Your biggest splurge...and the answer is....
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Comments (22)cybersecretary: it was obvious i was starting to make biscuits..and he still put the mail on the clean cutting board i use to roll the dough. Is there a trend for what gets set there? Can you establish some other place that those things can be officially "set down," that's on his pathway through the room but NOT the table? The thing my husband wouldn't do that nearly destroyed our marriage (truth, I'm not kidding; I'm still working through the mental and emotional damage it did) is that he wouldn't hang up my work T-shirts, work shirts, work pants, work tops when they came out of the dryer. (He's home during the day and did the laundry.) He'd dump it all in the laundry basket, and it would get wrinkled. I tried everything, verbally. I tried mentioning it. I tried a heart-to-heart in which I pointed out that it was becoming emotionally damaging; I was in a rough place at work, and I needed support, and words weren't enough; unwrinkled work clothes were. (in your case, I'd have been trying to say, "this is a matter of respect, actually--I feel that you are -refusing- to acknowledge that I even exist in the room! You want to do what you want, and I don't even impinge on your consciousness; I'm just an object like a chair or something, not a living, breathing, pie-crust-rolling human whose activities are of interest to you." He was better, he really was, for two rounds of laundry. I finally decided I would like to stay married, and I went a bought my own hamper and do my own laundry. He *might* have been better at it if he hadn't had to make the extra step of remembering to get the hangers out of the closet. Maybe. So, if you can find a logistical way to solve the problem, that would help. But the other person has to care enough to think about it....See MoreWhat is the biggest reason you went to a big box store?
Comments (32)I take forever to do most things, especially when spending money, since I only want to do them once with no regrets. I met a gal from a local kitchen place at a building show, and made an appointment with her to discuss the kitchen for my new house. It became very apparent that she wanted to zip through everything, and she was on a commission. I had an appointment with a kitchen designer at the lumber yard we used in our build (professional, but not very personal), and spent some time in a couple of other local kitchen design businesses (one never got back to me, and the other wouldn't let me look at the cabinet catalog on my own). I then went to HD, where I could make as many appointments as I needed to make up my mind, get printouts of the design and a detailed price list of every item every time, and I never felt rushed. We'd used a different HD for an earlier kitchen remodel (I had to keep checking the order, since at the time their old computer design program had some defaults it kept throwing in--also, the gal kept getting interrupted because she had to answer the phone several times, so that probably caused some of the mistakes). But answering the phone seemed to cause interruptions for kitchen designers in every place. My son used a 3rd HD when I helped him remodel his kitchen, but he used a local flooring place nearby. In all 3 Detroit metro HDs (and a Lowes), I'd spent a fair amount of time wandering around the kitchen department overhearing the salespeople working with other customers, So I knew who the knowledgable salespeople were when I got ready to choose the ones for us. Long after each kitchen was finished, these salespeople would still stop and have a brief friendly conversation when I was in their HD. At the non-HD places, I don't think anyone would have recognized or acknowledged me again, because they were always too busy. It may sound odd, but my 3 big box people seemed more neighborly (not a requirement for a kitchen designer, but nice nonetheless!), in spite of what you might expect to be an impersonal large store. We got all of our appliances at HD, because they were the only place that had the new GE induction cooktop to look at when it first came out (I never did see it at our local high end appliance stores), and we got a great price on it, plus a GE discount on the rest of the Profile package. We did use 2 different local businesses for our countertops, since both had been recommended by people we knew, and they both had lots of choices that the big boxes didn't have. We used a local flooring place, because they had choices of every cork manufacturer, and let me bring as many samples home as I wanted to! No other store could match this. They cost more, but we were willing to pay for the service I'd gotten. Bought the door/drawer pulls at Restoration Hardware. Bought the tile from local stores. So, in a nutshell, I looked at everything every place, but choice, service, price clarity, and the ability to take my time and look at everything, comfortably without feeling like I was using a salesperson's precious time, determined where I bought all of my kitchen things. Anne...See MoreRevisiting, what is the biggest and most double zinnia?
Comments (22)Thanks amberroses for the prayers. I did have a good reason to plant red rather than orange. One thing I was concerned about was the possibility of an overload of orange along my highway. I gave seeds to a BUNCH of passing motorists last summer (and fall & this winter.) Who knows where they all live. I did have an even more compelling reason too, but for the life of me can't recall what that was at the moment. (Houzz never notified me about your reply, so I'm caught a little off guard.) Thinking about is odd because the O. Kings were so successful & Orange is a favorite color of mine! Perhaps it was only that I just had the urge for something different after 2 years of Orange. I definitely urge you to try O. King. I believe if you google "orange king zinnia seeds" and "free shipping", you'll find the same great bargain I got. Zen-I'll likely still be starting some seeds indoors again despite no apparent advantage. I just adore growing things and this recent warm spell has me chomping at the bit. For sure, I'll start some quick ripening mater varieties around St. Patty's day; however, I fear that won't completely satiate my urge to grow some things. I guess I'll just have to wing it on the placement of the California Giants and the Benary's. I wouldn't know where else to look to find out which is tallest. My main flowerbed is actually a large even mound. That should help me deal with the height issue if it's no TOO great. I got 4 new large beds started so far this winter at the back of my property. The hardest work is done. They'll be partially shaded from 3 PM on. But hey! I certainly have plenty of seeds & I think that'll be enough sun to trail some other combinations. So far, my Zinnias have required little real work once they're established. Even weeds cease to be a problem if I keep after them for the first month. dowlinggram-I had orange Magellan 2 summers ago and did like them, a lot! However, they were not nearly as showy from the road as the Orange King were. Last week my Snowdrops started blooming in mass and last night I started watering and slightly warming my Bonfire Begonia tubers in their hanging planters. It's getting more officially spring like every day! Maybe the groundhog wasn't completely right about the number of winter weeks left. : )...See MoreWhat’s your biggest design dilemma?
Comments (38)Here are a few design issues I see frequently: Failing to see the big picture: Mixing older warm tones with the newer (but now passing possibly) cool tones. Example - someone puts a cool tone floor in a warm kitchen - or a cool kitchen in a warm toned home - they have made a big investment and now it does not look right. Another example, glass mosaic backsplash - pretty in a 12 x 12 sheet, but overwhelming when installed and often the wrong colors for the kitchen. Taking out or ruining a traditional timeless element and replacing with a trendy element - Exp: painting a traditional brick fireplace jailhouse gray. People who think - possibly due to poor info given on places like HGTV - that they can remodel their kitchen before they put their home on the market and get their money back and more. Clutter. Often see people considering a remodel to make a kitchen bigger when it is plenty big, just the space is poorly utilized. Failing to see the details. For example, the inspiration photo of a white kitchen that has a pretty hood, a couple of glass doors, pretty millwork - and the person paints their ordinary old cabinets white and wonders why it doesn't look like the white kitchen inspiration pic. Changing things up to realize what they think their kitchen "should" look like rather then exploring what really makes them smile....See MoreRelated Professionals
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