More Swedish Laundry goodies...Phosphates!!! :)
6 years ago
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- 6 years ago
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Downsizing...Help Us Pick a Floor Plan
Comments (39)I feel the most important thing you should do is visualize, as well as reherse, how you like to move and function within a home, including electrical switch placement. Sometimes square footage is "wasted" in someone else's eyes, but the feel it gives the home makes it wonderful to live in. A little extra space here and there may also give you room to set up a card table for extra guests if you need extra dining space for special dinners, or to place a sofa bed. I like your version 1 plan the best, but again, you need to determine what would make you happy. (NOT what someone else thinks you should do). Your gut feelings will tell you what is right...for you. We recently built a log home ourselves, and opted for larger rooms, and less of them. Our children are grown, and we chose to have only a large master bedroom and no other bedrooms. It is the most wonderful bedroom to sleep in, and I open the blinds many mornings on the sliding glass door and go back to bed for a while just looking out at all our trees and our land. We have one full bathroom and one powder room. Having a large walk in pantry and a dedicated laundry room was important to me. Our home is about 1700 square feet and has a full wrap around porch. We joke and say we have a porch with a house on it. We use the porch as much as the interior of our home. We have never once felt the need, nor wanted an "away" room, despite raising 5 children. If I want time alone I take a walk. Our children were raised to respect others and tone it down. If they wanted to make noise they did it in their bedrooms or outdoors. We did not encourage TV and they learned how to play creatively.They built tree forts and played bseball (even the girls). We do not own a TV now at all. We live in a friendly climate, and there are trails to hike, rivers to canoe on, and wonderful books to read. If we lived in snow country still, there are places to cross country ski as well. I do have a good sized area that is open to and part of the great room for a sewing machine and some armoirs for storage, or bookcases, once I figure out how I want to do this. It is what would be a "foyer" in some homes. I feel foyers are a waste. Others like them and that is fine. Since my kitties like to build nests on every available piece of fabric, we are going to build a sewing studio onto our barn, but I will always have the inside area for when it is very rainy and I don't want to walk outside, or have something cooking that needs to be watched. In hindsight, we should have expanded the house just a tad to allow for the comfortable use of glass french doors to close it off from pets. Putting a wall in now would cramp the room too much, and besides, I love how it all flows right now, and I refuse to mess up our porch with an addition. If you have children, they can certainly share, but eventually a boy and a girl would need their own room. Same sex children do not ever need their own rooms. There is nothing wrong with girls sharing a room, or boys sharing a room. If you build your house so that you can add onto it in the future, you can start out with one bedroom less, and then add on later if you feel the need. We did not want a "guest" room this time, and yes, we do have guests from time to time. We have a lot of fun, cook a lot of good food, and no one has once complained about the air mattresses in the great room scenario. Someone not comfortable with this arrangement does not belong here. That's why there are hotels. Because of the way we did the layout, the house feels huge to us, and is homey and relaxing. I dislike homes that have a stuffed feeling because too many rooms were crammed into the floor plan. We did build this house so we can age in place. Putting in 36 inch doors instead of 32 does not add much, if any, cost. Because we didn't cram, we have a bathroom large enough to move a wheelchair in, and a huge shower. I haven't decided if I want a tub. It's rarely that I would use one, but the space is there. I just need to decide if I'd like a nice makeup station or a tub. I think I'd rather have the grooming area and buy a hot tub. My husband and I are people that think about what WE want, and have never once cared about some vague resale. There is always a market for a well thought out and constructed home. Don't cut costs here. We have built and sold 2 other homes that did not go along with the neutral mentality, and sold both in record time. Basically what we hear when someone comes into our home is "This is awesome!". No one has ever said "what, no bathtub?", or "ewww......no guest room or away room?!". They do comment on the nice laundry room or how they always wanted a large walk in pantry, which I could not have had if we had added extra bedrooms. I get to look outside instead of walls leading to extra rooms. We do hear, "do you mind if I spend the night...I don't mind the couch." Think carefully about what would make you happy and then do it without second guessing. If children may be in your future, by all means plan for them. If you are not sure about all the built ins, have pieces made that can be removed and put elsewhere, or have some beautiful free standing pieces made unti you live in the house a while and see what you want. What has surprised me the most was how I changed my mind about a few things, and am glad I didn't have them done initially. The hardest part for me was going through the process of getting rid of stuff and keeping only what I really loved or needed. I wouldn't trade having less wall space and more windows for anything....and I find I don't miss all the extra "stuff". Opinions on floor plans are fun to get and can give you some great ideas. In the end though it is up to you to decide on which side you want your range and how much counter space you feel there, etc. Incorrect switch and outlet placement can be very annoying, so think those out carefully as well. For some reason I found I like my range to the left of the sink, but I had to carefully think this out. I built huge cardboard boxes and labeled them refrigerator, stove, etc. and moved them around as soon as we were "dried in", and before we did anything final. I also propped plywood "counters" on saw horses in between the "appliances" to make sure I had the amount of counter space I wanted. I ended up making some changes, but it saved thousands doing it at this stage, and I am happy, which is most important. No kitchen designer can take the place of you rehersing some things. Also accept that no matter how carefully you plan and think this out, there will ALWAYS be some things you would have done a little differently after living in your house a while. The upside is that with this amount of planning and thinking things out, the changes you would have made if you had a crystal ball at the time, are so minor it doesn't matter. Build a little flexibility into some areas if you just can't decide for sure on something immediately. You have too much going on right now to pefectly decide every last thing. You may also find trhat with money saved by not adding something to your home just because that's what you "should do" for "resale" may most likely leave a litte extra cash for something else that you truly want and would love. For me that thing was a 48 inch ruby red BlueStar range and a beautiful matching french style exhaust hood that actually does what it's supposed to do, and would otherwise have been out of reach financially (at least for a while). Boy do I enjoy this range! You say you may sell in the future. Build the house as if you were never planning to move. No one can predict the future and you may want to, or have to, stay in this house "forever". In other words, live in the moment, and do not borrow a cent more than you absolutely need. The interest, and the possibility of circumstances changing and making that loan a burden, are not worth it. I cannot emphasize that enough....See MoreMiele Laundry Survey
Comments (25)I LOVE my Electrolux units, as EVERYONE knows, LOL!!!!! but I always look at the Little Giant units from Miele. They are very expensive, but the build quality and materials are like nothing else!!! Our local Miele Showroom in Beverly Hills, CA has them on display and the routinely wash CA King sheets sets with 4 pillowcases, and they come out of the washer & dryer perfectly. They told us a Queen comforter or a King blanket is no problem for the Little Giants. What keeps me from pulling the trigger, is Miele discontinued the Little Giant vented dryer. Miele USA only!!! sells condenser dryers. Miele told me it only adds 10-20 mins to each cycle, but I am scared. I've used older Electrolux, Siemens and Miele condenser dryers in Sweden and Germany and the loads took 2 hours or more to dry! Miele claims this is no longer the case, but I do not know if they are lying!!! :-O...See MoreTon of laundry (wished you all lived close by)
Comments (30)Mamapinky: Cheryl with our timedifferense it takes me to the next day for me to get back to you al. I do on a dayly baisis take 4 different medicins for my neck pain just to be able to have some kind of a good life, I dont know if its good to be on these drugs but if i dont take them i am on bedrest. One of them is a morfine drug, so they are strong. I would not want this on anybody but I also kinda do not wanna be without this experience, I have learned alot but the hard way. Elcamino: thank you for thise kind words. It just fun to tell others about someting you love and that people like us here in this forum can relate to. There are a thread here that do show al of my laundryroom and I think all of the equipment I got, look for: http://ths.gardenweb.com/discussions/3340925/showing-my-laundryroom-in-sweden?n=19 I have noticed that it does seme that you in the US does not iron much, just fold stuff out of the dryer, I mostly hang dry , not that it does matter as I iron either way of drying decause I like the look and feel of the fabric after ironing or pressing or mangleing, and mangled sheet does keep clean for longer and does not dust as much. Other this is from pics and vids that you mostly underuse the capacity of you washers, I dont get that, do they not clean full loads? I can cram my miele eurowasher full and it all is clean. This need a nother tread here...See MoreShare your laundry center ideas and pictures :)
Comments (17)Enduring I am still useing it, I use it mostly for tablecloths, the weave in a good quality tablecloth has patterns that show very nicely when cold mangled and the fibers are pressed in a way that in sort of get a glossy surface. In my mind there is now better way to get tablecloths crease free and I also use it for sheets, up to Ikea dubble you can mangle. Maybe you remember that I have a Miele mangle as well, these to complement each other very well. There are youtube videos showing how to use different kind of mangles. The best mangle there are, are the old stone ones, one granitstone as a bottom and one on top with rolingpinns that you have rolled the fabric that needs mangleing on to, the high pressure that this type of mangle gives is the best and they were very common in Sweden starting from when Apartmentbuildings got loundryrooms....See More- 6 years ago
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