What Type Of Fans Do Interior Designers Seek For?

Rooms up to 75 square feet should have a fan size of 29 inch to 36 inch, medium sized rooms up to 144 square feet should have a fan size of 36 inch to 42 inch, and larger rooms up to 225 square feet should have a fan size of 50 inches to 54 inches. For larger rooms, look for at least 60 inches or consider using two fans.

Choosing the right ceiling fan can make a dramatic impact on your home’s aesthetics, whether you’re into something simple or ornate, need something for small spaces or a funky ceiling height. Find stylish, designer-approved indoor, outdoor, and bladeless ceiling fans to cool off your home in summer and help lower your energy bills all year.

Experts offer tips on how to choose a ceiling fan, including determining the right size and optimal hanging distance from the ceiling. Designer fans can be the centerpieces around which the interior decor of a space is designed, and most interior designers and homeowners prefer to use them.

When choosing a fan, ensure that it has the correct drop height, which refers to how far down the fan comes from the ceiling. For rooms up to 300 square feet in a super big room, a fan between 52 and 56 inches in diameter is recommended.

The finish of ceiling fans should relate to the lighting fixtures and hardware within each room, and the fan should provide adequate airflow and features like remote control operation, reversible motor, and energy-efficient operation.

Looking at the larger picture is the best way to ensure a fancy ceiling fan blends in with the rest of the decor in your room. Ceiling fans come in various sizes, heights, styles, and colors, and choosing the right size fan for your space ensures it will provide efficient air flow. Aesthetically, ceiling fans may not match a room’s overall design and could obstruct interesting ceiling features.


📹 10 REASONS YOUR HOME LOOKS DATED | INTERIOR DESIGN MISTAKES

10 REASONS YOUR HOME LOOKS DATED | INTERIOR DESIGN MISTAKES Interior Designer: Kristen McGowan In this video I …


Are ceiling fans outdated in 2024?

This year 2024 is referred to as the era of ceiling fans, as they are gaining popularity due to their functionality and style. The roots of ceiling fans can be traced back to 17th-century India, when the first-ever fan, known as a “punkah”, was crafted from palm trees and suspended from the ceiling. This fan was manually operated by servants and was a significant advancement in the design and functionality of ceiling fans. As we enter the new year, it’s essential to consider both style and efficiency when choosing ceiling fans.

How do I choose a good house fan?
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How do I choose a good house fan?

This ceiling fan buying guide is designed to help fans choose the right fan for their space and budget. It covers various factors such as location, fan size, style, fan type, control method, airflow/efficiency, and budget. Hunter ceiling fans are designed with whisper-quiet motors and high-performance features to ensure maximum airflow. Whether you’re upgrading a fan in a single room, renovating your entire home, or installing a new fan into a commercial property, this guide can help you make an informed decision.

The guide includes deciding on a fan’s location, fan size, fan style, fan type, control method, airflow/efficiency, and budget. Hunter fans are designed to provide cooling and decorative touches, making them an essential part of any room. The guide is designed to help fans make informed decisions about their fan’s size, style, and control method.

How can I impress an interior designer?
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How can I impress an interior designer?

To impress interior decorators, it’s essential to showcase your creativity and unique ideas. Design professionals expect fresh ideas from interior decorators, and sharing your unique ideas can show initiative, interest, and expertise. Your certification will prepare you for this situation, as you’ll need a good sense of style for different rooms and a feel for different trends.

To showcase your design experience, polish up your portfolio by showcasing your work on rooms in your home and taking before and after shots of rooms that needed a facelift or new paint job. If you attended a design school, use some of your course work to enhance your showcase. This will help you demonstrate your skills and provide a strong foundation for your future career.

How do interior designers attract customers?

Social media platforms like Instagram, Pinterest, and Houzz can help attract clients through visual content. Create a consistent aesthetic and brand message on your profiles to reinforce your brand identity. Real-time feedback can help identify trends, improve services, and build client relationships. Collaborating with other professionals in the interior design industry can expand your network, learn from others, and potentially bring in new clients.

What are clients looking for in an interior designer?

The client’s needs are based on price, portfolio, personality, and personalization. To attract new clients, consider these elements and tailor your services accordingly. It’s crucial not to compromise on the value of your work, individual aesthetic, or personality. Be proactive in each step and demonstrate that you are the only professional capable of delivering what your client is seeking.

Should all fans be in a house match?

Ceiling fans are a significant feature in a home, making them a visually appealing addition. They complement the room’s design and can be matched with different fan styles to enhance the home’s aesthetic appeal. Choosing the ideal fan is not a significant task, but it reflects the well-balancedness of your home and plays a crucial role in daily life. Hence, it’s essential to choose fans that complement the room’s aesthetics and design.

Do people still put ceiling fans in bedrooms?
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Do people still put ceiling fans in bedrooms?

Ceiling fans are a popular addition to many rooms in the home, especially in the bedroom, where most of our time is spent sleeping. They provide comfort control by circulating air, which can make the room feel more comfortable. When air is stagnant, the bedroom feels stuffy and uncomfortable. A ceiling fan pushes that stagnant air through the room, creating a more comfortable space. There are three reasons to browse ceiling fans for sale and find the perfect addition to your bedroom:

  1. Comfort control: Ceiling fans help regulate the temperature in the room, ensuring a comfortable sleep environment.
  2. Air circulation: Ceiling fans circulate air, preventing stagnant air from settling in the room, ensuring a cool and comfortable environment.

What do designers think of ceiling fans?

Ceiling fans can be a practical but not aesthetically pleasing addition to a room’s design, as they can obstruct interesting ceiling features and require more effort to clean than floor standing fans. Some older designs have five blades, making the space appear like a helicopter. Floor standing fans can be easily cleaned by removing the blades. However, ceiling fans require more effort to maintain due to their height and size, and a ladder is often needed.

Additionally, ceiling fans situated beneath a light source can produce a strobe light effect, disrupting the tranquility of a space. Designers must skirt around the fan to avoid casting a beam of light into the fan’s blade, which may be unavoidable in small rooms where changing the lights is impossible.

How to match a ceiling fan to a room?
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How to match a ceiling fan to a room?

To choose the right ceiling fan for your room, consider your decor, color scheme, material, and lighting integration. Consider the existing color scheme and finishes, such as paint on walls and furniture. Choose a color that complements your existing palette for a cohesive look, like a wood-tone fan for warm tones like brown and beige. Consider the materials used in your room and how the fan’s finish can tie them together.

For example, a brushed nickel fan might be perfect for chrome accents, while a weathered wood fan would create a harmonious look for a rustic room with exposed beams. If your fan includes a light kit, consider the bulb type and how it will impact the overall feel.

When deciding whether to match ceiling fan blades with the floor color, consider aesthetics, cohesion, and style. Matching fan blades with the floor can create a seamless, cohesive look and elegant design, but may result in a lack of contrast and a potentially bland appearance.

What rooms should have ceiling fans?

Ceiling fans are a great way to cool down your home, especially in Florida. They are particularly beneficial in areas where people spend most time, such as the living room, bedrooms, and home offices. They circulate cool air during sleep, improving your overall well-being. However, it’s important to note that ceiling fans don’t actually cool air but rather create a cooling effect through the wind they create. If a person isn’t in the room to enjoy the chilling breeze, the fan may not be as effective. Here are some tips on when to run ceiling fans in your home.

What is the most optimal fan design?
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What is the most optimal fan design?

High-efficiency centrifugal fans employ either airfoil or backward-curved impeller blades. Airfoil blades exhibit an airfoil shape, whereas backward-curved blades are single-thick metal blades.


📹 How to select the Ceiling fan color? l Interior Design l 1 minute talk on Interiors with Shivangi

You are spoilt with choices when it comes to the selection of ceiling fans. and with the immense variety, there comes the confusion …


What Type Of Fans Do Interior Designers Seek For?
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Rafaela Priori Gutler

Hi, I’m Rafaela Priori Gutler, a passionate interior designer and DIY enthusiast. I love transforming spaces into beautiful, functional havens through creative decor and practical advice. Whether it’s a small DIY project or a full home makeover, I’m here to share my tips, tricks, and inspiration to help you design the space of your dreams. Let’s make your home as unique as you are!

Email: [email protected], [email protected]

About me

56 comments

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  • WARNING: NEVER paint your tile!!! It will become a nightmare. There are companies that you can hire to come in a coat your tile with a longer lasting paint – BUT it WILL also become a nightmare!!! Just save your money and get it done correctly by replacing with a quartz type product. I manage apartment buildings and have seen this mistake over and over and over again.

  • Word phrase wall art is not just for decorating, it can also be to uplift ones day. I enjoy seeing mine, it makes me happy and reminds me to have positive days. I started purchasing mine last year during the pandemic to help my moods and I still love them. Also I think white appliances is coming back in style. Its not my choice but I think it can look nice if remodeled kitchen blends with it.

  • We recently had a professional remove our popcorn ceiling and it was not easy or fast. It was a huge mess and I’m glad we did this before moving our furniture in. This is an extreme undertaking when doing an entire home and it’s especially hard if your home is really old, or the ceilings have previously been painted. However, it’s an interior update “game-changer” and I definitely recommend it.

  • No way! I had the back splash that you showed and I paid too much money to have it installed And if I updated it to what you showed it will be outdated in a few years also. lol I do agree with you on the white appliances, popcorn ceilings, title on counter tops, blinds, mirrors on closet doors, and ceiling fans. I also think it’s tacky to put all those magnets on appliances. lol

  • My husband scraped all of the popcorn ceiling from our whole new home, upstairs and down before we moved in and I am so grateful. It makes a huge difference! It was hard though; he had to research well and he did it alone since we have a baby and I couldn’t really help him (except one day!) But man it looks so much better. We also got rid of a lot of blinds and replaced with just modern curtains/rods, though I still have verticals in my sunroom–this inspires me to get rid of them! Also I’d like to change up our ceiling fans which do look dated as well–I changed out the globes but I’m thinking of painting them black now too. I have another thing for your list though!! Gold interior doorknobs. Not nice modern gold ones but the plain little round 80s style bright shiny yellow gold ones. We are looking to replace those haha!

  • Kristen, I’m changing out my old vertical blinds, including my sliding glass door to the patio. What do you think about white plantation shutters? Are they considered dated? I would also like to put up long curtains along the side the shutters for a more appealing look in my living and dining areas. By the way, I just discovered your website today and love it!!! ❤️😊

  • All great!! I have Electrolux stainless steel appliances…they look so grand! I have a 4 bedroom home & two of the bedrooms have sliding closet mirrors…I would love to change them out. I was never into “wall words” & in the past 10 yrs we bought wide blade ceiling fans with one large light, remodeled/custom made our kitchen. Thanks for the tips!

  • I appreciate these articles and the creator’s eye and knowledge for interior design. I inherited my home and it was built in 76. And perusal these articles have a way of making me feel like my home is not pretty and that’s sad bc my home was a gift. My home has every one of the dated looks or designs listed in this article. My financial situation is tight and has been for a couple of years. So what do I do? I want my two pre-teen kids to be proud of our home. Anyway, I posted this only bc I know I’m not the only person that watches articles like this one and start to feel a little down about what we do have. Maybe we can be given a few hints of some $500 or less room enhancements. I would love a article like that, please

  • Actually, as my appliances break down, I am going to replace them with white! I think I will always like that look & prefer that to the stainless steel look. I have a moderate size kitchen & the floor plan make it look dark & gloomy. I am staying w/light colors & white. When I can afford it, I am going to change out the floor tiles for lighter color!

  • I absolutely want to change my kitchen cabinets. I’ve seen articles on how to paint them. The process seems long and tedious but I know it would be worth it! I’ll also be purchasing those hide-away hinges to help with the final look. What do you think about 2 color cabinets? Like white on top and brown in bottom? I’ve seen some of those in some articles.

  • The only thing I disagree with you on are the mirrors in the master bathrooms. That expanse of uninterrupted ( by frames or walls) mirror space gives the room a larger feel and who doesn’t like to see themselves from more than one angle? I’m having a new house built in AZ and so have been getting up to speed on this subject and many of the model homes I’ve visited are still using this type of mirror and it still looks current…I would even say classic. Of course the framed mirrors are a lot of fun so I will be choosing something more exciting for my powder rom and maybe will have some fun with wallpaper in there too!

  • Hi Kristen! Yes, it’s really easy to rip up carpet. Super fun too! You’ll definitely want a crowbar, or something to help rip up the tacks, and maybe a sharp utility knife. When I was about 18 or 19 our family cat had a urination problem and my family kept complaining about it and for months would talk about removing the carpet altogether. One day I got so tired of them talking about it, I ripped up the entire living room carpet all myself while everyone else was as work. Looking back on it now, I really should’ve gotten in more trouble than I did, but I did save them a bunch of work.

  • Comment by Carmencita: Decorating your home is a very personal matter. Without being completely crazy, just decorate with things that you like and that have a meaning to you. If you go for the latest fad of decorations, your home will always be “date” to somebody else’s taste. Classic pieces which harmonize and look and are comfortable, soft colors, with a few pieces which brighten your room, will be the best choice.

  • ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Great article plus advice. One other item that happens to be in our guestroom bathroom is the “Avocado green toilet, bathtub, & sink. We thought that we could paint them but as we speak they are being removed and a couple that likes them are taking them to their country home. Stay Hydrated & Cool this summer… Abrazos

  • I really want to swap out my mirrored closet doors. And my interior doors. My husband isn’t convinced but….. we had roofing problems so when I’m certain that’s all fixed, the rooms with the popcorn ceilings need to be done. You mentioned white appliances but I’m seeing some gorgeous very high end white appliances now.

  • You’re showing your inexperience- do you realized what’s involved in changing cabinet hinges to hidden hinges? Popcorn ceilings- how many have you actually removed? Just bringing up 2, there were quite a few. I watch all your articles but I think you’re starting to bite off more than your ready to chew. The best of luck. I’ll be cheering you on!

  • Sometimes high end vertical blind sheers are the best solution for a tiny townhouse sliding glass door. I had drapes and when I removed them my place looked instantly bigger and brighter. I’m not looking back. I agree with your other suggestions. Although I like the look, I wonder how long it will take for the weathered kitchen tiles to go out of date.

  • As much as I tried to make my place look nice, my last rental had those vertical blinds and they just screamed louder than anything else (and the turquoise stone and brass fire place). I didn’t bother changing anything because it was a temporary cheaper rental so I could save to buy my own place. I don’t miss those blinds!

  • My husband bought his/our house before we met & being a guy… Ya, didn’t really care about the ‘aesthetics’ but me being an interior design graduate & a Virgo… Ya, notice right away! VERTICLE BLINDS! Ranch house with kitchen/dining room combined, small area for the table but even though they were white against nearly white walls, those verticle blinds made the space look so much smaller than it really was! Those were the first things I took down & replaced with thin/light white sheers then painted the walls a warm/buttery banana cream… Just those two things alone made it look twice as big!

  • How does one update their husband’s taste in decor??😭 We bought a log home and the previous owners did a uniform colour throughout the main floor. EVERYTHING is the same shade of brown, and my husband thinks it’s great. It’s gawdawful and he won’t budge on it. Any tips on helping him to see the error of his taste?? 😆

  • That ubiquitous skinny glass tile backsplash; Even at the time I said “this is not going to age well.” This is always the case when something is “too popular” as this was. It’s the difference between fad and style. I actually had a friend that had done his and offered to give me enough of his leftover pieces which would do my small kitchen, and I politely declined. Really dodged a bullet there lol

  • Love your website. I’ll need to agree to disagree about the word art. it’s very subjective. I have a plaque with family values of love, respect,telling the truth, keeping a promise and forgiveness that I picked out with my girls and we’ve had to remind each other to abide by those values… sweet teachable moments. 💗💗

  • We’re currently doing a Reno on my parents basement rec room- turning it into a living space for my hubby and myself. The carpets down there have been there for almost 40 years! Yes brown and orange was THE colour scheme back then cringe It’s a super heavy job, but the big part of the work is scraping the foam rubber carpet backing off the concrete

  • I think saying a mosaic glass backsplash makes a house look dated is too generic and simplistic a statement. There are so many options constantly being introduced from different sizes, shapes, finishes,subtle textures etc. I also think this article is very optimistic about how easy some of these projects are. A lot of the information in this article does not seem well researched

  • I don’t have any of these things in my home but I do have a hundred or so things that other websites have listed: plants, lol whatever, I love them! Thank you, though for mentioning word “art” plastered everywhere. I abhor this & there’s a reason you see endless plaques & other wall hangings in thrift stores & garage sales.

  • Having recently been in the market and purchased appliances, you still see the white, black and stainless options everywhere. The only difference is that stainless is integrating black in to the look, like a stainless range with a black door or a black microwave with a stainless door. So to be more updated, its a black/stainless look imo.

  • Your articles are always informative and enjoyable. But here is something just for jiggles. My house was built shortly after the end of WWII and its furnishings are appropriate for the age of the house. With sympathic changes made in the kitchen and bath. It always has first time visitors speechless. Looking forward to seeing your office transformation.

  • Hi Kristen, I recently discovered your informative website. Interior of my new home was recently painted a warm creamy white, and looks great, along with replaced warm neutral colored wall-to-wall carpeting in living, and bedrooms/closets. Having a great time decorating with art and colored accessories. My challenge: kitchen has all black appliances – refrigerator, stove, microwave, dishwasher; all are in good working order and it’s not in the budget to replace. What suggestions do you have about black appliances? Thank you!

  • Or…. Whatever you love in your home is what you should invest in regardless of the look. There is a positive and a negative to whatever goes in a home from granite or quartz counter tops. If you are paying the mortgage, rent or land contract…. You buy that couch, tile, carpet, fan, shower, appliances, you want and like. What’s so called dated today will be an antique in years to come!!!!! Well, maybe not a floor model tv, but you get what I’m saying….

  • Hi there Kristen, I love my Vertical blinds, but have added Sheers & Drapes over the blinds, therefore I can see clearly outside & noone can see inside & getting my Sunshine. I also change my sheers & drapes every 3mos to be washed & chg to the Season colors. My home is my Happy place, of course being retired makes my joy!

  • Omg I have too many ! I’ve had my house for 10 years, I think big Two three things for me are the vertical blinds, kitchen backsplash and bisque appliances . Can you do a article on flooring… I have old 80s tile … think that might be my next project, just don’t know what type of floor to get for this house.

  • When I moved into my house and bought my appliances,!I struggled with the appliances because I do not like stainless steel ! I went with black textured! After the black refrig died I went with stainless still can’t stand them ! They remind me of commercial appliances. White is still my fav but does look outdated!

  • I agree with most of these, however I do have vertical blinds, used to be on every window, now they are just on the sliding door to the garden as they are practical with kids, slide them back and the doors wide open! Now we have white Venetian thick slat blinds almost like shutters, that look soo much better than the verticals on the rest 👍🏼

  • Boob lights, laminate countertops, floral bells for my wood ceiling fans. These are some great design ideas, some of which are budget breaking, but some of it can be done inexpensively. The most difficult thing I have to deal with is the design of my living room. I have a fireplace on one wall, big windows on another, and the third wall has the big AC intake vent. It’s open to the kitchen/dining area and my wife doesn’t want to let anything block the flow from the kitchen and make it closed off from the rest of the house. It’s not easy to figure out a layout that works.

  • Not everyone likes ultra modern homes and furnishings those “updated” ceiling fans look good in. I’m living in the south and have a ceiling fan in every room. Nothing says DIY like stainless steel paint on your appliances. That’s right up there with contact paper on your counter tops and decorative toilet rolls for hiding electrical cords. There’s a few more clinkers in here as well.

  • I happen to think the Stainless look is bad looking. I will take black any day. I have had white before, but the texture gets real grimy. Those hinges are more likely to break in my experience. Stick with what is durable. I grew up in houses that had Olive green bathroom fixtures. I just don’t let my surrounding bother me. I have lived in the same room for 10 years and only rearranged any furniture 1 time. No repainting. The one wall wood paneling still there. The fan shaped plaster ceiling texture still there. I am not a OCD person that thinks happiness comes from switching living space appearance on a whim. I think all those wasteful house flippers that gut a whole house and redo it based on their own narrow minded likes will often have all that work destroyed by the buyers. To suit their narrow minded likes. See how wasteful that is. In the end nothing is outdated if a person finds it useful, and it isn’t broken beyond repair.

  • Really like Kristen. Great personality and easy to look at and think she’s really talented. But sweetie you missed it on 1. Paint your tile 2. White appliances 3. Popcorn ceiling removal, yes it needs to go but removing it yourself? I had it done professionally. I’m thinking: If they made prisoners do it the Civil Liberties guys would be after them for cruel and unusual punishment.

  • No stainless steel, thank you. It’s as “out” as those cheesy interior barn doors you see everywhere. People are finally realizing stainless steel always look dirty — fingerprints, etc., not to mention the fact that they are very “ordinary.” People should be encouraged to show some imagination — or at least some originality, rather than having the same general look from house to house. Thank you for mentioning the signs. The time for that trend to be over couldn’t come soon enough for me. If your popcorn ceiling is freshly painted white, I don’t think it’s a deal-breaker. It’s a messy, time-consuming and expensive proposition to re-do it, and probably not a priority, compared to other things that make a bigger difference

  • Thanks Kristen. I like nearly all your ideas except: in my Craftsman-era kitchen, I have painted white custom cabinets with black pulls and place hinges. Countertops were laminate, refinished in a matte faux grey granite. And yes, my fridge is white! The kitchen update that makes for a classic, clean look that fits a vintage home. To your list, I would had: overstuffed puffy/bulky recliners and sofas. People like them b/c they’re comfy but….they are so ugly.

  • I like the most kitchen hinges. LOL Even if I wanted to, I couldn’t afford to do the things you suggest. I am not modern at all. I have mismatched furniture . Simple flooring. Brown carpet. I would love to have wooden floors. I love wooden fans. I really enjoyed your article though. Thank God I don’t have a POPCORN ceiling

  • Ughhh omg!!! I’m in an apartment and it has all of these issues. I have wall to wall GREEN carpeting and beige and black furniture and have NO clue how to have decent flooring. 🤦🏻‍♀️ I have popcorn ceilings, vertical blinds, and I have no clue how to make my apartment look nice since it’s so outdated.. 😢🤦🏻‍♀️🤷🏻‍♀️

  • In older homes (1945-1980s) the “popcorn” can be made of asbestos and an expert should remove it. Although the dangerous material was banned, many suppliers continued to sell it until it was out-of-stock in the 1980’s. I was concerned about our ceiling so I scraped a little bit off and mailed it out to be tested. Our home was built in 1961 and thankfully the “popcorn” was made of a Styrofoam type material.

  • Here are the emergency, alarms going off words you’ve been told anytime you have heard “It’s easy to do” “YOU JUST…..” It’s EASY to take out flooring, You Just….It’s easy to mount the TV up on the wall, and rewire all the power, speakers, and cable/satellite controls,……..You Just… I’s so easy to take out that dated tub and put in a wakl in shower….You Just. I want to see your You Just take out the easy flooring article. It’s extremely easy.

  • I enjoy your articles, but I have to admit that it gets tiresome to always have the suggestions directed to “upgrading” a space to whats popular/trending. I take the info into my plans based on what “I LIKE”. I’m really not interested in what’s popular as much as I am in having a home that WE like & are comfortable in. To me, if it’s “popular” now, it’ll be out of style before you know it. That equals more expense later. “Timeless” choices are ALWAYS what I look for… if for no other reason because it’s not necessarily “modern looking” because that’s never been comfy looking to me. All just my opinion, but I appreciate your articles.

  • We are older and cannot remove or renovate some of these these things. I remember when my grandmother moved her big living room mirror go a hide long crack in it. Rather then throw it out she to a length of wallpaper….cut out a Long beautiful branch printed on it…and glued it over the crack. She made it her own and it was stunning. I think that’s what I’m looking for, something unique and personal to remedy the things I can’t change. You did have some very helpful ideas. Thanks. 👍💕

  • You have really good advise – we are building our dream home and I’m laughing out loud. – I am having a home built that I WANT to look old and nostalgic. I did an island with driftwood stain and SW Glimmer perimeter cabinets. I did a soffet above the perimeter cabinets and I purchased ALL white appliances! hahahahaha…I wanted a Merritt O’Keefe range or a Viking range but not in our budget. I found stainless steel appliances can rust when water drips on them and they’re not wiped down right away. Blessings, M

  • Like the tip about the hinges. I have a new home and it didn’t occur to me that my cabinets don’t have the hinge showing. I think word art on canvas is lovely. Especially large scale. As long as it’s used in a simple, clean and not over done way. Also not on every wall. Don’t like plaques or decal words on wall. Kristen, Q: What do you think about the EAT letters in kitchen. I was thinking of getting the ones that has the lights. And layering it with a nice green plant and vase to sit on top of my fridge? Good info.

  • We’ve been beadboarding or planking our ceilings. The house is a transitional craftsman style on the outside. SO we did this in the laundry room and both bathroom and will do it in the center of the tree ceilings of our master bedroom and the office craft studio. Then in the spare rooms and madterbedroom will plank the ceilings. We are doing that to kitchen and family room and adding wood are beams to the ceilings for a more rustic look. We lovecwhstcweve done so far. Some was done professionally some by us. You can’t tell which was pro and which was DIY. That makes us so happy! Got rid of old ceiling fans, we have the modern ones in now, did them ourselves. Kust need to redo the ceilingsbin most ofvthe house now. Starting with the bathrooms, foyer and office craft studio and hallway. Bonus roomwill be very last and we will pay a pro to do it. It’s a big room with nooks and cubbies. Thanks for the great ideas! 👍

  • I took the paddles on my kitchen fan and painted them and flipped them over so the design didn’t show. Also painted the metal base and arms that attach to the paddles. I found a nice globe light that looks like clear milk glass (the little bumps on it) and it looks brand new. I got the globe at a thrift store for approx. $2.

  • Ummmm…white appliances are totally 100% classic decor…stainless really dates the room!! I just wish I could find whit appliances with that Orange-peel sort of surface…those were Da Bomb! Absolutely NO imprints or fingerprints to be seen on that surface! Also..those ceiling fans: mine are 35 year old Hampton Bay and they are SOLID, baby! Had the chance to change them out and after our most recent Kichler high end propeller model had the remote go on the fritz after only 2 years of light use and now it has to be professionally repaired or replaced on my dime….I’ll just disassemble my others fans, paint the casings white, put on new white blades and…boom…update. Maybe not as trendy or slimline as the new styles – but I’ll stick with a fan that is built really well than something new that will break right quick after install!!

  • My parents, their house is still in the 70s. It’s a tricky thing. They don’t like change, but perhaps some updating would be a good idea. If I told you, you wouldn’t believe me. Let’s just say there is tons of yellow and green. So without offending anyone, I’m trying to figure out how to update things a bit. I am so going to look for tile paint.

  • I’d say people should decorate their homes however they like it!!! As long as the people inside that home feel like that home reflects their personalities and their lives, let them put, paint, build whatever they want!!! Geez!!! People should not have to be setup to spend money every time these people say you dhould chsnge something. If you like it, KEEP IT!!!

  • Well fortunately my house that we moved into 2 years ago only has 3 out of 10 out of date problems. I have to laugh that my beautiful 2021 Salem Hemisphere RV is way nicer than my home, and it has hidden hinges in the cabinets! lol I call it my she shed! It also has the most beautiful electric fireplace that keeps it toasty warm in there.

  • We have just bought a Bed and Breakfast which has royal blue with tiny yellow square and we have a Blue lounge with silver design through it and some timber. I believe they’ve gone for the blue carpet for stain resistance. At first I wasn’t sure but it’s grown on me but I wander how our guests find it?

  • Yes, I have a tile counter top and white appliances that are looks dated. I have updated tile countertops to quarts countertops that looks so much better. But white appliances hard to change just because that still functions good and cost a lot to replace. I have got stainless range hood and cooktop updated, I’m looking for to replace my white refrigerator, microwave, oven, and dishwasher when they’re broken.

  • Our home was built in 1977. Green shag carpets heavy velvet curtains I saw the vision and possibilities. Removed all sliding glass doors to french doors tiled entire home remodeled bathrooms kitchen flirida room it was a long project. Now we r done. Yeah…question. what’s your opinion about putting a chandelier light in bedroom with retractable blades? Is it too trendy? Our style is contemporary Scandinavian. Or shd a go modern. Celung fans in Florida are a must. Thanks love your work.

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