on 31-10-2013 12:48 PM
I am currently searching for a home - a traditional Victorian or Edwardian/Federation style that has been sensitively renovated and restored - an oxymoron if ever I heard one!
Why is it, there are so many beautiful old frontages for sale and then when you click through the photos, the first four are lovely, showing well maintained high ceilings and fireplaces, plaster cornices et al and then you click on the kitchen and there is this laminate open plan monstrocity with horrendous halogen lighting, faux granite worktops and units that look like they were put together by Ikea?
Why on earth don't these homeowners or developers consider the original property and simply build an extension that mirrors the front? Fake Victorian fireplaces and imitation antique lighting cost less than this modern nonsense and as for open plan... sheesh, I understand we no longer want cramped living rooms and lean-to kitchens but why don't the designers take the sensibly sized front rooms as a guide, instead of building an air-plane hanger sized living, eating area that in some cases completely gobbles into the garden leaving a strip of grass the size of a nature strip and a view of the back fence a meter from your patio doors? With all that room, you would think the developers could at least do away with those horrible stainless steel features and fridges and washing machines that should be hidden behind wooden doors. And as for the outer extension, at least clad it in wood or reclaimed bricks - enough with the grey render that makes it look like a public toilet block. (*waves to she_ele*) What on earth will future generations think of the designs of this early millenium?
The worst offenders are the bathrooms. For goodness sake, buy a copper bath and use imitation old tiling and butler sink basins, anything other than those horrid purple glass bowls that stick up from white plastic shelves. You don't have to be an expert in the era of your home. Five minutes of googling will give you exact ideas on what design road to take.
Personally I love old blue stone/sand stone houses but I have yet to see someone take an old house and restore it to its former glory without adding plasma tv's attached to walls, ducted heating and generic carpeting over beautiful floorboards when a nice persian rug would do the job far more effectively. Don't people realise the 21st century is ugly? You bought an old house - Keep it that way!
In all my searching I have only found one place that has not been renovated as described above and that's because they have an original verandah scaling the entire perimeter of the property. And they obviously know what they have as it's priced at least half a million over what it is worth.
Surely someone out there shares my disdain for the current slap-it-up extensions?
on 31-10-2013 02:32 PM
I lived in an original Federation house in Sydney for 17 years. When we bought it everything was original. Now I appreciate that a copper in the laundry looks cute, but trying to use it in this day and age. The old Kookaburra stove in the kitchen was a nightmare and impossible to regulate, the kitchen cupboards were impossible to clean and keep clean, so the lot got tossed and a modern 21st century kitchen and laundry and bathroom went in.
Result, happy Mother, Wife and very happy Family.
The place for the past is in the past.
on 31-10-2013 02:34 PM
@goo**spew wrote:
@kennedia_nigricans wrote:i am 30+
You look 30-- 😉
I know LOL was asked for ID in a pub not so long ago.
on 31-10-2013 02:47 PM
@kennedia_nigricans wrote:
@goo**spew wrote:
@kennedia_nigricans wrote:i am 30+
You look 30-- 😉
I know LOL was asked for ID in a pub not so long ago.
I could tell that about you. Lipstick on a princess for you, darhls... 🙂
31-10-2013 02:50 PM - edited 31-10-2013 02:54 PM
Persian rugs aren't expensive - you can find a good sized one for around $500. ................................................................................................................................................
Really? I'd love to know where as I love persian rugs. Genuine persian rugs though, not faux. You may be thinking of faux. .
on
31-10-2013
02:54 PM
- last edited on
05-11-2013
09:53 PM
by
underbat
@bright.ton42 wrote:
Persian rugs aren't expensive - you can find a good sized one for around $500. ................................................................................................................................................ Really? I'd love to know where as I love persian rugs. Genuine persian rugs though, not faux. You may be thinking of faux. .
LOL, perhaps I'm a smarter shopper than you 😉 No, truthfully, mine cost around $5000 each but I was considering your price range and as budget seems such a pressing concern for you, I assumed you would take any quality Persian rug
You did know Persian rugs come in different standards don't you?
on 31-10-2013 03:08 PM
@goo**spew wrote:
@bright.ton42 wrote:Tend to agree with you there Martini - a good mix can be very tasteful and appealing.
As for the op's earlier post slamming gay designers - please. You know for a fact that all these 'tasteless' renovations
are done by gay people ? And surely what you're talking about which is to seek out original fixtures and fittings and so on is more a question of money than anything else, as not everyone by far can afford to do that, it is so costly. Lovely to have persian
rugs on the floors but how many can afford those after taking out mortgages up to the eyeballs on the house alone.
It's simple really - if a house doesn't appeal do it up yourself.
Really, bright.ton? Not everyone can afford to seek out original fixtures? Hmmm, I guess I'm richer than I thought - or somebody's poorer 😉 Never said all those martini-inspired renovations were done by gay people - but I did infer that gay male designers today have no taste and they don't. I also inferred that female designers have no taste either but that they do a more sensitive job which is true.
Persian rugs aren't expensive - you can find a good sized one for around $500.
And I disagree with you re if a house doesn't appeal do it up yourself - who needs the headache and the trauma and expense when things go wrong? If a house doesn't appeal you wait patiently until you find one that does - that's called taste. You can put lipstick on a pig and it's still a pig.
No....it's not called taste.
on 31-10-2013 03:10 PM
That strawberry tongue looks tasteYYYYYYYYYYY
YEEEEEhaWWWWWWW Babeeeeeeeee!
on 31-10-2013 03:12 PM
I love it! Everyone who agrees with me on this thread has taste and everyone who doesn't and/or appears defensive, we know has the airplane hangar kitchen with ikea units.
Shoe-in!
on 31-10-2013 03:14 PM
And on that note, my girlfriend's car has just pulled up my driveway. They are taking me for a late lunch, followed by lots of clothes shopping followed by dinner at the Windsor!
Wish me luck!!!!
Mwaaaahhh!
on 31-10-2013 03:22 PM
I don't usually complain about posts ....but this one got under my skin. Why are you so beligerent? and rude.
Also while I'm at it....your ID is repellant to me also. You think by being like this you are adding some "interest" to CS?