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| 2. Take "before" photos. In fact, take lots of photos throughout the process. When you feel motivation beginning to falter, take a look at pictures from early on in the process to remind yourself just how far you have come. |
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| 3. Start a blog. Just like many diet and exercise programs recommend sharing your plans with supportive friends and family members, I advocate starting a blog as a way of holding yourself accountable during the renovation process. After a rough day, when nothing went as planned, at least you can vent your frustrations in a blog post and get kind words of support in return from readers all over the world. They did it: Sherry and John started their blog Young House Love while they were fixing up their first home, and it is now a wildly popular and award-winning site that attracts many visitors each day. Now they are even writing their own home improvement book. Realistically, most of us won't become the next Young House Love, but starting a blog can still be a worthwhile project and documentation of your home progress. |
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| 5. Schedule your renovation in stages. During an extensive renovation, be smart about the order you work on things if you are staying in the house at the same time. Work to finish bedrooms and a bathroom first, so you can have a comfortable area to live in while other changes are going on. |
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by Holly Marder
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| 7. Help the pros by doing your job: Be decisive. Yes, contractors, architects and designers can sometimes go beyond the original schedule, but each time you change your mind or put off key decisions, know that the process will take that much longer. The best thing you can do to speed progress is to maintain a clear vision of what you want and communicate it clearly to all of those involved in the project. |
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by decordemon
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| 9. Pitch in and do some work yourself. Even if you've hired pros to do the bulk of your renovation, consider taking on a small DIY project of your own. Using your own hands to pitch in and improve your home can be incredibly satisfying. |
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| 12. Remind yourself why you are doing this ... Clicking through your inspiration photos is a great way to get juiced up about your project all over again. You can also try simply closing your eyes and visualizing your home project completed, vividly imagining every little detail, and how wonderful it will feel to have it all done. ... and know when to get out of town. Of course there are times when it's best to admit it's time for a break. When the entire house in in utter disarray, taking a spontaneous weekend getaway can be just what the doctor ordered. Need help with a home project? Ask the Houzz community See more remodeling ideas and guides More: 8 Ways to Stick to Your Budget Diary of a Ranch Remodel |
Science has solved the mystery of the swallows leaving Capistrano and salmon swimming out to sea. We know why bears hybernate and caterpillars retreat into their cocoons. But I have never been able to find out why workmen rip out your whole bathroom, for example, leaving dust and filth and nothing but a nasty hole in the floor, and then disappear for a few weeks, at least, without a word of explanation. One day, after much noise and filth and destruction, they go home and just don't come back. The next day you wake up to a silence like the silence after some huge nuclear disaster, limited to your kitchen, bathroom or other vital living space.
Is it because at heart they are sensitive artists, and all that brutal destruction is just too much strain on their delicate nerves and they have to go on holiday or into therapy for awhile to recover enough strength to come back and complete the job? Is it caprice? Do they just want to be loved and wanted, and are waiting for you to phone them and leave messages (they don't pick up, of course) coaxing and pleading and begging and bribing them to return? Or is it just some mysterious instinct that makes them go into hybernation after they demolish something, before they can put it back into livable condition?
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