Where do you get the letters?
Katherine Corey
9 years ago
Featured Answer
Sort by:Oldest
Comments (11)
house459
9 years agoVeronica
9 years agoRelated Discussions
Where do you start when designing a room?
Comments (8)Stand in the doorway to your room and decide how you want your room to present. What do you want to notice first about the room? How are you going to use the room? How many people would you like to accommodate in the room? Where do you want your TV or where is there provision for it? Will it be easily visible from all seating? Will the positioning of your seating look inviting? When it comes to colour, do you want a room that looks fresh and cool or one that is warm and cosy? This will dictate your colour scheme as well as the natural lighting in the room. The room shown appears to take inspiration from the painting which is a very good way to start a colour scheme, but you can always work in reverse and find artwork that compliments and enhances the room. Once your have some direction, go shopping with your camera phone and take photos of anything that interests you. Collect sample colours where possible and gradually build your room. Don't buy anything until you have the major items decided - we can be very restricted in choices, and an impulse buy can end a disaster. It will all come together, it just takes time and patience....See MoreMarried? Where do you display your wedding photos?
Comments (19)When visiting other people's homes I always gravitate to the photos. I enjoy looking and talking about them. In my own home I have pics of mum and dad in their youth and they are in my bedroom. For my children and grandchildren's pics I have made a collage in the stairwell interspersed with photos of me and my mates in our heyday. It always gives my girlfriends a good laugh as we reminisce old times....See MoreCan you just get an opinion from architect but do most design yourself
Comments (8)"Architect-designed houses are not accessible to all." This is a myth championed by the building industry. Alternatively, why not focus on the key benefits architects bring to a project. Here are a few for you: • Appoint an architect to your project and you’ll gain a home designed for the way you want to live.The alternative is a builder-designed home that suits what the builder is used to building. Quality builders will ask for plans and specifications to be thoroughly documented so that they can go ahead and do what they do best, which is build. Working out with the owner what you’re going to build and why is the architect’s role. • An architect manages planning approvals. This process is complex, often arbitrarily applied by many Councils, fraught with pitfalls for the novice and is ramped up every year with new hoops to jump. If you want a professional on your side who knows the territory, will go in to bat for you and will forge a way through this minefield, you need an architect. • If you’d prefer to put the works to tender to a number of builders rather than having to accept the quote of the builder you started the process with, you need an architect. • If you’d prefer to protect yourself with a proper, architect-managed ABIC contract that works equally for both parties and is legally enforceable, you need an architect. • An architect will minimise costly changes during construction as he or she will produce a proper level of drawings (expect 20 x A3 pages for a new home, rather than the 1-2 pages you’ll receive from a drafting service.). The reasons for this are that you have on paper exactly what you want to build. Without this, you are entering a contract with a builder with none of the details resolved. You wouldn’t do that if you were buying a house, so why do it when spending an equally significant amount of money? Unfortunately, some builders see this approach as an opportunity to happily accept constant changes from ‘project managing’ owners because it’s just another variation that he can charge for. The longer he is there, the better for his margins, particularly when there’s no contract to speak of. Finally, an architect is a specialist with a professional duty of care, irrespective of financial gain. In other words, they’re there to support and protect you, without benefit to themselves. No one else in the building industry can provide this....See MoreGas Strut Servery Window, where do i get one that won't kill my budget
Comments (3)Flip up and bi-fold are indeed "all or nothing" options that can be tricky to screen too. Both also rely heavily on well-engineered operating mechanisms and as such come with increased potential for problems. I once stayed in a house on North Stradbroke Island which had a large flip up gas strut supported timber framed window over the north facing kitchen sink with views to Cape Moreton. (I now wish I had a photo to share, but sadly I was too much in the moment to take any.) Standing at the sink, looking north over the Coral Sea with Humpback whales breaching in the distance was one of those forever moments. Plus, our elevated situation seemed to reduce the number of insects that came through the unscreenable window. In that case I wouldn't have compromised on spending to get that window out of the way. For just about every other context I would opt for a less complex, less costly, screenable, servery style window....See Morehouse459
9 years agonaplesgirl05
9 years agodecidein2010
9 years agomerelymary
9 years agodrgravis
9 years agoInnovation Fencing Inc.
9 years agoNicole Pattenden
5 years agoApollo Marconi USA Inc
4 years ago
debora carl landscape design