ideal kitchen

Storrmmee wrote:

I do have rugs but obviously need something more--like carpeting
on at least the first sets of stairs going up and going down.
Hmm. probably should have put tile down in the entry area. BUT
that whole area is so awful that I hope to get it redone anyway.
(It is really small--so small that two people entering have to
arrange themselves in order to do so.)
--
Jean B.
 
Storrmmee wrote:

I had heard about nasty things in wall-to-wall carpets
(especially), which is one reason why I got rid of them. I can
see that that could be the case with curtains. although to a
lesser extent because they aren't walked on, and things aren't
dropped into them.


Of course, sheers offer almost no privacy, as I well know.

Ah. You won't miss what you didn't have. My situation is
different. I have a full basement in the current house, but the
lower level of the new house is my daughter's domain. I WAS going
to use one small room for storage, but now it looks like it will
be half a room.

The things that were in half of my garage also need to find other
homes--and the only home is the end of the new garage, the shop
area, and the garage's attic.


--
Jean B.
 
i guess when it comes to it I am probably too lazy to be that careful in a
room that to me is meant to live in, sorta like people who have formal
living rooms and never let anyone go in... just not for me, if others like
it fine, and nothing wrong with it, just not our lifestyle, Lee
" Bigbazza" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
 
On Mon, 21 Feb 2011 07:27:53 -0800, sf wrote:


Granite is hard but it's brittle.... natural granite counters can
fracture fairly easily... composite granite contains no natural fault
lines so is much less apt to fracture.

I think granite counters are morbid... I would no more consider a
granite counter than I would a formica gravestone.


Fragile dishes will break when dropped onto most any solid surface but
the harder the surface the more readily they'll break.
 
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