Value and Comfort

Promoting Healthier, Cost-Effective, and Greener Real Estate Practices in the Bay Area

Hot Tip: Eco-Friendly Paint Strippers

May 1st, 2008 by bruce_richmond

So, you want to refinish the floors or that dresser (with potential!) you found at a garage sale. Forget the noxious odors and health risks associated with paint strippers.

aMAIZEingTM Biobased Solvent & Stripper is a 100% bio-based solvent and stripper, derived from corn and soybeans. It and similar products made by SoyClean and  Molecular Tech Coatings Inc.’s EFS-2500 removes adhesives, paint from concrete, masonry, wood, metal and other surfaces.

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aMAIZEing can also be used to remove graffiti from concrete if your place gets tagged on a regular basis. Or it could be time to move.

Staging for Sale or for Life: Five Ways to Be More Comfortable in Your Home

March 13th, 2008 by bruce_richmond

Home staging is the idea of decorating a home to make it more attractive to buyers. 

Not moving? Then use it to make your home more livable, attractive, and a healthier “nest” for you and your family!

The act of creating a powerful first impression can be done for a minimal investment. If you’re selling, you’ll can increase the perceived value of your home dramatically (which may result in a shorter selling time and a higher sales price). If you’re staying, you’ll create a more relaxing and comfortable atmosphere.

There are a few distinct differences between staging your home for life versus staging your home for a sale. Read on for a few tips, no matter what your situation is.

First impressions:
Whether you’re staging for your own life or staging for a sale, you only have one chance to make a first impression on visitors. Potential buyers may only be in your home for three or four minutes, so you want those first moments to be positive. Don’t forget simple yet significant improvements to your home’s exterior, like:

  • Mow the lawn and trim dead branches (especially near windows and doors)
  • Place some pots with colorful flowers on the porch
  • Give the front door a fresh coat of paint.

Your home will now give visitors a warm welcome, whether they’re over for a personal visit or as a potential buyer.

Your stuff:
Staging for life – Staging your home is about decorating with your tastes, reflecting your individual style.
Staging for sale – When putting your house on the market, it’s important to consider the buyer. What does the average buyer need to see in order to fall in love with your home?

  • Try to avoid leaving personal items in plain sight.
  • Keep it clean and simple.
  • Focus on highlighting the best features your home has to offer.

Less is more:
Staging for life – Ask your real estate agent or a professional stager the single greatest improvement you can do to make your home more livable. They’ll tell you to get rid of the clutter. Having a bit of organization and eliminating unnecessary “stuff” in your home, including piles of junk mail and old magazines, will help to create a more open environment.
Staging for sale – When putting your home on the market, you want it to look lived in, but you don’t want home buyers focusing on you collection of ceramic cows instead of noticing the custom cabinets you had installed. Most professionals also advise putting personal pictures away. This helps home buyers imagine your home as their home. Remember to clean out closets so they appear more spacious. Don’t forget to organize or clear out medicine cabinets, as potential buyers are likely to open those, too.

A room with a use:
Staging for life – You may have specific uses for various rooms in your home (using a spare bedroom as a craft room or office, or setting up the garage as a home gym). This is exactly how it should be. Don’t feel bound by the limitations of a room’s label.
Staging for sale – On the other hand, it’s pivotal to let home buyers see rooms as they were originally intended. Turn that playroom back into it’s original state. Perform an inexpensive and quick makeover for these rooms by hanging sheer curtains to let in daylight and replacing aging light fixtures and switches.

Freshen up:
Staging for life – We all have our routine cleaning schedules, but consider doing little extras for yourself. Touch up the paint in your lived-in rooms. Treat yourself to a few houseplants to liven up your living areas. A little can go a long way.
Staging for sale – Channel you inner cleaner and decorator. Steam-clean the carpets. Touch up the paint. Add emotional warmth with throw pillows, dramatic plants, and unscented candles.  For that “Architectural Digest” look, clear off the counters  in the kitchen and bathroom. An inexpensive way to add color is with a vase of vibrant flowers, neatly folded towels, or a bowl of fruit.

Clean is green. Decluttering as a healthy habit.

January 3rd, 2008 by bruce_richmond

Lots of resolutions have been made. I’m sure many have been broken already. Me? I’m starting the New Year with a clean desk.

How can clutter not be a green issue? As part of our home or work environment, it affects our mental, physical, emotional and even spiritual health.

Some people are able to keep a home so neat that it looks staged. On the other side, I’ve seen some of the worst types of clutter in homes. Hallways that are stacked with papers and who-knows-what leaving a path like a narrow rural road that barely allows one car at a time. Shelves overflowing, beds with almost enough space to sleep in, insects living in molding piles of newspapers — it’s hard to imaging how bad it can get.

Some experts consider compulsive hoarding to be a mental illness in its own right, although its not yet formally recognized by psychiatrists. Where it effects quality of life, the National Study Group on Chronic Disorganization may be of help.

For the rest of us, it’s still a behavioral issue. And systems help. Our California Closets system was very helpful for our family in organizing our clothes. When we have a new overflow problem we know it’s time to donate. Real Simple has regular monthly features with organizing products and cleaning ideas. Just don’t print or cut out the articles and start a new stack of to-dos.

And if you need help, get it. Professional Organizers and Feng Shui consultants thrive on our capacity to collect and our need to reduce clutter. Clutterboy in Los Altos, CA, has some fun “clutter conquest” stories if you need inspiration.

For me, having items in their place means I can find the documents I need when I need them. Being able to find my gym bag or running shoes leaves me fewer reasons to avoid exercise.

My next decluttering project is the garage.