Is this colour palette all too much the same?
7 years ago
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- 7 years ago
- 7 years ago
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Would timber floors be too much with timber ceilings ?
Comments (21)@ sally wastie....Would have loved those pine kitchen cupboards....before they were painted. Had I a strong yen for :a bit of colour"...(and I do love colour), I would have had a new glossy multi coloured counter top, probably something very striking and then oiled the pine cupboard doors There were no work benches in the kitchen of my 1920s all pine cottage ( always say that the kitchen was an afterthought since it is positioned just of a hallway and consisted only of a sink and a wood burning stove.) I built a small bench/table using VJ pine slats I'd removed from elsewhere and then put a thick pine top that curved out from the small straight bench to form a little round kitchen table..Then came the fun, I painted the benchtop and table a datk teale colour, gave it a flecked faux marble finish and a couple of coats of high gloss waterproof varnish. Nothing terribly amazing but it did give the old...'kitchen space' a bit of a lift. Had a larger round kitchen table with a formica top and timber legs...so gave the table-top the same teale treatment as the bench and it now lives on the veranda that came a few years later. Yes! Teale of any shade always looks good with timber. The only pity was that the kitchen walls and ceiling here were terribly smoke stained and had been painted a really horrible pre WWII green. Begrudgingly, I repainted the walls but used a bright orange/yellow to complement the dark teale colour ( this particular yellow is a good colour to keep the flies out) and, in keeping with the era of the house, I installed a built in dark timber kitchen hutch found at the dump shop. The kitchen is the only room to have been painted and repainted....but still have the dark timber parquetry floors. If you get tired of all timber a few splashes of bright colour in well-thought-out places do not go astray. If you have vertical timber panelled walls and you are feeling hemmed in... a good trick is to stain a small section of panels a darker wood colour or with a coloured stain to shift the focus from all the timber. or you can bleach the timber panels lighter. This idea can create interest extending ceilngward from behind a furniture piece...say low display cabinet...or just in a section of wall. You enhance the all timber 'look' with an eye -catching timber panel of another timber hue...like having a mahogany panel set in a light timber wall... Just a few ideas for those feeling a bit claustrphobic in an all timber house....understandable, not all of us aspire to live in a log cabin...but if carefully accented, an all timber interior can be extremely impressive and will not date. This is a pre-digital shot of the glass panels I had installed in the wall around my bed head...its really faded PIC but you can get the idea. Looks better today since the glass has been decoratively frosted with patterns. The sunroom behind the bedroomThis is also a pre-digital PIC showing the little timber kitchen bench with the teale table top. The end and other side of the bench is stained timber. This little table seats 3 or 4. Pity you can't see the old parquetry floor here. Old formica table given a lift with a Teale coloured painted top...there's no room for it in the ' kitchen space'. Amazing what a little lick of the right colour can do in an all timber house....See MorePulling together the colour palette
Comments (2)Hi, would love to get some comments/advice on the colour palette to use through out the rooms. What is the best way to work this? So you pick one colour as the dominant colour for the house? Thank you :-)...See MoreToo Much Concrete!
Comments (56)Yes painting is not a task I enjoy & think the concrete is probably best left as is - with the exception of a good wash.... that being said .... I can almost visualise the building now with black/charcoal windows & doors & lots of mass plantings creeping up to the concrete & now feel the dark growth on the concrete might just serve to pull the space together with the help of a structure overhead. Hahaha listen to me... I've gone from hating my concrete to almost defending it :) Siriuskey could you try posting the link again please as it just goes to Google home page? Or even a search topic & I'll try to find it. Thank you all for your suggestions & hopefully I'll have an updated image to share sooner rather than later....See MoreExterior reno for sale - don't want to spend too much.
Comments (16)I agree with MB Design and Drafting. I rejected two homes based on the building reports alone. It wasn't that there is a lot of work to do or that it would be expensive. It was the fact I was going to have to spend $$$ and time fixing stuff that would never be seen because the prior owners failed to maintain the house properly. I would be spending my first year in those homes organising trades, waiting for people to show up or not, dealing with the headache of unforseen extra problems and cost blowouts. Not to mention I wondered how much unseen damage there was caused by lack of maintenance. Ultimately I purchased a more modest home with less impressive facade and floorplan because it was well maintained and any money I spent would be spent on fun things like decorating or improving fixtures. Plus it already had a major feature I wanted and that feature had been done professionally so it was well worth paying for. It doesn't matter to a buyer how pretty a house is if their heart is broken by a building report that tells them their dream home has a laundry list of boring jobs and unnoticed problems that need attention asap. 9 times out of 10 they will walk on the property than bother renegotiating the price and getting professionals in to assess the $ involved....See More- 7 years ago
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