Home Improvement


Kitchen design ideas -

Are You Designing Your Kitchen?

A kitchen is the central headquarters for the family. Kitchen is often the showplace of the home, and yet it is required to function well for a wide variety of tasks. A well-equipped, beautifully dressed kitchen will provide both a sense of well-being and a favorite place in the home. As you plan your new kitchen, you must consider both the utility and the look factor.

Kitchen design ideas – choose the one that suits you best!

When thinking of ideas for designing your kitchen, you could either consider one- one part of the kitchen at a time or pick up a complete theme. A complete theme could be something like a design based on Feng Shui which incorporates all its principles. Feng shui concerns the art of placement and you could help you to arrange your kitchen in a way that enhances its good energy. For instance, according to Feng shui, the cook’s back should never face the kitchen entrance so you must design accordingly

Now according to the other way, you could choose a particular look for the kitchen floor, the walls, the storing place etc. this can be done in various ways depending upon the amount of money you are willing to spend, the lay out of the kitchen and your taste. Here are some specific design ideas for your kitchen -

* Kitchen floor- Your flooring choice is important as it will set the tone for the whole kitchen. The textural quality of the floor always appeals to eye and has a radical effect on how one perceives the room as a whole. For kitchens, the two most elegant floors are tiles / stones and laminated or hardwood floors. Ceramic tiles are a premium product for a kitchen and represent an impressive upgrade over any other floor. The only disadvantage is the cold feel. However if you want you can also opt for a floor heating system.

* Kitchen countertops – While choosing your countertop, select a color and texture that will compliment your cabinetry, floor or paint selection. Don’t be afraid in combining two or more countertop materials. Complimentary colors and textures on adjacent surfaces create visual interest. Also remember, it pays to select a material, which will withstand years of use without extraordinary maintenance requirements and is easily repairable should an accident occur. Granite and marble are strong options.

* Kitchen lighting – you might have a large ceiling fixture, equipped with energy-efficient fluorescent tubes that supply plenty of well-diffused general lighting. However it may leave you working in your own shadow at the sink, range, and countertops. These areas in your kitchen need supplemental task lighting. Also placing your windows is a tricky question.

Kitchen design layout -

The perfect arrangement

Kitchen designing is very subjective, so a layout that might be perfect for one can be disastrous for another. This is primarily because the tastes, and the ways of people in terms of working habits, styles are vastly different. Thus kitchen layouts should be done according to the necessities and specifications of the prime user of the space, who has definite ideas about how he/she would like their working space to be. But apart from this subjective outlook, there are certain steps that you should follow while designing your kitchen plan or layout. Following are the stages -

Stages in kitchen design layout

Follow these simple steps in order to get your kitchen space rightly utilized with a desirable look-

1. Measure your kitchen in a detailed manner, the position of the doors, windows, electric points, drains and sinks etc.

2. Demarcate the kitchen areas into three – Storage, cooking and cleaning. Go about planning the space, keeping these three aspects in mind.

3. Make a list of the appliances that you are likely to use in the kitchen, and provide space for them according to their dimensions.

Keep these three points in mind and then design your kitchen in a style that fits in accordance to your tastes. Following are some of the stereotypical kitchen design layouts that are used -

Kitchen design layouts – Types

These are the 4 basic kitchen layouts that are generally followed while designing a kitchen -

1. Corridor layout – This is meant for a narrow kitchen, where there are two facing rows. One for storage and the other for cleaning and cooking. Make sure there is a minimum 1200mm space between the two rows.

2. L shaped layout – This is a layout, where the rows are diagonal to one another, thus forming an L shape. This gets the kitchen working space into the corner, thus giving a lot of free space to move about.

3. U shaped layout – this is the best choice for small kitchens and very convenient too.

4. Island layout – This one on the other hand is meant for large kitchens. Here the cooking hob is altogether a different box unit, while the L shaped row is meant for the sink and storage purposes.

These are the different ways in which you could plan your kitchen layout, and also make changes and alterations according to your preferences.

Jamie is the author of other Kitchen Design [http://www.homeimprovementtips.net/kitchens/] Tips located at Home Improvement Tips

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If you are living with a perception that home loans in India come only in two flavors-fixed or floating, its time to wake up to the reality. Keeping pace with global developments and in a race to stay ahead in the fiercely competitive home loan market, banks and Housing Finance Companies (HFC,s) have come up with innovative schemes, which provide a lot of options to a new home loan borrower. So, if you are worried about getting a home loan, read on; the banks might have something special for you.

Fixed rate or floating? Why not both
The classic dilemma to go for a fixed loan or a floating loan has perplexed the average home loan borrower since ages. Volumes have been written over the advantage one has over the other and this has only added to the confusion. Taking advantage of the situation, banks have started a home loan scheme, which offers the flexibility to choose a home loan with both the floating and fixed interest rate options. A borrower can choose a part of his home loan to be charged at a fixed rate of interest and the rest at floating rates and vice versa.

Tempted by the current fixed interest rates? Choose Smart fix
The unprecedented rise in floating rate home loans in recent years has prompted many borrowers to rethink their strategy in favour of the fixed rate home loans. If you are also one of those, who wants to take advantage of the relatively low fixed rates, but agrees with the universal opinion that floating rates are best over a long period of time, you can choose a special type of home loan, which charges the fixed interest rates for a specified period (say 3 years) and floating rate thereafter. Aptly called smart fix by some banks, this home loan scheme lets you have the best of both.

Need a bigger home? Go for a short term bridging loan
If you are dissatisfied with your existing home for any reason what so ever, and desperately want a bigger or better house, but do not want to sell your existing house before you move into the new one, a short term bridging loan can be the perfect solution. This loan fills the vital gap and provides an interim arrangement of finances between the sale of your old house and purchase of the new property. These loans can be repaid in easy installments or by a lump sum payments after you sell the old house.

Can’t afford big EMI’s now but can do it in future? Choose step-up repayment
Off late the banks and hfc’s have awaken to the fact that income levels of individuals rise as their career progresses and this improves their repayment capacity over a period of time. Hence, they have decided to offer, what is called a home loan with step-up repayment facility. This special home loan scheme provides the facility to fix the EMIs at a lower level during initial stages of the home loan and increase with tenure. Some banks even waive the principal repayment component of EMI for the initial period. So, if you are a young professional or have spent few years in a job and can convince your lender with a visible career growth, a home loan with step-up repayment facility might be the panacea.

Can afford big EMI’s now but not later? Choose step-down repayment
Consider a situation, where a couple has taken a joint home loan in India and one of them is set to retire in few years. This can create a tricky situation, when it comes to the home loan repayment, since the repayment capacity of one of the borrowers will decline after his retirement. A home loan with a step- down repayment plan can go a long way keeping troubles at bay in such a scenario. The couple can choose to repay higher EMI’s during the initial stages of home loan, when both of them are earning and when one of them retires, the burden of EMI’s can be lessened so that the repayment schedule is still maintained diligently.

This is definitely not an exhaustive list of such schemes, banks and HFC’s are regularly churning out innovative schemes, which cater to specific circumstances and help widen their home loan client base. Every such home loan scheme has its own advantages and disadvantages. Any home loan borrower must definitely shop around, compare home loan rates and gather as much information on terms and conditions of the home loan scheme so that he is able to take an informed decision.

Simple example of borrowing from equity to fuel consumption

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Smoke stains above this fireplace are proof of a smoking problem. Some detective work is sometimes needed to determine the cause of the problem before it can be fixed. Soot stains are CARBON particles. If you have soot stains inside your home, you have also had CARBON MONOXIDE fumes in your home. Soot stains are not only unsightly they indicate air in your home has been exposed to dangerous fumes. Take care of this problem (which may not be caused by your fireplace) before using it again. Soot and carbon monoxide are a natural byproduct of burning wood, gas, coal and oil – any carbon based fuel.

The first thing to check is that the damper has been opened before starting a fire!

Next, try priming the flue. Keep in mind that in the winter the chimney may be filled with cold air. Since warm air rises and cool air falls,you must reverse the air flow, sending warm air up the flue. You can do this by using a bit of newspaper, tightly rolled and lit like a torch and held up through the fireplace damper. Once the smoke from your newspaper torch reverses and sends the smoke up the chimney, continue with lighting the fire. Or, use a hair dryer to blow warm air up the chimney for a few minutes before lighting your fire.

Fireplace Size

Large fireplaces are a stunningly beautiful feature in any room. However, care must be taken in the planning and construction of a large fireplace in order for it to perform properly without causing a smoking problem.

Fireplaces must built within a general set of guidelines for proper sizing. Standard American fireplaces built with a sloped and angled rear wall to form a flattened smoke shelf should be designed with a 10:1 ratio of fireplace opening to flue size (square or rectangular flues). Length x width of fireplace opening provides the fireplace size length x width of flue tile provides the cross-sectional area of the chimney. Severe rectangles may need a 8:1 ratio. Round flues should provide a minimal 12:1 ratio as a round flue drafts more easily.

When the fireplace opening is overly large for the size of the flue, the chimney cannot adequately remove the byproducts of combustion the amount of air entering the fireplace must be commensurate to the amount of air that can exit the chimney. Since it’s usually much easier to reduce the size of the fireplace opening than to enlarge the chimney, several options may be available:

Install a smoke guard, which is a metal bar that attaches to the fireplace opening at the top. Install glass doors the frame will overlap the opening on all 4 sides, thereby reducing the opening considerably. Raise the fire by laying a row of brick on the floor, using tall grates or tall andirons. Rebuild the firebox, which is a more expensive option. Install a fireplace insert (wood, gas, pellet, coal) with a new chimney liner sized appropriately for the fireplace.

Multi-Sided Fireplaces

Because of the explanation above, see-through or multi-side fireplaces almost always smoke because the flue must be commensurately larger to carry the extra volume of air needed by a multi-sided fireplace. Before building a multi-side fireplace, check that the chimney flue ratio has been planned carefully.

We’re frequently asked about removing the rear wall of an existing fireplace to make it a see-through to the room behind it. A chimney that was designed to vent a fireplace with a single opening cannot handle having its fireplace opening size doubled and be able to work properly. Even if you find a brick mason who will do this job for you, it’s not a good idea and almost never functions properly.

Chimney Design

An exterior chimney stays colder in the winter, especially in harsh climates. Before a chimney can draft properly it needs to be warmed, so an exterior chimney, although a common design, can present drafting problems. If you’re building a home, consider a chimney built to the interior of the home if possible.

Chimney Height

The chimney needs to be at least 3′ higher than the roof where it penetrates AND 2′ taller than anything within 10′ away. The shorter chimney at left is likely to smoke because of the taller chimney just a few feet away.

On chimneys with multiple flues, like the taller one in the picture shown, the flue tiles should be staggered in height to help prevent one flue from sucking smoke downward from the adjacent one. A chimney should be built so that its flues can be as straight as possible bends and offsets increase resistance and slowing the exit of the smoke and fumes which can cause drafting problems.

It’s preferable to have the chimney built closer to the peak of the roof than on the lower side to reduce problems associated with a stack effect within the house, where there is a great difference in pressure between the air in the house and outdoor air. Air within the house leaves it, often from the upper sections such as the roof or upstairs windows. Entry air must be provided to replace the air that is exiting. When the chimney is on the lower side of the roof, replacement air may be drawn down the chimney. This can cause a competition between cold air being sucked down the chimney while the smoke is simultaneously trying to rise from it. A common problem is a chimney located in a one story room of a 2 story house which commonly suffers from negative pressure problems. Negative Pressure

In our compulsive obsession to design energy-efficient “air tight” homes, we often don’t consider there must be means for outdoor air to enter the house to operate the devices we use in them. Chimneys must pull air from somewhere to provide combustion air for the fire AND allow an updraft so smoke and fumes can exit, so air must be supplied at an equivalent rate to replace the air leaving the chimney. Extremely airtight homes can prevent chimneys from operating properly, especially where other air-moving devices are being used such as furnaces, bathroom or kitchen vents, attic fans, clothes dryers, etc. Again, replacement air for these devices AND for the chimney may be entering through the chimney. It is possible to have cold air dropping down one side of flue while warm smoke or fumes are also trying to exit at the same time. Try cracking the closest window to the fireplace to provide extra air for the fireplace AND make sure no other air-moving devices are being used in your home at the same time.

If your chimney once worked well and now doesn’t, consider whether you may have made alterations that affect its ability to draft, such as weatherstripping, replacement windows, new siding, extra insulation, room additions, or new appliances. High efficiency clothes dryers that dry clothes more quickly can use drastically more air to operate.

Chimney and fireplace professionals may be able to suggest alterations to improve or cure your smoking or malfunctioning fireplace in SOME situations. If your new stove or fireplace is not working properly, have it checked by a pro for advice. But remember, using the best principles of design for a fireplace or stove installation may not be overcome by the design of the house and the way that air enters and leaves it. Simply put, we in the fireplace industry cannot solve smoking or draft problems in every situation.

*Article reprinted with permission of Victorian Fireplace Shop

Karen Duke is a fireplace, chimney and hearth industry expert of over 25 years in both the retail and service sectors. She is a CSIA Certified Chimney Sweep and has numerous hearth industry certifications. She is the founder and webmaster of http://www.TheFireplaceChannel.com and she is the co-founder and webmaster of http://www.TheVictorianFireplace.com, which is one of the largest online fireplace retailers in the world. She makes her home in Mechanicsville, Virginia. Karen’s contact information can be found on either of the above sites.

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Beautiful Wood-burning Fireplace Yule Log Video

This wonderful fireplace scene is one continuous shot of a real wood-burning fire. If you like this scene, you can find more just like it on the Ambient Fire DVD: www.vat19.com This footage was shot (and is available on YouTube) in HD. Hope you enjoy our virtual video fireplace!
Video Rating: 4 / 5


Home improvement includes small repairs as well as house renovation. There is no single reason for undertaking a home improvement job. House repairs may include plumbing and repairing air conditioning and heating systems. If there is no need for house repairs, you may still go for home improvement. Home improvement may include painting, flooring, roofing, wall coverings, woodworking, interior decoration, etc. Home improvement can even increase the resale value of your house. This can be a good investment opportunity. You must go for home improvement as an investment opportunity only when the cost of home improvement is lower than the increase in the value of the house.

If you do not have sufficient funds to carry out home improvement job, you can take out a home improvement loan. You can finance a small repair work from your own pocket. On the other hand, a renovation job requires a considerable expenditure for which you need to get a loan. There are plenty of home improvement loan options available to choose from.

There are several sources of getting a home improvement loan. One of them is a homeowner’s loan. If you own a house, you can pledge it as a security to avail a home improvement loan. Such a loan carries a low rate of interest since it is secured against a property.

Another source of a home improvement loan is a home equity loan. Suppose your house is 80% mortgaged, you can take out a home equity loan to release the remaining 20% of the equity that is tied up in your house. Home equity is the current value of your house minus the unpaid mortgaged balance. A home equity loan is taken out against a house which is already mortgaged.

You can also take out a personal home improvement loan to carry out a home improvement job. It is very easy to avail a personal loan. There are many lenders who offer a variety of personal loans. If you want a small amount of money and are willing to repay it over a short period of time, you may go for an unsecured personal loan. Conversely, a secured personal loan will help you avail a considerable amount of money.

For More information you can visit http://www.cheap-home-improvement-loan.co.uk


If you’ve been involved in designing or building a new kitchen in the past 20 years, you’ve probably heard the terms ‘unfitted kitchens’ or ‘kitchen workstations’ or simply ‘kitchen furniture’. These terms don’t refer to a dinette set, but rather to a completely different way of organizing a kitchen by using a few specially designed pieces of furniture instead of installing continuous lines of cabinetry and countertops. For some people, a ‘furnished’ kitchen is an intriguing idea, but others might say “Why bother fixing something that ain’t broke?”

Sometimes we get so caught up in accepting how things are that we don’t take any time to question whether we are going in the right direction. Technology has a way of pushing us forward, but sometimes we need to take a break to discover what form of progress is the most appropriate. For example, when electricity first came to New York City, there were layers of power lines attached to all the buildings and power poles everywhere. If we look at the old pictures of Manhattan we can’t believe how ugly it all was, but to most of the New Yorkers of the period, they never even noticed the chaos. It took someone with just a bit of foresight to realize that burying all the power lines underground was a better way to go.

Kitchen design that uses cabinetry has evolved into the universally accepted method to create a kitchen. But in the last 20 years, designers started to ask the question, “Is cabinetry really the ‘best’ way for all design situations?” To answer this question, we must first discover the reason ‘Why’ changing from cabinetry to something else would be beneficial. Hopefully, by illustrating how kitchen design has evolved, you will begin to discover ‘Why’ kitchen furniture can be a great alternative to designing kitchens with cabinetry.

In the days before electricity changed everything in our lives, family kitchens in modestly sized homes were large but simply appointed rooms. They contained a solid fuel heat source for cooking (a fireplace or a coal or wood stove) and a built-in sink, with or without running water. Everything else was a piece of furniture. The icebox was elegantly made of wood, as were the central dining/work table, cupboards, pie safes and pantries. The family kitchen was the central work/social place of the home too where family members, sometimes in the company of friends performed most domestic chores and socialized with each other.

Electricity brought many timesaving devices into the kitchen, as well as many inventions that pulled us away from the kitchen. Due to the innovations in the kitchen, fewer people were needed to prepare meals, so the kitchen lost a lot of its social importance and became a smaller, super-efficient working room. Built-in cabinetry, previously delegating only to Butler’s pantries in larger homes, now became the best way to shrink the kitchen into an efficient workspace. With more leisure time, socializing was delegated to the living areas of the house, because the kitchen was too small.

Now, current planning has opened up the kitchen to incorporate the social rooms again. New homes almost always have a breakfast/family room completely in view of the kitchen. The Great Room concept is simply a large social room with a kitchen in it. Walls between the kitchen and other rooms are being torn down in older homes in the effort to create multi-task, live-in kitchens. We have actually gone full circle, in a little over 100 years, by creating a modern version of a pre-electricity social/working kitchen.

Why has this happened? There are too many reasons to list here, but they all seem to relate to time. With the development of the 2 career families and single head-of-household families, there isn’t enough time in the day to dedicate a lot of it to cooking. Again, innovations (i.e., microwaves, pre-prepared and frozen foods) have allowed us to spend less time cooking during the workweek. And when we are cooking, we don’t want to miss anything that is going on around us. On weekends, we may relax in the kitchen/family room by watching TV or even entertaining friends by cooking elaborate meals.

But typically, the kitchen portion of the great room still looks like and is organized like the super efficient, work-only kitchen mentioned above. It is lined with horizontal bands of cabinetry and countertops that are interrupted only by exposed hi-tech appliances. Designers promote this ‘laboratory’ look because it is easy to design and it truly is the only kitchen design concept that most people understand. Most kitchen layouts are created by drawing a line 2 feet out from every wall (to indicate cabinetry) and then if there is room, an island (the bigger, the better) is drawn to act as a buffer between the kitchen and family room. The room’s personality is determined by the design of the backsplash, and it depends on the color uniformity of the cabinetry and appliances to hold the design theme of the room intact.

On the other hand, the family room, or the social area of the great room is designed in a completely different way. Typically, a beautiful empty room is created and then it is furnished. Instead of lining all the walls with horizontal bands of built-ins (and there are exceptions to this i.e. Frank Lloyd Wright’s prairie homes) the wall spaces are interrupted with vertical elements like windows and doors or focal points such as a fireplaces. The walls of the room are separated into vertical segments instead of continuous horizontal bands. At blank wall areas and in the middle of the room, eclectic pieces of furniture create seating arrangements, while the wall-hung artwork and sculptural collectibles on display determine the room’s personality. But the wall, floor and ceiling colors and textures permeate between all of these vertical elements acting as the ‘glue’ that holds the whole design theme together.

So the question is, why not create a multi-task, live-in modern open-plan kitchen/family room by furnishing it rather than installing cabinetry? Why not blend the kitchen into the family room using vertical instead of horizontal design? Why must half of the room look like a sterile laboratory, while the other half of the room is filled with the personal touches that bring you comfort?

When designing with furniture, spaces must be created between each piece that allow the 3-D character (3-D in that furniture is made with at least 3 finished sides) of each piece to be appreciated. These spaces are most important as they allow the design theme of the adjacent room to continue uninterrupted into the kitchen. The spaces allow the wall, ceiling and floor coverings (the architectural finishes) to instantly meld the kitchen and family room into one homogeneous space in a way that is impossible to do with horizontally designed cabinetry. The spaces define the room’s personality and allow the furniture to become more eclectic as well, emulating the same design techniques used in the design of the family room. No longer must the kitchen have just one color of wood, or one door style or one countertop material. The spaces allow all of these elements to change more readily. For a clear example, think of an open-plan log home where all the interior walls are exposed logs. A furnished kitchen allows the logs to be seen between each piece, which helps to unify the open-plan room whereas a horizontally designed cabinetry filled kitchen covers up all the logs. In an open-plan loft design where the kitchen is always seen, a furnished kitchen can blend seamlessly into the other casual seating groupings by allowing all the architectural finishes to meander between all the pieces and hold everything together.

There are a few simple design rules to consider when designing the individual pieces of furniture, but that is a topic for another time. There are even other reasons ‘Why’ to use furniture instead of cabinetry, such as using it to emulate a certain style or period like the pre-electricity styled kitchen. But it is in today’s open-plan kitchen where furniture can make its most universal impact. Will it ever replace cabinetry? Absolutely not, but for anyone who is involved in designing a kitchen project, properly designed furniture may be the most appropriate design concept to use, one that is well worth the bother!

David Beer is an architect and the founder of the YesterTec Design Company that makes Kitchen Workstation Furniture (instead of cabinetry.) YesterTec has patented U.L. Listed technology to conceal ovens, cooktops, microwaves and standard dishwashers in specially built workstations. Please visit http://yestertec.com to discover more about this exciting alternative kitchen design concept.

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