
There’s no dying that selling a house is about money. As a seller, it’s only natural that you would want the biggest return possible on your home’s resale. Believe it or not, putting some money into interior design now can help you get a bigger purchase price later.
When a real estate agent determines the correct list price for your home, he or she looks at the features that your home has to offer and then compares those features to similar homes that are currently on the market or have been sold recently. Some of these features include: location, square footage, and interior design.
There’s nothing you can do to improve the first two factors. If your lot is near a major road it will always sell for less than a similar property in a quiet neighborhood. Same for a property with tiny rooms compared to a home with spacious ones. But, the interior design is well within your control.
Factors such as kitchen upgrades, bathroom remodels, and whether or not you have a finished basement are taken into account when deciding to list one property higher than another. They are also a consideration when the buyers decide how much to offer. Sloppy design is more likely to generate a low-ball offer than one where pulled together interior lends credence to value
The right interior design investment now may pay off big later.


It’s easy to understand why the debate on whether to refresh your interior design for resale can be a fierce one. While it may seem silly to invest money into a property that you intend to sell, the benefits far outweigh the initial payout. With an increase of traffic, buyer appeal, and value, it’s easy to see why interior design is essential when listing your home. Use this as a springboard to help you get started.
What’s your favorite interior design tip? We’d love to know what helps influence your home.