Coat closets? Thing of the past?
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Coat closet by the front door? A must?
Comments (33)We're in So Cal, and I will definitely miss my coat closet when we move. In the new place, we had to redo it, to get bigger closet for the guest room. But I insisted on having a space carved out of the entrance from the garage side. Will be narrower than a normal closet, but still much better than nothing. I also plan to use a double hook next to the front door-just for a random guest or a couple..:) It's a vintage hook, a very quirky one. So I hope it will look cool, whether in use or not. Even it being So Cal and all-I can count on my fingers the evenings when I didn't need a light jacket. Evenings are chillier when closer to the ocean..as hot as it can get during daytime, I always know to take layers with me, because it will be totally different after the sunset....See MoreIs a laundry room not connected to master a thing of the past?
Comments (40)There are pros and cons to each laundry room location. It depends what will work for you. Deciding on location of the laundry is an exercise in problem solving. You decide on a number of problem variables and then look for the solution by iterating various locations. A list of questions to consider: Do you mind walking extra? For example, I decided that I want to build in walking into my house taking consideration that we are deprived of movement in an immobilizing automobile culture. Yet the idea of taking clothes off right where you launder them close to the bedroom, washing them, folding them, and putting them away right there is very appealing. There is a lot more convenience then walking from an area far far away. How disciplined you are to move laundry from place to place? Do you dry your clothes in the dryer or will you be using a clothesline? If a clothesline is a potential, proximity to an exit is an important consideration. Do you work outside a lot? If you do, would you prefer to take dirty clothes off just as your enter the house? What time of day do you usually do the laundry? If you do it outside of sleeping hours, closer to the bedroom may not be an issue at all. Do you spend a lot of time at home? Or do you mostly work outside of home? Where you spend most of your time may affect your laundry patterns. If you stay at home and do laundry as you go about your business during the day, you may encounter extra walking to the bedroom area to check on your wash. Do you do a lot of handwashing that requires air drying? Do you iron a lot? If yes, how will your laundry, storing, dressing cycle be affected - where will you place an ironing board? Will you want duplicate ironing boards and irons? What is the chance of forgetting laundry if it is not in the high traffic area at the time of you doing laundry? Who does the laundry MOST of the time? Is privacy an issue? You can add your questions and considerations and weigh out what is important....See MoreOT.....things of the past which were a common part of your life
Comments (140)I was born in the mid-60s and grew up in small town mid-America. When I was little I shared a bedroom with my brother and sister. I only got my own room when everyone moved to college or moved out of my parents' house (I was the youngest). We didn't have air-conditioning. On hot summer nights, we slept with the windows open and a fan running. We didn't have cable tv. We had an antenna and could only tune in two stations (ABC and NBC) on a black & white Zenith. My parents didn't get a color tv until I was in college. My parents had a party telephone line that we shared with a neighbor. We owned a rotary phone. My mom sewed a lot of our clothes on a Pfaff sewing machine. I remember going to the fabric store to pick out patterns and materials. I learned to type on an old Royal Typewriter that was probably made in the 40s. My mom had a Christmas list and typed her letters to go in each card. I collected the Christmas cards we received and kept them in a special purse, and played with them. I also remember playing with vintage paper dolls and failing miserably to make new clothes for them. We had one of those old refrigerators that was difficult to open (what do they call those latches that old refrigerators had?). My mom got milk and eggs fresh from the farm until I was 6 or 7 years old. We rode in the car without seatbelts, and rode our bikes without helmets. We spent a great deal of time playing outdoors and roaming the neighborhood with no supervision. Everyone knew everyone in our small little town. We didn't always lock our doors. It wasn't really necessary. I remember listening to music on my brother's 8-track player. We had a car with an 8-track, too. Albums were around, of course, but then it was cassette tapes which were replaced by CDs. My husband and I still have many of our old cassettes. In the summer we went to the drive-in movie theatre. Before the digital age, I would buy maps whenever we went on a trip and kept them for future use or as keepsakes if it was a place we probably wouldn't visit again. It's been a long time since I've posted here. Thanks for the trip down memory lane!...See MoreThings you can't buy anymore: 100% wool coat
Comments (17)LL Bean, Peruvian Connection, Talbot's and Garnet Hill all have 100% wool coats, so do the better department stores, at least in the northeast, but really, check your local thrift shops, I have (hangs head in shame) about 10 winter coats from thrift shops, all good brands; Pendalton, Lord & Taylor, Woolrich, J. Crew, department store brands and a J. Peterman (remember their wacky catalogs? lovely coat tho), some are truly vintage, some just used. You likely aren't going to get Chanel or Hermes level stuff t, but sturdy, warm and stylish coats can be had at local thrift shops, my favorite haunt charges $5 for coats, which makes them hard to resist....See MoreRelated Professionals
Hockessin Architects & Building Designers · Flint General Contractors · Marinette General Contractors · Mountain View General Contractors · River Forest General Contractors · Roselle General Contractors · Sulphur General Contractors · Newton Furniture & Accessories · Encinitas Furniture & Accessories · Mount Sinai Interior Designers & Decorators · Panama City Beach Architects & Building Designers · Bonita Home Builders · Highland Village Home Builders · Danville Professional Organizers · Hialeah Professional Organizers- last month
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