Posts Tagged ‘door’

PostHeaderIcon Some useful tips for Cleaning your Kitchen Cabinet

A kitchen cabinet is a piece of furniture that serves many functions. It serves as a storage space for your kitchen appliances, cooking utensils, as well as foodstuffs. It also makes your kitchen look clean and clutter free. You can perform regular maintenance to keep your cabinet looking as good as new, protect it from damage, and keep the kitchen looking great. Here are some useful tips for cleaning your kitchen cabinet:

1. Wipe the cabinet with a damp cloth. Soak the cloth in warm water mixed with some drops of dishwashing detergent. This will help you remove grease and dirt. Make sure that you use a soft cloth so that you won’t scratch the surface. You can do this every twice a week to prevent grease buildup on your cabinet.

2. When you spill tomato sauce or mayonnaise on the cabinet, clean it up immediately using a damp cloth. Do not let the spill soak into the wood, otherwise it will cause damage.

3. Do not drape damp dish towels over cabinet doors because moisture can damage the wood.

4. Do not slam the cabinet doors, or open them too wide. Close and open the doors gently to keep them in good condition.

5. Limit the number of items that you put in the drawers. Do not overfill them because extra load will cause the drawers to bulge.

6. Check the cabinet regularly for any signs of damage. If you find any damages, it is a good idea to repair the cabinet immediately.

7. After opening the cabinet doors, make sure that you close them properly. If you leave the doors open, bugs might get in the cabinet and damage the wood.

8. You can repaint your kitchen cabinet with to make your kitchen look more attractive and elegant. Repainting is the cheapest way to upgrade your cabinet. Use high quality oil-based paints for best results. Make sure the paints are non-toxic, otherwise the fumes will contaminate your food.

9. Set up a maintenance schedule. Make sure you follow this schedule in order to keep your kitchen cabinet looking clean and tidy all the time.

This cabinet is a great investment for home owners. Therefore, it is important that you maintain it regularly. A well maintained kitchen cabinet will add value to your home. Thus you can increase the price of your house when you want to sell it in the future.

PostHeaderIcon Everything you will need to build your own Home Bar

It’s a part of the beer enthusiast’s life to head out and grab a beer from our favorite drinking hole. We love all kinds of bars. The dive is a relaxing joint while the club is where we can meet new and interesting people.

But, we can’t live out in the bars all the time even though we’d love it. We eventually have to break away and come home to the families and the household responsibilities. That’s why building a home bar makes us feel like home when we’re home.

There are plenty of ways to build your own home bar. You have to use your imagination and creativity. What it boils down to is your personality. Some people like a 50s theme while others like a beach theme. But, those are merely decorations. You have to build the bar first.

Choose Your Space

Choosing the perfect location is sometimes the hardest part. While some people know exactly where the bar should go, others find it difficult to imagine where they would like to have their bar. A basement bar is out of the way and a great location where you get away without technically leaving the home.

It’s smart to put a bar in an unused room or a room that isn’t frequented much. Also, you can add an extension to the house. But if you’re going to go that far, why not just put the bar outside. It’s great for warm weather and in warm weather climates.

Materials

To build the structure, you’ll need 2 x 4s and plywood. You’ll need enough nails and screws to hold it all together. Also, you want finish. I like dark wood finish and polyurethane. But, some people finish in other ways. They’ll use a faux wood finish, wood slats, tile, granite counter tops and I’ve even seen wallpaper. It’s up to you and your style. Give it all a thought and decide on what’s perfect for you.

You’ll also need the features. Brass railings look great against a dark wood bar with dark green lighting fixtures. Cabinet doors make it easy for you to finish your bar in style. You can get them at most hardware stores. Round it off with a kegerator for your keg and a cooler for bottles and cans.

Build

If you know how to design and build, you are ready to go to town. If you don’t, find a friend that will help you design so that you will have all the materials you need. Make sure it’s someone who knows how to build or else it’s the blind leading the blind, which can be fun if you have a temperament like mine and nothing gets to you.

But, the easiest bar I have ever seen built was when a friend of mine bought cabinets from the local hardware store. Not cabinet doors like mentioned earlier, but cabinets. He put them side by side, connected them with a countertop and was practically finished building his bar in an hour.

After that, he simply rocked the bar with bar stools, brass railings, dark green lighting fixtures and a kegerator. He purchased a radical cooler for the end of the bar where he puts bottles and cans. A plasma screen is attached to the wall behind the bar and a stereo is wired to it. It’s just about the neatest bar I have ever seen.

Bars are an extension of your personality as a beer enthusiast. If you are serious about your beer, you need a place to put it on display. Whether you brew for yourself or you just like to try new and exotic beers, build your bar soon and start enjoying the beer world with the rest of us.

PostHeaderIcon Some simple and easy things you can do to add to the life of your home while saving money

Because of the decline in the housing market, and thanks in part to the lowest mortgage rates in history, more and more people are choosing to refinance their home loan rather than move to a new home. Low rates can mean lower mortgage payments and bigger savings to your bottom line! All good news!

But one thing people seem to forget is that by staying in your current home, you’ll need to pay more attention to your home’s upkeep and maintenance. Chances are if your home is more than 10 years old it is in need of some winter weather maintenance to keep it in optimal shape. Here are some simple and easy things you can do to add to the life of your home while saving you money on energy bills in the long run.

Weatherproofing your windows and doors

The first place you should check when you begin to weatherproof your home for winter, is to check around your windows and doors for caulk that looks stiff or crumbly. If it is peeling, chipping or otherwise falling apart, it definitely needs to be replaced. Fortunately replacing weatherproofing caulk is easy and inexpensive and even the most ‘unhandy’ handymen can replace old caulking. Use a screwdriver or utility knife to remove the old caulk. Take care to completely remove all of the old caulking, and lay down a new bead of caulking in its place. Choose a brand of exterior caulk with a long lifespan, and use a damp – not wet – sponge to wipe away any excess.

Weatherproofing with weatherstripping

Another simple place to check when beginning to weatherproof your home is to check your weatherstripping. Weatherstripping is the flexible material that surrounds your doors or windows to protect against drafts. Typically the material is made from vinyl, but made be made from foam, cork, plastic or even in some cases metal. New vinyl weatherstripping will last longer and provides a much tighter seal than older materials. For doors and awning or casement style windows, open the door or window and remove the existing damaged weatherstripping and cut the vinyl strips to length, pressing firmly and tightly into place. Voila! You’re done!

Your home supply store will be able to provide recommendations on the appropriate size of weatherstripping for your job – adhesive-backed vinyl is typical for windows and doors while heavy duty stripping (for garages and such) may require nails and tacks. You may luck out if your home is a relatively new home, because then you can purchase pre-made threshold stripping to fit your doors.

Weatherproofing to avoid heat loss

Some homeowners, in lieu of installing storm windows and doors, add plastic sheeting to their windows to help stave off heat loss. This is a very inexpensive, and easy, way to help keep your warm toasty in the winter. Simply attach the plastic to your home’s window moldings and shrink the plastic using a hairdryer. This ensures a tight seal and a good fit for your windows. If your windows are in the least bit drafty, you’ll be surprised at how big of a difference weatherproofing your windows with plastic will make.

Another small change that can make a big difference is checking your outlets for drafts. Many homes, especially older ones, don’t have proper insulation around their outlets. Simply remove the outlet plating and check to see if you feel a draft. If you do, one quick way to seal up any drafts is to cut a sheet a foam to the size and shape of your outlet and place behind the outlet plate. This will help form a tight seal and keep out any drafts blowing through.

Weatherproofing your pipes

The cold weather can be incredibly hard on the plumbing in your home – especially when temperatures reach below freezing. To avoid your water freezing, or worse – your pipes breaking – you should have insulation protecting your hot and cold pipes throughout as much of the home as possible. The insulation will help your cold pipes from freezing and and bursting, while it helps protect your hot water pipes from thermal loss, making your electrical or gas consumption more efficient.

The easiest way to protect your plumbing against the weather is to install tubular-sleeve insulation. It comes in a variety of sizes and is incredibly easy to install. All you have to do is cut the sleeve to the length of the pipe you wish to protect and wrap it around the pipe! If you need more than one sleeve to cover a long pipe, make sure to duct tape the seam. Easy as 1-2-3!

Weatherproofing your home is something that can be done in a day! The investment may be short-term, but the rewards will definitely be long-term! You’ll notice a huge increase in your comfort – and your wallet – once we’re in the thick of the cold winter months.

PostHeaderIcon Decoration in Small Spaces: the Office Closet

Today there are many people that work from home. It is precisely for this reason it is so common to find houses with own studio / office. But what happens when the place in which we live does not give us a room for the office? How can you work in a small home without disturbing or being disturbed?

Decorating small spaces

The floors with limited space was a challenge for design. And the placement of an office in one of these floors is not immune to this challenge. A good option for solving this problem is the cabinet office. To build this space, it is only necessary to have a wardrobe in one wall of the house that is about an outlet. This is because they need electricity. Is that the placement of a computer and a lamp are essential on this site.

If you think of an Internet connection is a good idea to pick a laptop with Wi-Fi. In this way you will avoid having to make a hole in the wall to pass the cable network.

Then you should place a strong and sturdy shelf on the wall. On these shelves is that you can save all those elements that are required in an office such as sheets, pens, hooks, etc. To keep the place tidier, an excellent recommendation is to use funds saved.

Another good idea is to have a wastebasket that can be placed on the floor, under the last of the shelves. If there is extra space, you can use this site to keep other household items. After all this is not longer a closet. You just have to run the chair of place and close the door to the office gone and come again built furniture.

PostHeaderIcon Protect Your Family from Fire Hazards in Your Home

The Security Council reports indicate that Home fires and burns are the third cause of injuries in U.S. homes. The sad fact is that most of these fires could have been avoided. Many owners have fire alarm systems and – as these alarms are effective when there is a fire report in progress – they do not serve to prevent fires.

Do not put your family or yourself to unnecessary risk. If you know which the areas are most prone to fire in your home, you can go from room to room, making all necessary changes before you and your family becoming victims.

Most people gather in the kitchen when it comes to fire safety. They ensure that their fire alarm systems including smoke detectors and fire in the kitchen, and fire extinguishers. Most people who already know they have to do are:
• Never leave the kitchen while cooking
• Never wear loose clothing around the stove
• Always be alert to splashing oil when frying
• Never leave paper, plastic or other flammable products near the stove

We must pay due attention to each room to avoid fires. Install smoke alarms is a great idea, but not enough. Use the following checklist to conduct a study of all the rooms in your home. Once finished, you will feel much more confident that you and your family are safe from fire.

The living room

  1. The chimney has a protector of coals, a door of glass or other protection to prevent sparks from leaving the fireplace.
  2. Matches and lighters are stored in a locked cabinet, if you have young children at home.
  3. The chimney is inspected and cleaned annually by a professional.

Garage or outdoor area

  1. Chemicals (including fertilizers) are locked out of reach of children.
  2. Gasoline and kerosene are stored outside the home in a cool place in properly ventilated containers.
  3. The grilles are at least two feet away from anything flammable, such as shrubs and tree branches.
  4. Has been cleaned all the grease from grills, inside and out.

All rooms

  1. Cigarettes are immersed in water before disposal.
  2. Candles are never left unattended.
  3. Electric heaters are several feet away from curtains, newspapers, magazines, books, blankets, towels and other flammables.
  4. Plugs are not overloaded.
  5. The power cords are in good condition and not worn.

If you take an hour or two to inspect your home, you can reduce the chances of falling victim to a fire. Alarm systems are a great help in times of trouble, but by taking some preventive steps, greatly reduce the probability of an accident at home