Your Bathroom
Is your bathroom looking dingy, but still functional
so you feel like you should just bear with it until something
really goes wrong?
Paint peeling perhaps, or broken fixtures, water
damage or maybe stained flooring. It's okay to remodel your bathroom
simply for esthetic reasons. An old worn, but still function pair
of shoes, might be so comfy you can't give it up. It has a certain
value as long as you don't wear them to a business meeting. But
a bathroom? Nah. Let your imagine go wild, pull in a professional-recommended
by someone you know preferably. Absent that hire a firm that has
a Diamond Certified rating, and you most likely will be satisfied).
What would you like? Larger bathrooms are very popular
now. If you can afford it, and if there's room for it, why not
expand a few feet. Years ago many bathrooms were built with barely
enough room to turn around. But that's not what today's busy people
want now. Think sanctuary.
Maybe you've got just a small window too. Why not
enlarge the window along with the room, and add more lighting,
and more variety in the lighting. If you're settling in for a
bath (in your new sunken tub, instance) you might want dim, relaxing
light. But if you're shaving, well you know you need something
brighter. It's your room, so go ahead and enlarge your options
along with the size of the room.
Are your cabinets worth keeping? If they are, simply
refinishing them in a lighter color will give them new life. And
if you top them with custom-cut marble, you're going to smile
every time you walk into the room. So will your guests.
Another thing you can do to transform your bathroom
is install radiant heat, the kind that radiates up from the floor.
It'll cost you to install, certainly, but once you've gotten past
that initial hurdle, it's very efficient and will save you money.
Imagine being able to walk around barefoot on your warm bathroom
floor. And, if the floor's warm, that means the rest of the room
is too.
Doesn't this make you want to get started on your
bathroom remodel right away? Before your begin though, do some
window shopping at home improvement store displays. Take note
of what you like and what you don't like. Read through several
home improvement magazines for inspiration. Then, when you start
interviewing prospective contractors you'll know some of the terminology
and be able to give guidance to the pros you hire right from the
beginning.
Author:
Tod Cox
Article
writer for the web community.
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