Home Improvements

05 September 2006

Getting Started - Vacuum Cleaning Your Carpet

To always maintain the look, feel, and appearance of your home carpet you'll need to vacuum on a regular basis. If you are new to vacuuming, you can use these tips to help you keeping your home clean.

Before you start, you should always inspect the house area. Pick up any large objects that could cause your vacuum cleaner to clog up. Smaller objects are fine, just as long as they can pass through the vacuum hose. You should check the vacuum bag to ensure that it is not full. If it is full, you should empty it change it. A full bag cannot suck up much dirt, as the suction power will be greatly reduced due to the bag taking up a great space thus limiting the suction process.

You should always be on the lookout for straw, thread, and string as it can trap debris in the vacuum hose and result in a clog. These types of hazards are also bad for the agitators as well, as they can clog up the suction as well, or get tangled up in the agitators and cause more problem or damage to your vacuum set.

You should vacuum forward instead of going backwards. Going forward will get you do the job quicker and you won't wear your cord out near as fast. When going backwards, you also run the risk of running back over your cord, which is something you don't want to do. Be sure to overlap your strokes to ensure that you get out all of the dirt and the residue. You don't want to miss any of the carpet, which is why it is important that you overlap your strokes.

You should change your vacuuming direction occasionnaly to reduce any type of matting in your carpet. Doing this every time you make a sweep on the carpet or every other time you vacuum will be good. On corners, use a damp cloth or a crevice tool attachment that hooks up to your vacuum cleaner. This will ensure that you get the corners and tight areas good, and they don't stand out from the rest of the carpet.

You can get rid of dust particles and dirt by waving a vacuum wand under your bed. Doing so on occasion will ensure that your bedroom stays clean, and smells clean too. For kitty litter on carpets or floors, you should use a lightweight vacuum cleaner. To get deep into the fibers of the carpet, you should try an upright vacuum cleaner with a power brush. Kitty litter can be a pain in the neck if it gets crushed in the pile or embedded, which is why you should get it out as quick as you can.

Give some thought to purchasing a vacuum cleaner with a rotating brush or combination beater and brush bar, which will loosen up the dirt in the carpet and then suck it out. This will beat the dirt from the fibers and even embedded dirt, which will leave your carpet clean and smelling great.

If you have pets, you should sprinkle some baking soda on the carpet before you vacuum. Let it sit for a little while, before vacuuming. The baking soda is a lot cheaper than carpet fresheners and it does the same thing - only better.

Vacuuming is very easy to do, and it's something that should be done on a regular basis. You don't have to be an expert to vacuum, all you have to do is make an effort. Your carpet will look good all the time, and your house will stay smelling great - which is reason enough to grab the vacuum and take a trip through the house with it.




(c) Khairul Azlan. Khairul Azlan gives you tips on Dyson, Eureka and Hoover Vacuum Cleaners and Other Vacuum Cleaners.

04 September 2006

How Not To Alienate Your Home Improvement Contractor

The following article was written by a contractor with 20 years of experience. Having contracted jobs from over two hundred homeowners in five different cities, his advice suggests some things that you can to do to prevent things like confusion and conflicts on the job. Although we never enter into an agreement believing things will go wrong or turn sour, things happen and have the potential of unnecessarily creating a bad working relationship. Hopefully the following hints will help you help your contractor do the best job that he or she can do.

1. Resist the urge to talk to your contractor about things that aren't related to the job. Because your hired contractor has so many things on his mind and a set deadline to meet, irrelevant chatter is nothing more than distracting and a waste of time. This doesn't mean that your contractor is a grouch or has no interest in you as a homeowner. In fact, some of the conversations that you have with him will shed some light on the problems that you're trying to solve with your home improvement project. But it really isn't necessary that he or she know where you graduated, or where you'll go on vacation five years from now. Conversations like these are better served at a time when your contractor is off the job, has a little time to spare, and is invited to your home as a guest - not an employee.

2. Don't tell your contractor how to do the job or offer to help. Even if you think what you have to offer or suggest is helpful, your contractor knows best. Contractors have spent years in trade school and years of training-on-the-job and they already know what they're doing - else they wouldn't be on the job. (We promise!) We don't believe you would like it if your boss or another co-worker (especially one without the skills that you have) told you how to do your job at work, would you? Nah! So please extend the same courtesy and trust that your contractor will fulfill your contract exactly as stated.

Besides, problems could occur if your contractor follows your advice or accepts your help - and you later discover that your advice is the cause of a failed installation. In a court situation, you could be found at fault for interfering. 3. Don't ask for more than what's contracted. If you discover that you'd like additional work, don't try to squeeze in more work than the labor that your contractor is already performing. You must remember that your contractor is only legally bound to perform the work outlined in your contract. Anything more requires another contract.

4. Be polite and extend the same courtesy to your contractor that you would extend to anyone else. Your home improvement contractor is not your servant (not that you should disrespect your servant either)! The point is that your behavior can affect the way that your contractor behaves toward you. And if you want to help to create a working environment that's pleasant to everyone involved, have respect for your contractor and the hard work that he's accomplishing. In return, you'll not only get a perfect job, you'll get an excellent resource for other work that you'd like to have done!




(c) Paul White. http://www.FloridaHomeBuild.com

03 September 2006

3 Tips To Pick The Right Living Room Furniture

While many people's living rooms look like a collection room at the Salvation Army, there are in fact reasons behind making living room furniture a collective design element, rather than a random showing of furniture.

The way that one sculpts pieces of clay into one static sculpture is the way we should look at living room furniture in terms of decorating. There are many reasons why living room furniture should be thought of in terms of sets, or relations to other pieces of furniture, none more obvious than the simple look of it.

When you have a bunch of furniture packed into a room, and if any, or all of it comes from a different location than the rest, the room is bound to look cluttered, and unorganized. Instead when it comes to living room furniture, make sure to buy in sets, or at least coordinate the colors of your living room furniture before installing them in the living room.

For those without an eye for design, or those that simply aren't interested in spending their time dealing with this issue, here are a few tips.

1) Always buy furniture that will last, like leather, and stay away from cheap furniture at all costs. Chances are if a furniture piece is cheap, you will get what you pay for, and it will break. If it breaks, the chance of you going back to find the exact shade of color that the furniture was is slim, to none. Thus, you will end up buying a replacement that most certainly won't match the rest of the set. Avoid this by purchasing only high quality furniture that has a warranty for replacement in case it breaks.

2) Another tip is to purchase neutral colors when it comes to your big ticket items like sofas, and easy chairs. Colors like beige, brown, and chestnut are easier to match to, than white, red, and yellow. The more toned down the furniture is in terms of color, the better off you will be to match the living room furniture with one, and other.

3) Finally always be sure to use living room furniture that comes in sets. If you purchase living room furniture set, typically a sofa, love seat, lounge chair, ottoman, and end table, you will be allowing the furniture company to do all the design, and matching for you. By purchasing in sets you don't have to worry about matching, since the furniture is made by the same company, in most likely the same color.




(c) Shrinivas Vaidya. Shrinivas Vaidya is the webmaster of http://www.livingroomdatabase.com. Visit today to get more free tips on living room furniture to decorate a beautiful and charming living room of your wildest dreams.

02 September 2006

Guide To Basement Bathroom Plumbing

Basement bathroom plumbing work needs considerable skill, experience and care. It is advisable to hire the services of a plumbing contractor for carrying out basement bathroom plumbing work. The existing floor needs to be busted and in the process drainpipes may also get broken if adequate safety measures are not taken up.

Basement bathroom plumbing procedure

Some concrete may need to be removed for installing basement bathroom plumbing system. The fixtures required for setting up basement bathroom plumbing - bathtub, one-piece shower unit etc. may not be easily obtainable. Special effort needs to be made to secure them.

Often, the concrete of the basement needs to be broken. Marks are made on the surface along some demarcations and the concrete is chipped away usually employing a jack hammer. The debris thus obtained has to be cleared and new plumbing pipes are well glued to the original setup. After completion the new setup has to be covered up with concrete.

Another approach to basement bathroom plumbing is installation of a plastic sump beneath the basement floor. A sewage ejector pump or lift pump is used to pump out the waste as the sump becomes full. The pumps have devices to grind solids. In case the pump fails the toilet will not be draining properly.

There may be some houses where the building drain lies below the basement level. So, no pump is needed. A plumber can help in this regard by providing various estimates of drain line locations and plumbing setup plans.

Again, there may be homes where the main drain lies at floor level. To help out in such cases you may build a false floor for the bathroom. Of course your ceiling needs to be high enough in such case. The false floor erection would ensure that the fixtures are higher than the sewer line. This will do away with the necessity of installing a sewage ejector pumping unit.

Basement bathroom plumbing - a special plumbing

Basement bathroom plumbing is a special kind of plumbing setup. Therefore, special care needs to be taken while proceeding with the installation, maintenance and repair or replacement of the basement bathroom plumbing system. If you are contemplating basement bathroom plumbing for your home then you may conveniently hire some competent plumber for helping out.




(c) Masni Rizal Mansor. Masni Rizal Mansor provide tips and review on basement bathroom plumbing, 12 volt appliances and kitchen cabinetry.




Read also 4 Tips For Your Patio Furniture Repair and Guide To Patio Furniture Cushion by the same author.

01 September 2006

Avoiding the Over Improved Home

Purchase real estate, make improvements to it and then sell for a tidy profit. That is how we are all told we can make a bundle in real estate, but it can lead to problems.

Avoiding the Over Improved Home

There are two basic rules in real estate. The first is you should buy in the right location. The second is do not buy the best house on the block. Instead, you should be a home that needs some work. If you then do the work, you will reap the benefits through increased equity when you sell the home. This is all true, but there is one caveat to the home improvement strategy. People often improve their home so much, they price themselves out of their market.

Assume you buy a property in a neighborhood where comparable homes sell for $350,000. You buy a beater home for $300,000. The goal in buying is to fix it up and gain the $50,000 when you ultimately sell it. This is a smart theory and sound financial strategy when you buy the home.

Let's assume you live in the home for six years. Immediately after buying, you improve those horrible bathrooms at a cost of $15,000. A year down the line, you simply have to have a bigger, better kitchen and spend $20,000 redoing it. In the fourth year, you find out you are going to have an addition to the family and spend another $20,000 adding a room to the home and upgrading facilities. In year five, your salary goes up and you decide marble flooring would look good in the entrance at the cost of another $15,000. You have now spent $70,000 on improvements for a market that will only support $50,000 in improvements. How are you going to get the money back when you sell?

When buying a fixer upper, it is important to put a plan together and stick to it. More importantly, it is vital that you create a budget and stick to it. This may all sound obvious, but this scenario plays out over and over in the residential real estate market.




(c) Raynor James. Raynor James is with the site - FSBO America - find home property values.