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THE COUR IER A PR IL 2010 C1 HOME improvement www.thecourier.com Homeowners, businesses taking advantage of tax credit for energy-efficient windows By MICHELLE REITER STAFF WRITER Photos by RANDY ROBERTS / The Courier DAN THOMPSON of American Windows and Siding of Ohio, Inc. installs an energy-efficient tilt and slide window at the home of Terry and Nicole Bartsom of Findlay. A tax credit that’s part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is allowing any homeowner who installs new energy-efficient windows to be reimbursed 30 percent of the cost of the new windows up to $1,500. Benefit The tax credit will reimburse you 30 percent of the cost of energy-efficient windows (not including installation/labor costs), up to $1,500. Timing The tax credit is in effect until the end of 2010. Windows must be installed in your “principal residence” between January 1, 2009 and December 31, 2010. Details From June 1, 2009 to Dec. 31, 2010, windows/doors/skylights must have a U-factor and Solar Heat Gain Coefficient (SHGC) less than or equal to 0.30. From Jan. 1 - May 31, 2009, all ENERGY STAR qualified windows, doors, and skylights qualify. You do not have to replace all the windows/doors/skylights in your home to qualify and it doesn’t need to be a replacement, either. Installing a new window where there wasn’t one previously (like in an addition) also qualifies. Qualified models You can find the U-factor and SHGC on the National Fenestration Rating Council label. NFRC is the only federally recognized organization for determining the energy performance of windows, doors and skylights. Visit www.nfrc.org) for information concerning product performance. How to apply Reiter: 419-427-8497 michellereiter@thecourier.com File Tax Form 5695 with your tax return. You must have a Manufacturer’s Certification Statement to qualify. Men, women do chores a little differently | 2 Open the drapes and let the sunshine in | 4 ME! a new home for By most accounts, this is the year for windows. Those seeking energy-efficient replacement windows this year may be able to receive a tax credit of 30 percent, or up to $1,500, as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 allowed a tax credit for those replacing their windows with more energy-efficient versions. The credit, part of the $787 billion stimulus bill passed last year, is equal to 30 percent of the first $5,000 you spend on windows. The $1,500 off does not come at the time of sale, but will be a tax deduction. The extension of the credit means it can be claimed for either 2009 or 2010. Rental homes, though, do not qualify for the credit. For some businesses, this has meant a significant sales boost though at least one business has not noticed much change. The tax credit has been extended through 2010, which means many businesses are working hard to get out the word and sell as many windows as they can. Anyone not yet aware of the rebate will likely encounter advertising for it. “It’s had a positive affect on sales,” said Daryle Reinhart, the owner of Clear Choice windows in Fostoria. “It’s spurred interest.” Not all windows qualify for the rebate, but most do, he said. Qualifying windows must have a .30 U-factor and solar heat gain coefficient or lower. Most windows manufactured meet those qualifications, but not all, so customers may need to ask salesmen specifically for windows that qualify for the tax rebate. Terry and Nicole Bartsom, a Marion Township couple, had new windows installed this month from American Windows and Siding of Ohio, Inc., located on West Main Cross Street in Findlay. The tax credit bumped the project up on their to-do list, Terry said. “We were planning to do it down the road, but we didn’t want to miss the boat on it,” he said. The Bartsom’s windows were at least a decade old, he said, and were not as energy efficient as they could be. They could have been losing heat, but he said he was not sure. Still, the tax credit, which they will be able to claim on their 2010 taxes, was incentive to buy nine new windows this year. Dennis Turner, American Windows and Siding Owner, said he has not owned the business for long and does not know if the tax credit has boosted sales in terms of numbers, but believes it has. But he is quick to tell people about the tax credit as soon as they walk in the door. “We educate them about it, and offer them advice,” he said. He said some roofs, attic insulation, air conditioning units and heat pumps also qualify. But not every business is necessarily seeing an increase. Times are still hard economically and, tax rebate or not, some people do not have the money up front to buy new windows, especially if they have to wait a year to see the tax savings. “I don’t see any influx of business because of it,” said Don Mills, the sales manager for Overhead Door, located on Route 12 in Findlay. “I see people absolutely hanging onto their money. There is a lack of confidence in what’s going on.” Mills said there was a time when Overhead could not keep up with business. Now, after one job is finished, he wonders if there will be another. About half of his customers are not aware of the tax credit, he said. All the same, he supports the tax credit. “I think it’s a good thing,” he said. “If the government gives you something, you had better take it. It’s a really wise investment.” It may be simple but white can be fresh, practical | 8 ® People always ask, “What’s in it for me?” With a custom home from K. Hovnanian® Homes® Built On Your Lot, it’s all about you. We have dozens of designs to start with, and we’ll work with you to customize and personalize your home, so you get exactly what you want…custom built on YOUR lot. We’ve been building exceptional homes for 50 years – and we’re the only “on-your-lot” builder in the Midwest who guarantees the structure of your new homes for 20 YEARS. SCHEDULE AN APPOINTMENT Visit khov.com to see our extensive and learn collection of magnificent homes ® ® more about K. Hovnanian Homes BUILT ON YOUR LOT. BO BOWLING GREEN NEW HOME GALLERY Off South Dixie Highway (Route 25 North) just north 0f I-75, Exit 171 866.402.1592 Saturday 10:00-6:00, Sunday 12:00-5:00 Introductory p prices from the Upper $80’s to the upper $200’s...on your lot! Prices and rates are subject to change. Prices vary by location. BROKERS WELCOME khov.com C2 HOME IMPROV EMENT New season, new look for your home THE COURIER FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2010 AREA’S #1 TREE CARE SPECIALIST Check Out Why At: www.tawatree.com TAWA TREE SERVICE WE EMPLOYEE 3 ISA STATE CERTIFIED ARBORISTS ALL CLIENTS ARE PROTECTED BY COMPREHENSIVE & GENERAL INSURANCE ALL EMPLOYEES COVERED BY WORKERS COMPENSATION TOLL FREE 1-877-523-9001 1131 SUGAR MILL DR., OTTAWA Having a Graduation Party in your garage this year? Need a New Door?... Call Now for a Free Estimate. Order Early to Guarantee. Your Installation is Done on Time The Associated Press A PHOTO FROM “Suzanne Kasler: Inspired Interiors.” With collection of vintage blue accessories and blue printed fabrics, Kasler says she creates a soothing, cool atmosphere is this entryway that doubles for dining in a show house she designed in Santa Rosa Beach, Fla. The beach theme is apparent in the seashell chandelier. The photo above, released by Clarkson Potter, shows an image from “The Find: The Housing Works Book of Decorating with Thrift Shop Treasures, Flea Market Objects and Vintage Details” by Stan Williams. Nothing says spring is officially here like a home getting transformed By SUSAN ZEVON FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS On the leafy street where I grew up, spring brought blazing forsythia and a canopy of fresh green blooms. But for me, the season never truly arrived until the afternoon I would come home from school to find our apartment transformed. My mother and our housekeeper would work all day stripping the windows of draperies, installing screens, polishing wood floors and furnishings, and covering the sofa and chairs in crisp green and white chintz. These were the days before air conditioning, yet even on a hot summer day that apartment seemed cool. Today, few households boast a full set of summer slipcovers, but there are easy and inexpensive ways to refresh your home for spring. It starts with the ancient ritual of spring cleaning. “Spring cleaning has been a part of history for thousands of years, and it is often integrated into the religious practice of cleansing the home prior to a spring festival,” housewares designer Rosanna Bowles writes in her recently published “Coming Home: A Seasonal Guide to Creating Family Traditions” (Stewart, Tabori & Chang, 2010). In Atlanta, where the summers are long and hot and there is a tradition of gracious decorating and entertaining, designer Suzanne Kasler transformed a client’s home for spring with a set of white cotton duck slipcovers, and a complete set of oriental rugs in a lighter palette than the deeper-toned rugs they replaced over sisal carpet. In her own home, Kasler does not have a summer set of furnishings. She welcomes the season by cleaning, paring down and changing accessories. She advises clients to do the same. “New books on the coffee table, a change of accessories and a few fresh flowers can make a huge difference,” she says. She finds the color blue, “a water color,” especially cooling. Spring is a good time to experiment, says Stan Williams, author of The Elegant Thrifter blog spot and “The Find: The Housing Works Book of Decorating with Thrift Shop Treasures, Flea Market Objects, and Vintage Details” (Clarkson Potter, 2009). “Move the furniture around, change the direction of the rug, reevaluate your window treatments for the change in light, take down the drapes and roll up the rugs,” he advises. “Thrift shop finds give you the liberty to experiment,” Williams believes. “Buy a piece, experiment and if you don’t like it you can donate it back and take the tax deduction.” You might try moving indoor furniture outside, and vice versa. Williams suggests transforming old pieces: creating a tiered plant stand out of an old dresser, covering old wingback chairs in white vinyl for a cool and contemporary look, painting an old table with bold black and white. Bowles suggests putting a piece of furniture in storage to open up a room. She also likes to temporarily replace accessories that are dark and seem wintry with ones that provide fresh, light accents. Set the table with pastel dishes and fresh flowers. Other ways to renew your home for spring without spending a lot of money, she says, include letting in the light (except at noon) and, when the sun sets, opening drapes and windows to let in fresh air. Clear the kitchen and bathrooms, counters and all, of clutter. Lighten the bedding, using 100 percent cotton sheets and blankets when possible. And when going through those closets and cabinets, donate what you no longer like or need to a thrift shop or charity, or sell it. Open up your home and life to the possibility of change signaled each year by the arrival of spring. STEEL • WOOD • ALUMINUM Sectional Overhead Doors, Motor Operators, Radio Controls, Garage Door Repairs COMMERCIAL • INDUSTRIAL • RESIDENTIAL IN-STOCK DO-IT-YOURSELF PARTS t i a On The Net: www.rosannainc.com www.suzannekasler.com http://elegantthrifter.blogspot. com www.housingworks.org SPRING OPEN HOUSE Saturday, May 1st, 2010 • 8am - 5pm Bring in this ad and receive $10 off any purchase of $50 or more. Coupon good May 1, 2010 only. One coupon per purchase. Grower Q&A Hydrangea Tips & Tricks Field Tours Giveaways & Raffles Tool Sharpening North Branch Nursery, Inc. Landscape * Garden Center * Wholesale 3359 Kesson Road, Pemberville, OH 43450 • 419-287-4679 Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8-7; Sat. 8-5; Sun. 11-5 IMPROVE the look of your home... UPGRADE with new appliances. Bindel’s Appliance LG 214 South Main St., Findlay • 419-422-6954 www.NorthBranchNursery.com HOME IMPROV EMENT THE COURIER FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2010 Gaming furniture moves into family rooms Housekeeping primers for novices, male or female Huge growth in video game sales convinces furniture No surprise: Men, women do makers to create household chores differently new designs By MELISSA KOSSLER DUTTON FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Furniture makers have long made pieces for storing gaming consoles and their accompanying equipment in children’s room. Now they’re starting to offer more stylish varieties for other parts of the house. “Gaming consoles have really moved out of kid’s bedrooms to family rooms,” said Patricia Bowling, spokeswoman for the American Home Furnishings Alliance in High Point, N.C. Furniture makers have “kicked up a notch” the functionality of living room and game room cabinets, she said, and borrowed many of the storage ideas and organizational aspects of children’s bedroom furniture. The newer pieces can store the various controllers and specialized accessories, such as musical instruments and sports equipment, that are popular among video game enthusiasts. Designed to keep a room tidy and attractive, the furniture also can accommodate cords and plugs. The trend toward hanging televisions on the wall rather than storing them in cabinets also has helped drive the need for new, family room-style furniture, designers and manufacturers said. Huge growth in home gaming sales convinced Hooker Furniture in Martinsville, Va., to start designing furniture for games, said spokeswoman Kim Shaver, citing a 2009 Centris study that said more than 33 million U.S. households have systems. The pieces are such an important part of the company’s furniture line, she added, that it intends to create a gaming room at the International Home Furnishings Market in High Point, N.C., this month. “We’ve decided to ramp our development of the gaming console,” Shaver said. “It’s extremely popular with retailers and designers.” Hookers’ gaming cabinets come in three finishes and are designed to reduce clutter, she said. “The units are more casual in design,” she said, and are meant for family rooms and recreation rooms. Designer Eric Ross of Eric Ross Interiors in Franklin, Tenn., said he counsels clients putting together game rooms to choose furniture with doors that will hide the sets and accessories. “You’ve got to conceal all the equipment,” he said. “Children aren’t neat.” A nice feature of some of the new furniture is full-extension, pull-out storage trays that let players see all the games at once, Ross said. Before furniture makers started manufacturing consoles for gaming systems, homeowners often tried to create their own with shelving and baskets — a do-it-yourself solution that Ross found lacking. “You can see in the baskets,” he said. “It’s just not practical.” Van Shephard, senior designer at Lombards Furniture Galleries in Columbus, Ohio, agreed that a cabinet is best, to hide all the game parts. Some high-end retailers have starting making TV cabinets designed to accommodate the wires and plugs from gaming units, he said. “It’s very up and coming,” he said. “It only makes sense.” FRUTH’S Sugarhouse, Greenhouse and Floral Shop • Perennials • • Hanging Baskets • • Annuals & Vegetable Bedding Plants • • Trees & Shrubs • • Geraniums • • Soy Candles • • Burpee Seed • • Potting Soil • • Bulk Mulch • • FTD Wire Service • • Teleflora • 19900 CR 169 Vanlue HRS: M-F 9-6 Sat. 9-5 Sun. 1-4 419-387-7555 By JENNIFER FORKER FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS It’s no secret that men and women sometimes take different approaches to housecleaning. After I married my husband, I found him cleaning the toilet by disassembling it first. His father? Family lore says Grandpa John once cleaned the kitchen floors by moving the table and chairs into another room, filling a bucket with scalding, sudsy water and throwing it on the linoleum floor — mimicking how he mopped barracks floors during Army basic training in the early 1960s. “It was clean, it was fast, it was efficient and it got the job done,” said Grandpa John Clarke, 73, of West Warwick, R.I. “It’s not how I do it anymore. Now we hire a cleaning lady.” Two books have hit bookstores to help the housekeeping-challenged. One is clearly female-oriented, promising to impart the wisdom of grandmothers. The other? Grandpa John would agree with its logic: Teach men shortcuts and encourage speed. “How To Get Things Really Flat” (The Experiment, 2009) not only tries to help men understand the art of ironing, as the title indicates, but author Andrew Martin hopes to liberate women by emboldening men: Yes, you can do the dishes (and the laundry). He does this with humor and bluntness. “My argument is it’s not difficult to learn (how to do certain chores) so why not learn it? Men are perverse in not learning it,” Martin said in an interview from his London home. “They spend hundreds of hours of their lives arguing with their wives. And I say why not find something better, more original to fight about?” “How to Sew on a Button: And Other Nifty Things Your Grandmother Knew” (Ballantine Books, 2009) takes a similar tack for women untrained in the household arts. The book idea started with a pie gone wrong, said author Erin Bried of Brooklyn, N.Y. She tried to bake a strawberry-rhubarb pie for friends and learned — after serving it — that she’d used Swiss chard stems instead of rhubarb. The greens gave the pie a decidedly grassy — and inedible — taste. “It was so embarrassing, I decided to write a book about it,” said Bried. These two authors researched their books in similar fashions: by interviewing those they deemed “experts.” Martin spoke with the women in his life, particularly his wife, and a few obscure scientist types. Bried searched out other people’s grandmothers. Ten of these women share their ideas on thriftiness and entertaining, housecleaning and, yes, even how to sew on a button. Bried, a senior staff writer at Self magazine, says her book is for folks seeking more self sufficiency. C3 PRICES We are about to mow down our prices! Lawn Care shouldn’t break your bank! Spend your money on the things that help you relax! Have a safe summer from your friends at... 9280 N. Dixie Hwy Bluffton 419-358-7638 MULCH SHREDDED TREE BARK (ALL NATURAL - NO PALLETS) $18.00 PER YARD COLOR ENHANCED MULCH (Black, Chocolate or Red) (100% WOOD PRODUCT - NO PALLETS) $22.00 PER YARD Wagner Sawmill 13201 Rd. X Leipsic, OH 45856 Phone: 419-653-4126 The Associated Press ERIN BRIED IS the author of “How to Sew a Button: And Other Nifty Things Your Grandmother Knew.” A senior staff writer at Self magazine, Bried says her book is for those who are seeking more self sufficiency. www.wagnersawmill.com Monday to Friday - 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. (Closed 12-1 Lunch) Saturday 9a.m. - Noon “We are in tough economic times, and we’re all looking for different ways to save time and save money and make life simpler,” said Bried. “If you know how to hem your own pants you can make the decision to do it.” Martin, the author of seven novels, says the trick in getting men to do housework is to teach them shortcuts, which are more than speedy — they’re “manly.” He tells men to use the vacuum attachment to dust — or to dust with both hands — and to work fast, against the clock. Making it a contest — that’s manly — will get the job done. Martin warns women to start their men off slowly with chores that show noticeable results. That’s why men like to mow, he said. “You can see where you’ve been,” Martin said. “You can see you’re achieving something.” The same can hold true for ironing and vacuuming. “There is something about vacuuming,” said Martin. “It’s more manly. It’s noisy. It’s violent. People have to shut up for it.” Martin even has a favorite vacuum attachment. “I say the best attachment is the narrow one,” he said. “That is the most violent.” Located 1/4 mile East of St. Rt. 108 between Holgate and Miller City on Co. Rd. X (One Road South of the Putnam/Henry Co. Line - Watch for sign on St. Rt. 108) Locally Owned & Operated Work with Jennifer Poe, CKD Certified Kitchen Designer KITCHENS BATHROOMS Full Bathroom Remodeling Custom Vanities & Tops Walk in Showers with Seats Designer Medicine Cabinets Aging in Place Solutions ADA compliant products Stock and Custom Cabinetry Beautiful Stone & Quartz Tops Outstanding Customer Service Unique Design Solutions Professional Installation Client References Now Offering All Types Of Remodeling Services Visit our Showroom www.legacykitbath.com 1100 Croy Drive Behind Sears in Findlay 419-422-9100 A step by step guide to spring cleaning By The Associated Press Spring-cleaning tips, adapted from Erin Bried’s “How to Sew a Button: And Other Nifty Things Your Grandmother Knew” (Ballantine Books, 2009): Step 1: Schedule the spring cleaning (to get into the proper mindset). Have all of the proper supplies on hand and set aside plenty of time. Step 2 : Make a checklist, room by room, of what needs to be cleaned. In each room, dust every surface, wipe down dirty walls and doors, vacuum and/or mop, steam clean rugs if necessary, wash light fixtures, remove and clean drapes or blinds, beat cushions, rugs, pillows and mats (outside), and clean windows inside and out. Step 3: Room-by-room specialty tasks: Kitchen: Wipe out fridge, defrost and wipe out freezer, clean oven, organize pantry and drawers. Bedroom: Flip and rotate mattress, change bedding, wash pillows (if washable), swap out winter clothes for summer clothes (donate anything no longer worn). Bathroom: Besides the usual cleaning of toilet, shower, sink and counter, clean out the medicine cabinet and drawers. Home office: Remove books from shelves and dust; wipe dow n computers ; orga ni ze important papers. Step 4 : Prioritize tasks. If you have helpers, delegate tasks. If not, make sure you can finish what you start to avoid bigger messes. 1016 North Blanchard St. Findlay, Ohio 45840 419-423-5723 SPRING AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE $ 00 75 Any materials such as refrigerant and filters at an additional cost. Ask about our complete line of Indoor Air Quality Products *Offer valid thru June 30, 2010 FREE Laminate! FREE Vinyl! FREE Tile! To Help Celebrate Our 5th Year In Business, Verhoff’s Carpet Mart Is Offering The Following Unbeatable Deal!! WE CALL IT THE “BUY A SQUARE YARD *** GET A SQUARE FOOT” DEAL OF THE DECADE HOW DOES IT WORK?? Simply Buy A Square Yard of Carpet And We’ll Give You A Square Foot of Laminate, Vinyl or Ceramic Tile FREE! **We will not raise our carpet prices to compensate for this deal, there will be no gimmicks or bait & switch **The Free Vinyl is not the cheap “Easy To Tear” vinyl - It’s high quality vinyl with a 10 to 25 year warranty, values up to $3.50 sq. ft.! 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Includes Regular Housecleaning Insured • Bonded NADINE‛S CLEANING 419-722-6824 Commercial/Residential Sales/Service/Installation Affordable Rates/Quality Service COMPLETE PLUMBING ~ HEATING ~ COOLING SERVICE y a 00 50OFF $ ROTOBRUSH DUCT CLEANING (Minimum 15 Openings) Any materials such as parts & filters at an additional cost. Exp. June 30, 2010 q r Lic. Verl Warnimont - Owner & Master Plumber OH. #34264 30 Years Experience Free Estimates For Installation ~ 24 Hour Emergency Service STEVE RUARK / Associated Press STEVE SCHIFF, president of Dynamic Draperies in Dover, Del., stands near a window treatment in the dining room of his home in Newark, Del. “The most obvious thing,” says Schiff of using your windows to mark the return of spring, “is to open the treatments and lets the light shine in.” 419-423-5723 Open the drapes and let a little sunshine in HEY MR. FIXIT, WEÕVE GOT JUST THE RIGHT BOOTS FOR YOU. Days of alternating drapes may be gone but you can still use window treatments to mark the change in seasons By CAROLE FELDMAN ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER The days when people swapped out heavy velvet drapes for lighter, more translucent ones come spring are gone — window treatments are too expensive for many of us to have multiple sets of draperies. But there are other ways to use your windows to mark the change of season. “The obvious thing is to open the treatments and let the light shine in,” said Steven Schiff, owner of Dynamic Draperies, in Delaware. Here are some other tips: • Clean. Wash your windows to remove winter’s grime, said Meghan Carter, who runs the Web site AskTheDecorator.com. She prefers mild soap and water to the ammonia-based glass cleaners. Clean windows on a cloudy day or when they’re in the shade, starting from the top and using a damp squeegee blade to wipe off cleaner, Consumer Reports advised. Clean the window coverings, too. For curtains and drapes, use a soft brush or dusting attach- ment to a vacuum cleaner. “Set on reduced suction to prevent fabric from being drawn into the nozzle,” the magazine said. Screens also should be cleaned. And consider choosing one of the newer screening materials that might give a clearer view. • Consider switching to lighter window treatments. Fabrics help determine the feel of a room. If you have storage space, heavy, dark drapes can be taken down for spring and summer and stored. Put them on a “nice round fat hanger,” said Oma Ford, senior deputy editor for home design at Better Homes and Gardens. While it can cost $4,000 or more to outfit a house with custom-made window treatments, Ford said ready-made curtain panels can be much less expensive for those who want to swap out drapes in the spring. And she suggests thinking outside the window box. “Consider using a lightweight bedspread or tablecloth,” she said. They can be attached to a rod with clip rings. “You might be able to find some fun patterns,” she said. For kitchens and bathrooms, cloth napkin squares hung on a tension rod with clip rings can create “a fun, no commitment style statement,” Ford said. • Or, if you want to keep your drapes up all year, consider: Layering window treatments is one way to make them work all year. Sheers, blinds or shades layered underneath those heavy drapes will let light in yet still provide privacy. Ford likes the “tropical feel” of shades made from bamboo or woven natural material. Fabrics in lighter colors will produce a “little more springy feeling,” she said, because they reflect the light that comes into the room. Carter recommends staying away from thick heavy fabrics in dark shades. A neutral color in a mid-range fabric “gives you a little coziness while still being kind of fresh,” she said. • Think practical. Function should be the first thing to consider when picking fabrics for window treatments, said Schiff, who has been in the fabric and window treatment business for more than 35 years. Is the drapery supposed to provide privacy? Cut down on bright sunlight? “Each solution has its choice of fabrics,” said Schiff, who lives in Newark, Del. “If all you need to do is diffuse rays of sunlight, you can use almost anything.” Today’s windows provide more insulation than in the past. And even if you live in an old house and haven’t replaced the windows, storm windows provide some insulation. “There really isn’t the need for the heavy, insulated, velvet draperies like grandma used to have,” Schiff said. “From an energy point of view, draperies are a piece of the puzzle, but not a major piece.” • Decorate around the windows. “Moving plants near windows gives more of a sense of bringing the outside inside,” Schiff said. It doesn’t matter whether the plants are in the house or outside, or whether they are real or artificial. “It’s a great way to freshen and put a spring uptick to a house,” he said. Mirrors also can add light to a room by reflecting the natural light from the windows. “I wouldn’t recommend that people slap a mirror up just anywhere,” Ford said. “If it feels like there’s a window missing, that might be a good place to put a mirror.” On the Net: www.askthedecorator.com @E&<" 505 W. Smith St., 4148 B Park Ave. W. 227 S. Washington St., Forest, Ohio Mansfield, Ohio Tiffin, Ohio 419-273-2531 419-529-4002 419-448-8885 Let the equity in your home work for you! SUPER WINDOW SALE CONSERVE ENERGY - SPRING, SUMMER, FALL & WINTER Free Estimates! • Dealing Direct With Owner • No High Pressure • Best Quality Around • Professional Installation • Premium Grade Siding & Windows (Lifetime Warranty) • Licensed, Bonded, Insured 30% TAX CREDIT! UP TO $1500 AVAILABLE! 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The cooling water also “captures” that waste heat for other uses, such as hot water or radiant heat for the building. OF 325 S. Main St. 419-423-9990 Solar energy with jewel-like curtains on windows TROY, N.Y. (AP) — Cityscapes of glass-clad buildings gleaming in the sun make Anna Dyson think about wasted energy. Dyson heads the Center for Architecture Science and Ecology, or CASE, a research consortium that wants to turn office windows into multifaceted solar power generators. Their “integrated concentrating dynamic solar facade” consists of grids of clear pyramids that help focus the sun’s rays to generate energy. It would essentially make buildings look as if they were draped in giant jeweled curtains. 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When you have Bryantman on your side, nothing can stand in the way of your comfort. Armed with Bryant’s high-efficiency heating and cooling systems, he has the ability to make sure your home is always your perfect temperature. And if that wasn’t heroic enough, Bryantman will always do everything in his power to make sure your comfort is always protected. Whatever it takes.SM 24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE 610 Third St., Findlay (419) 423-5833 BRYBM01 An ideal oppor unity for homeowners The Associated Press THIS UNDATED PHOTO PROVIDED by Sarah Dorio/Decor Demon shows an outdoor living room designed by Brian Patrick Flynn. To create a budget-friendly outdoor living room, Flynn recovered patio furniture found at a flea market with soft indoor/outdoor fabrics. Great design ideas for turning even most unexceptional deck into inviting outdoor space By MELISSA RAYWORTH FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Homeowners with sprawling backyards often put at least a bit of effort into decorating their outdoor entertaining space. Maybe they splurge on some high-end outdoor furniture and an elaborate grill, plus a few accessories to give the space style. But what about the rest of us? When a home has more modest outdoor space — perhaps a porch or patio, or a balcony off the master bedroom — these limited spaces are often ignored. Genevieve Gorder often sees clients who paid top dollar for an apartment with a balcony only to ignore the space because they don’t know what to do with it. Gorder, host of HGTV’s “Battle on the Block” and a judge on “HGTV Design Star,” says these small and mid-size spaces can seem tough to tackle. “Any outdoor spaces can be kind of intimidating,” agrees designer Brian Patrick Flynn, founder of decordemon.com. “When you design a room, you have four walls and it’s easy to conceptualize what will fill it. Outside, the possibilities are endless and you don’t really have a sense of scale. The sky goes on forever.” But there are great design strategies for turning even the most unexceptional deck or patio into an inviting space for outdoor entertaining this summer: LOOK DOWN “The biggest impact for your buck is to focus on the floor,” says Flynn. Paint a concrete slab or old decking with a worn finish using “porch and deck paint,” he says. “It’s fantastic on a pretty spring day. A lot of bold sunlight will dry that paint and you’ll be walking on it within hours.” Gorder suggests shopping online for marine paint, designed for the hulls of boats. It’s impervious to weather and comes in great bold colors. Choose a solid color or paint some stripes to extend the look of the space. Then add some warmth. “I love the idea of layering little area rugs outside, in an ethnic, Moroccan-y way,” says Los she says, referring to metal racks hung with lots of candles. So are hurricane lamps, paper lanterns and artificial LED candles. “Make it sexy outside and people will be there,” Gorder says. “You’ll use that space more.” Another can’t-lose choice: Bur nha m says little white Christmas lights never lose their charm. She wraps a few strands around an olive tree just off her patio to add a soft glow. Angeles interior designer Betsy Burnham. “We did it in sort of an American way on a porch in northern Michigan,” she says, “with striped kilim rugs. It made it so intimate out there, and you can sit down on “Flowers and plants LIVING THINGS them because it’s are your paint outside. Burnham and not just a cold outThey’ll last all year Gorder both door surface.” advise selecting No ne e d t o and give that brilliant plants to create spend a lot, she the perfect backsays: “Pull them pop of color.” drop. “You want from in front of your sink. Be cre— GENEVIEVE GORDER, HGTV the height, so ative with what PERSONALITY that when you’re sitting you still you already have have green in your house.” behind you, not just down at the YOU DON’T HAVE TO COMMIT ground,” Burnham says. Rather than decorating your “Use some potted boxwoods,” outdoor space and keeping she says, or small potted citrus everything out there all summer, trees, “and you’ll all of a sudden consider mixing and matching have this sort of manicured indoor pieces just for occasional greenery outside.” parties. Flynn uses masonry nails to hang art on concrete or brick exterior walls during outdoor parties, then brings the art in when he’s done entertaining. He also brings out a bedroom dresser (on casters, to make moving it simple) to use as a sideboard, setting up a bar on top. These designers also love bringing out colorful, oversized floor pillows (either ones made for outside or ones you already use indoors) and clustering a few together. “The best size is a 30 -inch by 30 -inch,” Flynn says. “It fits any size person’s butt sitting down, but little kids can also curl up on it.” A small outdoor dining area becomes exceptional when the table is set with cloth napkins, napkin rings and even a bit of china and crystal, Burnham says. You wouldn’t leave these items outdoors all the time, but treat yourself to using them for summer get-togethers or an al fresco dinner for two. Adds Gorder: “Anytime you can use the vertical, you can trick the eye” into thinking a space is larger than it is. She loves potted sea grass, which is low maintenance and grows tall. Also, think color. “Flowers and plants are your paint outside,” Gorder said. She loves geraniums. “They’ll last all year and give that brilliant pop of color.” Many people assume that adding lights outdoors requires elaborate, expensive wiring, Gorder says. But there are tons of low-tech options for “creating the mood.” “Candeliers are gorgeous,” payments, or to consolidate outstanding debts or make some home improvements. Put a home equity line of credit from Commercial Savings Bank to work for you today. – No closing costs – Low payments – No teaser rates For more good news on why you can be confident with us, call or visit your local Commercial Savings Bank. Online at csbanking.com. CUSTOM CREATION “The key to making things look designer,” Flynn says, “is making them look custom.” He uses Trina Turk’s line of outdoor fabrics from Schumacher (think bold, Palm Beach-inspired patterns) to cover pillows and outdoor upholstery. If you’re saving elsewhere, like using flea market furniture instead of new pieces, it’s worth splurging on a bit of custom upholstery, he says. And if seating space is limited, Gorder suggests creating a long bench that runs the length of one side of your balcony or patio. “Even if you have to custom make it out of an old door or plywood, do it,” she say. “You will use it.” 201 E. Lincoln St., Findlay 419.423.3057 1660 Tiffin Ave., Findlay 419.423.2921 112 E. Liberty St., Arlington 419.365.5300 *Subject to credit approval. Your Annual Percentage Rate (APR) may vary and is based on the Wall Street Journal Prime Rate (Prime Rate) (3.25% as of March 23, 2010). A margin that varies by the loan-to-value ratio (LTV) of your loan and your credit report beacon score may be added to the Prime Rate to determine your APR. The maximum margin is 2.50%. Your APR can never decrease below 5.25% and will never exceed 25%. Minimum loan amount is $5,000. Maximum LTV is 85%. An annual fee of $50 is payable each year on the anniversary date of your loan. A prepayment fee of $300 may apply if your account is paid off and closed within 24 months of your loan date. Property insurance (and flood insurance, if applicable) is required on the property securing your CSB Prime Key account. Terms and conditions are subject to change without notice. Consult your tax advisor regarding deductibility of interest. Arlington | Findlay | Carey | Upper Sandusky | Harpster | Marion RIDER CONSTRUCTION David L. Rider 30 years of quality construction 419-422-9579 Remodeling * New Homes * Additions * Windows * Siding * Roofing * Decks Hitchings Insurance Agency, Inc. 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Still, there were daffodils, there was birdsong, there was grass. And we had our little house to clean and paint and decorate, because it was, for once, our own place. We relished our private pod of family life.” Taking on spring away from city, in suburbs THE COURIER FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2010 Paving the Way to A Beautiful Home! Driveways • Parking Lots Commercial & Residential Kuenzli & Son Paving Asphalt Paving Contractor Driveways • Parking Lots Kuenzli & Son Paving 17789 St. Rt. 37 Mt. Blanchard 419-694-5181 Call me today to see how you can save when you combine your home and auto policies. Terry Lynn Webb 419-425-1988 1433 East Sandusky - Suite B Findlay a047034@allstate.com Discount and insurance offered only with select companies and subject to availability and qualifications. Discount amount may be lower.Allstate Insurance Company, Allstate Property and Casualty Insurance Company and Allstate Indemnity Company; Northbrook, IL © 2009 Allstate Insurance Company NEED YOUR GARAGE DOOR OR OPENER REPAIRED TODAY? • Garage Doors and Genie Operators Sales and Service • Install and Repair all Brand Name Doors and Operators • Replace Springs, Cables, and Remotes Family Owned and Operated Business • Parts for all Brands Owners: Jim & Liz Chidester Serin • Best Quality Products & Look for us on Facebook Same Day Service 741 Hull Ave. a 419-423-8318 Findlay, OH i Storewide Discounts MAY 1st - MAY 31st CARPET ~ HARDWOOD ~ TILE ~ LAMINATE ~ VINYL LAUREN JOFRE / Associated Press THIS PHOTO SHOWS THE WRITER’S HOME in the suburbs. While she and her husband reveled in the opportunity to move, with their two children, away from the big city and into the suburbs, they quickly discover that their suburban lifestyle faced just as many challenges at city life had. The only difference was that in the city there were no worries about woodpeckers to intimidate, termites to kill or bulbs to plant in the garden. Family of four adjusts to termites, woodpeckers and joys of suburbia By LAURA JOFRE FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS My husband and I were city folks with two young children, excited to be buying a house in the suburbs: rooms and floors! Our own driveway! Our front yard, tiny though it is! We even got two trees: one in the front and one in the back. “There’s no trash on our street,” was the first thing my 5-year-old daughter said. Not only was there no trash, there were no shouters, loiterers or urine smells: nothing to be wary of. There were no downstairs neighbors complaining about the racket, and no upstairs neighbors blasting music while moving furniture. No more airshaft views through pigeon poo windows or laundry-room roach fears: Life would be a bucolic celebration of the seasons and open spaces. We bought garden tools. Shortly after we moved in the spring, we heard a persistent knocking that recalled our old noise-averse downstairs neighbor. It turned out to be a blackand-white woodpecker with a jaunty red cap, who systematically drilled circular holes in our brown wooden shingles. We went from admiring the bird to banging on the window to squirting it with a water gun (rain! It shivered in delight), to fixing a fake owl to the roof. It wasn’t scared. It pecked straight through the shingle and flew back to the tree. It turns out that one of the woodpecker’s natural adaptations, to protect itself from pecking-induced brain damage, is to have a very small brain. A neighbor advised us to paint our house a less tree-like color. Maybe there was something unpalatable about our trees. The one behind the house had ants all over it, which thrilled the kids. “Look, Mom, they’re going right in!” That didn’t seem right. I grabbed a stick — I was sort of MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ / Associated Press AN ACORN WOODPECKER dangles from a tree as it looks for food at Rancho San Antonio Park in Los Altos, Calif. “Shortly after we moved in the spring, we heard a persistent knocking that recalled our old noise-averse downstairs neighbor. It turned out to be a black-and-white woodpecker with a jaunty red cap, who systematically drilled circular holes in our brown wooden shingles. We went from admiring the bird to banging on the window to squirting it with a water gun, to fixing a fake owl to the roof.” excited that we even had sticks — and tentatively poked the bark. My stick encountered no resistance for several rotten inches. The arborist said it should come down. So, suburban nature was not carefree. Still, there were daffodils, there was birdsong, there was grass. And we had our little house to clean and paint and decorate, because it was, for once, our own place. We relished our private pod of family life. My father came to see the house one day that spring; as we approached the front door from outside, my father said calmly, “That’s probably termites.” I may have screamed. The invasion covered roughly a third of the door. Termites! I had heard of them: They ate houses. Why wasn’t my father alarmed? “They’ll be gone in an hour,” he said. They left behind only a few wings as evidence of their cavorting. I kicked them off my 2010 All-America City finalists announced DENVER (AP) — More than two dozen communities have been named finalists for the National Civic League’s 2010 All-America City Awards. The Denver-based organization says the cities were selected for addressing such issues as diversifying the labor force and funding services during the recession. Finalists are Chandler, Ariz., Bentonville, Ark., Dublin, Lynwood, Rancho Cordova and the Vernon Central neighborhood, Calif., Miami Lakes and North Miami, Fla., Acworth, Ga., Belleville and Canton, Ill., Noblesville, Ind., Des Moines, Iowa, Lenexa and Scott County, Kan., Bowling Green, Ky., Salisbury, Md., Ferguson and Riverside, Mo., Lynbrook, N.Y., Gastonia, N.C., West Chester and Wyoming, Ohio, Mount Pleasant, S.C., El Paso, Texas, Abingdon, Va. and Middleton, Wis. Ten winners will be announced on June 18. doorstep. The next spring, I was more prepared. We planted a new tree, enjoyed our crocuses. The woodpecker kept knocking and we kept trying to turn him away, like seasoned naturalists who know a pest from a prize. We also acquired a robin who bashed against our window in a daily brawl with its reflection. The window held. But when spring, in its indiscriminate energy, actually entered my house, well, I lost it. It was a warm day, and the kids and I were heading out to the paradise of our yard. We approached our front door, from the inside, and found it seemingly covered with a grayish brown blanket. As it came into focus, I saw the blanket was actually a moving, squirming mass of termites. “Ew, Mommy, look at the door!” shrieked my daughter. “Are those bugs? ” asked my son, 3, fascinated. Oh, it was horrifying. There were just so many. Some of them were flying. And they were on the wrong side of the door. Nature was fine, woodpeckers and rotten trees were fine: They were all outside. I hustled the kids down to the playroom. “You guys want to watch TV?” I asked. “And I’ll see if those silly bugs want to go outside? Do you think they’re lost? ” The kids nodded slowly, skeptically, and I strolled out of the room, practically humming in my composure. Then I sprinted, face averted, past the front door. I found the yellow pages and the biggest ad for pest control, and dialed with shaking fingers. The nice lady I spoke to advised me to vacuum the termites, as if it were that easy. She waited as I wildly waved the vacuum hose at the door, trying to accomplish the job from the distance of the hose length, with my head turned away and my eyes closed. Nothing doing. I had to get up close, grit my teeth, and vacuum those suckers. “What do I do with the vacuum bag?” I imagined the termites all crawling around in there, becoming angry, plotting. “Well, I would throw it away,” she said. Eventually, we would replace a section of plywood wall hidden beneath our front steps where the termites had found their own homey bliss. We installed a baiting system and so far have seen no more termites. Our new tree is thriving. We’ve planted more bulbs. And our house, now painted white, no longer attracts the woodpecker. Every year, I’m overjoyed by spring’s arrival. But then my city training kicks in, and I can’t help it: I glare outside with a fair amount of suspicion. 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Mon-Sat 9-8 Sun 9-5 2330 Bright Rd. • Findlay • 419-423-4223 • www.feasels.com HOME IMPROV EMENT THE COURIER FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2010 Here are a few options on what to do with all that unwanted stuff By DAN SEWELL ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER Spring for many homeowners means confronting all the things that have filled up the closets, basement and garage over the past year. As the late comedian George Carlin used to say: “Your house is a pile of stuff with a cover on it.” Getting rid of that stuff has always been tricky — especially if you hope to come away with some cash. Today, because of the Internet and the recession, there are more options than ever for trying to sell used items. To newspaper classified ads, garage sales and flea markets, add Facebook, Craig’s List, eBay and other online trading sites. To pawn shops and consignment shops, add an expanding array of resale stores that pay cash on the spot. Laura Deaton Morarity, who was preparing to move recently to a new public relations job in Seattle, was a little stunned at how much she had acquired in her Cincinnati-area home after living there just four years. “It was just a ton of stuff. My husband and I just decided, ’We’re selling everything’ except our clothing, books and some keepsakes,” she recalled. But in the middle of a bad winter, how do you do that quickly? Her solution: a virtual yard sale on Facebook. She posted a photo album on the social networking site and alerted her friends and family, who also got their Facebook friends involved in the buying. In 24 hours, Morarity sold everything she listed: couch, chair, dining room set, loveseats, TV stand and more. “It was really kind of shocking how fast it went,” she said, adding that she priced to sell but came away with enough cash and savings on moving expenses for a head start on stocking a new home. Tighter household budgets mean that not only are more people buying used, but they also are holding on to things longer, increasing demand for good-quality resale items. AL BEHRMAN / Associated Press LENA ELAM, LEFT, sells clothes to employee Lise Hopkins, right, in this February file photo at a Plato’s Closet in Cincinnati. The store buys and resells clothing items. “We are attracting more and more customers that never went to resale before,” said Renae Blonigen, brand director for the Plato’s Closet chain, which buys and sells used youth clothing. “We were doing well before the recession, and that has really exploded our business.” Johnny Crowell, a co-owner of the Home Consignment Center, a 16-store chain based in Danville, Calif., also said that sales are up while fewer people are offering their sofas, dining room sets and other furniture for consignment. “I suppose it’s because fewer people are moving or upsizing,” said Crowell. His stores have added to their inventory through furniture factories and other steady sources. Crowell said the business, started in 1994, prices consignment items to sell so that customers quickly get their 50 percent take. It also offers pickup and other services to make it easier for sellers. Minneapolis-based Winmark Corp. has been opening dozens of new resale stores, including Plato’s Closet, and outlets that buy and sell used children’s clothing, sporting goods and musical items. A Hollister shirt in nice condition that sold for $30 new might land the owner $5 to $7 from Plato’s, which then might sell it for $13 to $15. Kate Finger, general manager of 15 Plato’s and Once Upon a Child stores in the Cincinnati area, said sales at the suburban Colerain Township store jumped 24 percent last year after a 32 percent rise in 2008. But that means it needs a steady supply of more good stuff to sell, so employees try to make sure every buyer understands they can also bring their own used clothes — the chain looks for still-trendy, new-looking items — for cash on the spot. Lena Elam, a regular at the Plato’s store in Colerain, said being able to sell her three children’s used clothing enables her to replace them with used clothing she wouldn’t be able to afford new. “What they don’t buy, then I take it on to Goodwill,” said Kim Patterson, a suburban mom who had just sold some of her two children’s jeans. Goodwill Industries International Inc., the Salvation Army, and other charities provide another option: They can help give your clothing, furniture, books and other items appreciative new homes while you support their humanitarian efforts — and can also get a tax deduction. “We have found that in a tough economy, people like to know that their donations are being reinvested back into the community,” said Jim Gibbons, Goodwill’s CEO. On the Net: www.goodwill.org www.winmarkcorporation.com www.thehomeconsignmentcenter.com C7 ZERO I N O N C O M F O R T T H I S S P R I N G ! With 36 Months Zero Interest On A New Trane System. Purchase a new qualifying high efficiency Trane heating and cooling system by June 30, 2010 and Knueve and Sons will give you up to 36 Months Zero Interest financing. Or choose payments as low as $125 / month or up to a $1,000 rebate.* In addition Knueve and Sons will give you a 10-year parts and labor Peace of Mind Protection Plan on our installation. Did you know many high efficiency heat pumps, air conditioners, and furnaces qualify for New Energy Tax Credits up to $1,500? By installing qualified equipment you, the homeowner, may be qualified to claim 30% of the installed costs (up to the It's Hard To Stop A Trane. $1,500 limit). Call Knueve & Sons today so we can help you select equipment that will qualify for tax credits. TM TM K&nueve ons S FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS With a small Manhattan apartment, Erica Linderholm struggles with a common affliction: too much paper. Bills, mail and magazines sit in what she calls “nice stacks” on her kitchen counter and table, occasionally moved to make way for other activities, such as eating. Carefully chosen bins hold old grad school papers, waiting to be reread — or not — when time allows. Work stuff gets lugged around in a rolling bag that Linderholm purchased with the idea of tackling some of it during the 45-minute commute between home and her job as a teacher. “I just schlep it around,” she said. “It’s another vessel for stuff.” Despite our supposed growth as a paperless society, a look at many kitchens, hallways and home offices shows that we are still anything but. Amassing, stacking and losing papers is alive and well in American homes, and some organizational experts say that stunts progress. “Essentially, what most of the piles represent are incompletion,” said David Allen of Ojai, Calif., author of “Getting Things Done.” Papers cease to be problems when they are read, dealt with and filed away, he said. Instead, stacks of untackled material — unread articles, unpaid bills, unanswered invitations — weigh heavily on us, making us less productive. They eat up space in the brain as well as on the kitchen counter, he said. Alaina Yoakum, a sculptor and stay-at-home mom in San Rafael, Calif., said she had been “overwhelmed by my paper problem” when she turned to “Getting Things Done” for help. “I was overlooking bills, misplacing permission slips for my kids, forgetting about fliers for events I’d wanted to attend, and so much more,” Yoakum said. “I felt at a complete loss as to how to deal with the mass overload of papers.” “And it was becoming embar- rassing,” she said. Since reading Allen, Yoakum said, she now has a system: Establish an inbox for new papers, which need to be reviewed in a timely manner. Papers that require action — writing a check or making a phone call, for example — that can be done in two minutes or less should be dealt with then. Anything taking longer needs to be scheduled to do later, or filed away for future reference. The results, Yoakum said, are liberating. “It hasn’t been difficult to make the change,” she said. “Now when I’ve had to suddenly find an important paper or receipt, I knew for a fact that I could find it there. I didn’t have to go scavenging my car, my dresser, or under my bed for it,” Yoakum said. McCOMB LUMBER COMPANY Complete Line of Building Materials We Build Custom Homes We Sell Modular Homes 800-676-3619 4 1 9 . 4 2 0 . 7 6 3 8 www.knueve.com “Your Komfort Is Our Koncern!” 102 Crystal Avenue / Findlay, OH 45840 Heating & Air Conditioning | Air Quality & Humidification | Plumbing Services Water Heaters | Water Treatment Systems | Home Standby Generators Bathroom Remodeling (All offers in this ad are not valid with any other offer. Cannot be combined with any other coupons or specials.) See your participating independent Trane dealer for complete program eligibility, dates, details and restrictions. 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LIGHTING SHOWROOM 1765 Findlay Rd. • Lima • 419-221-1000 ]u Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Call Today 419-423-8082 800-232-7300 Or Visit our Website at www.flagcitywater.com See Our Display at 1705 Romick Pkwy. • Findlay, OH C8 HOME IMPROV EMENT THE COURIER FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2010 FINE TOUCH FURNITURE Be bold with home decor that wows instead of whispers Audacious decor accents should be playful, fun, fresh By KIM COOK FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In its new spring collection, CB2 has a brilliant orange wool area rug emblazoned with the phrase “Keep Calm and Carry On.” The pre-WWII slogan was originally conceived to calm anxious Brits, but this rug is more startling than soothing. And it’s popular; the retailer sold out fast and had to re-order. Marta Calle, director for CB2, says there’s lots of interest in decor “that’s fresh and new, with great detailing. People want pieces that say ‘modern’ in an exciting and unique way.” Some stores may still be playing it safe with inventory, but many have clearly opted to go bold, and homeowners looking to add a bit of wow to a room will find lots of options. Let’s start with walls. The always-daring Tampabased designer Given Campbell gives us a new collection of wallcoverings inspired by several Catholic patron saints. For example, the paper named for “St. Christopher,” the patron saint of travelers, is interpreted in a repeat of airplanes. A quirky 18-by-24-inch frameable version yet wonderful troupe of snails of any of her papers “for those makes its way across the paper who either rent or feel apprehennamed “St. Francis,” after the sive about installing wallpaper.” patron saint of animals. From She’ll print in custom colors, as feathers to fish scales, in softer will Campbell; inks used by both earth tones and wilder hues like designers are eco-friendly. There are many eye-catching fuchsia, lime and gold, these pieces to hang on the wall this wallcoverings hold surprises. Campbell thinks her art’s season — CB2 has a 3-foot-wide appeal is simple: “Drama. Put- abacus crafted of iron and colorting bold wallpaper on even just ful rubberwood beads. It’s lowone wall in a room of any size tech, high-design wall decor. B ro ok l y n - b a s e d g r a p h ic instantly changes the feel of the designer Jen Pepper interprets entire room.” She notes that with more her favorite serif and sans serif typography shelter magain dark walnut zines featuring “Putting bold medium- density st rong pat ter n fibreboard — and color on the wallpaper on even just cool, inexpensive walls, people are one wall in a room gifts for a typomore confident to phile or modern try it themselves. of any size instantly But she has a changes the feel of the artPcollector. epp er ’s su g ge st ion for fledgling studio, neophytes: “Use entire room.” Pe pp e r s prout s , a bold pattern in neutral hues. — GIVEN CAMPBELL, TAMPA, is also producing White on white FLA., DESIGNER s o m e s t r i k i n g laser-cut trivets; is especially good the deer and fox for this, because it’s both dramatic and subtle. motifs rendered in thick pink It’s like design training wheels.” or green felt are pleasingly hip Part of her sales go to St. Vin- folk art. cent de Paul charity. Mario Trimarchi has created Los Angeles-based Kreme a sculptural dance of mirrored Life has several fascinating wall- laser-cut steel in his Scirroco paper patterns too, including a bowl, inspired by childhood chain motif that’s both chic and memories of fierce winds and edgy. Designer Cadee Wilder bits of flying paper. It’s available offers the option of buying an at MOMA, as is a fun collection of paint-drip-patterned trivets and mugs. Boston-based but Britishborn Martin and Michele Yeeles have designed a series of plates printed with photographs of American roadside diners and signs. That these evocative images are printed on sturdy melamine seems to add to their charm. Dandelions shot in black and white add panache to inexpensive porcelain dinnerware at CB2. Finally, at the always-intriguing Mxyplyzyk, there are rhino, moose and deer heads like cardboard origami for the wall, as well as brightly colored bowls with interior photo-prints of yummy looking fruit, salad, popcorn or spaghetti. Designer Natalie Kruch has tied more than 500 candy-colored balloons to a wooden stool she’s named Balloona. Like all of these examples of audacious yet affordable home decor accents, it’s playful, fun and fresh. Just like spring should be. Sourcebook: www.bobsyouruncle.com Deluxe Town Diner melamine plates, set of four, $40; Roadside Signs, set of four melamine plates, $40 www.kremelife.myshopify.com Chains wallpaper, navy/ • Furniture Re-Upholstery • Furniture Repair • Foam Replacement (Seat Cushions) • Thousands of Fabric Samples • Free Estimates • Free Pick-Up & Delivery • Showroom of New Home Furnishings white, pink/white, black/white, 23.5-by-16-foot roll, $195; 18-by24-inch and 24-by-36-inch prints, $40 and $55 www.givencampbell.com Saints wallpapers, St. Francis (snails), St. Peter (fish scales), St. Christopher (airplanes), St. Bernard (quill feathers), $160 roll; 18-by-24-inch and 24-by36-inch prints, $59.95 and $79.95 www.cb2.com Abacus iron and rubberwood wall art, $149; Keep Calm wool rug, 4-by-6 feet, $199; Dandelion dinnerware, $4.95-$7.95 each www.momastore.org paint drip mugs, $12; napkins, set of 20, $5; acrylic coasters, set of 4, $20; Mario Trimarchi stainless steel bowl, made by Alessi, $150 www.mxyplyzyk.com PT bowls with interior photoprints of salad, fruit, popcorn or spaghetti, $20; Balloona stool, $215; Robbie rhino wall art, $55 www.shop.peppersproutdesign. com deer and fox trivets, small $35, large $50; Serif and Sans Serif Typography wall art, $70 Just Call 1-800-767-9195 And We’ll Do The Rest. Mon.-Fri. 9-5:30; Sat. 9-12 HARDWOOD FLOOR REFINISHING •FREE Proposal/Evaluation National Wood Floor Association Trained/Certified • Professional Dry Sanding or No Dust Chemical Sanding NEW HARDWOOD FLOOR INSTALLATION AVAILABLE •Financing Available •6 months/Same as Cash Fully Insured Deep Cleaning only 50¢ Sq.Ft. Call the experts; - “since 1996” Kenton Carpet & Hardwood Floor Care 888-852-3657 www.kentoncarpetcare.com (Accept VISA & MASTERCARD) Are you ready for the next RAINY DAY? White can be fresh, practical These designers say the options for working with white are numerous. White decor contrasts well with textured stone or concrete floors, and looks glamorous paired with lots of green plants. Another choice: “Find wallpaper that’s tone-on-tone, or white but embossed with texture,” Nayak says. “Wallpaper is huge right now.” It also helps add pop to other colors in the room By MELISSA RAYWORTH FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS When interior designer Betsy Burnham redecorated her office recently, she made a decision that surprised her staff: She focused on the color white. White walls, white ceilings, white furniture, even white chandeliers. “I’m a huge color fanatic,” she says, “but I just think white makes color pop so beautifully.” Her favorite colorful accessories “never looked as good” as they do now against a white backdrop. “White is crisp, it’s young and it’s really flexible.” Decorating with white can be intimidating. But, says designer Brian Patrick Flynn of decordemon.com, “used correctly, white lets other things truly work as the breakout stars.” Yes, there are potential pitfalls in working with white (you’re probably envisioning red wine spilled on a white sofa). But it can — honestly — be a versatile and practical option. TREADING CAREFULLY WHY WHITE WORKS “White is a trick designers use to modernize things,” says Flynn. Traditional pieces of furniture and scuffed wooden floors are revitalized by white paint. Their imperfections are transformed into appealing texture. Designer Taniya Nayak, host of HGTV’s “Destination Design” and HGTV.com’s “$100 Half Day Design” series, loves spray-painting old picture frames and mirrors a glossy white. “It instantly gives them a fresh, mod look,” she says. The backdrop of a white floor and walls makes familiar furniture, window treatments and accessories stand out in a new way. White can feel traditional when paired with ornate pieces, or utterly modern with streamlined furniture and chrome. “White can also kind of work as a mediator,” Flynn says. “Just like bringing in a marriage counselor, white will work as a mediator between soft and loud colors. You can use it to work as a bridge between two colors.” And a room that’s primarily white is easily redecorated with little expense. At her Los Angeles design firm, Burnham did a white bedroom for a client that included SARAH DORIO / Associated Press THIS PLAYROOM featured on Decor Demon demonstrates how designer Brian Patrick Flynn adds color to ceilings and backs of bookcases for clients requesting all white walls. splashes of color in bedding and throw pillows. If the client gets bored, says Burnham, she can swap out those few items and have an entirely different look. Most surprising, white items can be easy to care for. Many white fabrics are chemically treated to be stain-resistant (or you can have them treated), and all-white slipcovers can be laundered with bleach. White vinyl, a favorite of Flynn’s, doesn’t stain. And white tables can be protected by glass tops. Be careful in selecting upholstery, of course, and especially carpeting. A white carpet is “a train wreck waiting to happen,” says Flynn, unless you can easily clean it (surprisingly, fluffy flokati rugs are often machine washable) and won’t mind doing that often. HOW TO APPROACH IT Flynn loves doing white walls and furniture with bold color on the ceiling, in accessories and in the interiors of bookcases. Nayak recently created a nautical look for her HGTV series that pairs white furniture, ceilings and columns with dramatic navy blue walls and splashes of yellow. If you prefer something preppier, she says, try white and navy with a bit of bright green. (Other color combos she likes: Rooms done entirely in black and white, or white with gray and chartreuse accents.) If you have a room with large windows, you’ll make the view more of a focal point by doing a very white room. “The view becomes your art,” says Nayak. Choose your shades of white carefully. “You want it to be livable, not like Liquid Paper,” Burnham says. “If there’s too much blue in it, it’s just going to be blinding.” Some whites are warmer, with a slightly yellow undertone, while others have a cool, bluer tinge. There are also greenish whites, purplish whites and many other varieties. If you’re using several white elements in one room, a mix of cool and warm whites can clash. And remember that changes in daylight (from golden sunshine to the gray light of a cloudy day) may change the way a particular shade of white appears. If you’re using glossy white paint, it will draw attention to imperfections in ceilings, walls, floors and furniture. If that’s not appealing to you, Nayak says matte paints are better for hiding imperfections: “Matte is a flat look, but washable.” One worry about very white rooms is that they can feel cold or impersonal. “I love bringing in wood tones” in floors, ceilings or furniture, says Nayak. “That’s the No. 1 way to warm up a white room.” Anything from a pale natural wood to a darkly stained finish can work with white. All three designers suggest mixing in strokes of color or even a bit of animal print, rather than doing a room entirely in white. It’s a challenge to give an all-white room personality, Flynn says, since color is the main way we express ourselves when we decorate. “I’m absolutely blown away and captivated when somebody can successfully pull off an all-white room. 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Crawford, Findlay, OH Go To shawfloors.com for a $200.00 Shaw Floors Coupon (some restrictions apply) www.bobsfloors.com HOME IMPROV EMENT THE COURIER FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2010 C9 Decorative, faux painting is back Produce patterns that rival wallpaper By CAROLE FELDMAN ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER The Associated Press THIS PHOTO RELEASED by Creative Carpet & Rug shows how the stairs look after one of their stair runner installations. S TA I R R U N N E R S When decorating, don’t forget about the staircase Often overlooked in many homes By LISA A. FLAM FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS You walk up them, you walk down them, perhaps countless times a day. When you look down, though, do you see any sign of your personal style? Staircases, once decorated with detailed, elaborate runners in the Victorian era, have been forgotten in many homes, or at least bumped down on the decorating to-do list. “Stairs are ignored. Period,” says Genevieve Gorder, host of HGTV’s “Dear Genevieve.” “People think of stairs and hallways as strictly utilitarian — a place to get somewhere else,” she says. “But they are some of the most beautiful places to decorate.” FIRST IMPRESSION work other things in without being stuck in a time warp.” On the other hand, Lowell favors something simple and neutral, like a textured sisal wool runner. “The idea is to add texture and luxury to the space but not drown the space or lock in any overt patterns,” he says. Hunyadi, whose store sells mostly traditional styles, says more people have been asking for something nontraditional. Her store has started to carry tonal looks, and runners with scrolls, trellises and fabric-type patterns — styles that made up about 30 percent of sales during the last few years. However, carpeting with more pattern will show less dirt and dust than a more solid carpet, she notes. Adding a runner to a staircase in the front of the house can help make a good first impression, especially because entryways often don’t have the space to feature fabric-covered furniture or windows. A runner can add color, texture and pattern to a space. And the carpeting can cut down on noise and provide a safer walking — or in the case of kids, running — surface. “People want a more finished feeling, but they forget the stairway,” says Christopher Lowell, host of Fine Living Network’s “Work That Room.” “An upholstered staircase can give them that feeling.” Since hardwood floors have made a comeback over the past few decades, many homeowners are shopping for runners because they’ve either ripped out wall-towall stair carpeting or have moved into new homes with all hardwood floors. Homeowners also want runners to combat stairwell echoes, or for safety. “We have people who have fallen down the stairs, and we also have people who have dogs who have fallen down the stairs,” Hunyadi says. “A hardwood stair is certainly more slippery than something with carpet on it.” SIMPLE VS. TRADITIONAL MAKING IT WORK The traditional Oriental style is a runner mainstay, offering lots of colors around which to decorate. “They’re somewhat timeless and classic, and a lot of times they’re not going to tie you to a particular trend,” says Eileen Hunyadi, who owns The Stair Runner Store in Oxford, Conn., with her husband, John. “Traditional styles can be around for quite a long time and you can Hunyadi advises coordinating a runner with the colors and style of the home’s main floor, not the upstairs. “The lower part of the house is really where you’re going to view the stair runner,” she says. Many homeowners try to match the runner to a color in the home, Hunyadi says, which can be tricky, so she points them to a complementary hue. BYE, BYE, WALL-TO-WALL As Gorder puts it: “It’s not about matching so much as creating a sense of flow. Pull colors that are in your home that you like, and connect them to the staircase.” The staircase is also a good place to try something new. “It’s a great place to debut something, but make sure there are connective qualities that make it feel like it’s supposed to be there,” Gorder says. “This is an opportunity to play. You can introduce more color and be a little bit more bold.” RAW MATERIALS Besides style, consider price. Runners are generally made of wool or a synthetic fiber. Hunyadi says her wool runners generally cost 25 percent to 30 percent more than synthetics, but there is some price overlap among higher quality synthetics and lower end wools. Wool is softer to the touch, she says, has more of a matte look and releases dirt more easily. Synthetics, which used to look a little shiny, still catch the light differently than wool, and hold onto dirt more. While wool carpeting can actually wear away from use, synthetics do not. “If you put the two side by side, you can tell the difference,” says Hunyadi. “But when you take the other one away, many can’t.” W hichever materia l you choose, take care of it. “Take off your shoes, vacuum, vacuum, vacuum and have it professionally cleaned as appropriate,” once every year or two, she says. CARPET ALTERNATIVES If you want to add style to your staircase without carpeting, Gorder suggests tiling the risers — the vertical part of the stairs that gets scuffed easily. Or try making a paint “runner” in a bold shade of marine paint, or sanding one, creating the look with contrasting wood colors. “Painting a runner down the stairs in a pattern, stripe or polka dot is a really contemporary way to attack the stairs,” she said. Elaine Griffin is crazy about stripes — in small rooms and kids’ rooms, powder rooms and halls. She also likes glazes and metallics. Stencils, too. Decorative and faux painting is back, although in a subtler style than the “Dallas” and “Dynasty” days of the 1970s. “We overdid it then,” said Griffin, a New York decorator, designer and contributor to Better Homes and Gardens magazine. Bonnie Roberts-Burke, a real estate agent, had 80 feet of stripes painted in her 100-year-old Washington town house. They start in the living room, go up the stairs and all the way down the hallway on the second floor. “It pulls it all together,” she said. The stripes — each 5 inches wide — are of the same creamy blush beige color, but alternate between satin and flat finishes. “It just makes the most interesting patterns,” she said. “It changes as the light in the house changes.” Roberts-Burke said it gives the house an elegant feel. Her husband, David Burke, finds it warm and calming. The couple hired a professional to paint their stripes. Griffin said many homeowners try decorative and faux painting themselves; “civilian painters,” she calls them. Paint and glazes can be used to create a marbled look, textured effect or a wood finish. With them, you can produce patterns that rival — or even surpass — what is available in wallpaper. Faux painting simulates nature and makes a surface look like something else — “making a plain door look like cherry or a plain plaster column look like marble,” says Tracy McGranaghan, a decorative painter with studios in Annapolis, Md. “Decorative painting,” she said, “is creating patterns and color dimensionally on walls and surfaces.” It’s not just walls that are being painted creatively. Furniture and cabinetry, even floors and ceilings, also are fair game. Meghan Carter, who runs the Web site AsktheDecorator.com, said painting the ceiling a color other than white can produce a more intimate feeling, especially in rooms with “abnormally tall ceilings.” “Paint is a wonderful thing because it’s instant gratification,” McGranaghan said. “In a very short time, you can completely transform a space.” Faux finishes can add depth and dimension to a surface. “It’s all about subtlety, not so much knockyou-in-the-head drama,” she said. Among the many types of faux finishes, according to Better Homes and Gardens: • Sponging: Dip a wet sea sponge into glaze and press it on the wall. The glaze also can be applied to the wall and then lifted in patterns using the sponge. It creates almost a marbleized effect. • Ragging: Press a rag against a wall in which a glaze already has been applied, removing some of the paint. This will create a textured appearance. • Strie: Move a brush vertically over a wall to created a striped effect, either applying the glaze with the brush or removing some of it as you work. • Stippling: Use a brush to create the appearance of little dots. “That’s when you put on the base coat and put on a glaze and pounce with it,” Griffin said. Wood graining also is popular, McGranaghan said, as is the use of Venetian plaster, which results in a marbled look. She also paints patterns — “things that almost look like wallpaper” — on walls, cabinets and furniture. 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Columbus St. C10 HOME IMPROV EMENT A living, breathing fence THE COURIER FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 2010 FREE TO ROAM. SAFE AT HOME. Installing Invisible Fence Brand Systems in Findlay for the last 24 years. Indoor FREE* System Create pet-free zones inside your home! Call Today! 888-270-7516 Financing Available Ask us how! www.invisiblefence.com * Offer valid with purchase of a new, premium, outdoor containment system. One (1) free indoor unit per customer. Must present this ad at consultation to qualify. Not combinable with other offers or valid on previous purchases. Participating dealers only. Expires 5/31/10. Hoverman Insurance Agency DEAN FOSDICK / Associated Press A MULTI-SPECIES HEDGE NETWORK of tightly pruned evergreens direct traffic and provide a protective microclimate around a potage garden in the backyard of a privately-owned country house in this 2009 file photo near Heusden-Zolder, Belgium. The hedges also are an attractive complement to the many colorful blooms growing around the property. Hedges serve a variety of purposes By DEAN FOSDICK FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Good fences do make good neighbors, especially if you like hanging out with the wildlife crowd. The right collection of trees and shrubs adds long-term interest and privacy, while providing cover for birds, pollinators and other wandering critters. Decide what it is that you want from a living fence and then select some flowering shrubs (lilacs, quince, weigela), deciduous bushes (barberry, burning bush, spirea) or evergreens (arborvitae, boxwood, yews) to accomplish it. All provide a different look or serve a different purpose, from security to nourishment to sound abatement. And there’s nothing wrong with blending varieties or even incorporating them into standard fencing. “Diversity of species is good insurance against devastation by pests, including insects, disease and mammalian,” said Barbara Bates, a horticulturist with the Kane County office of University of Illinois Extension. “Multi-purposing plants” also give you more bang from your landscaping buck and labor, she said. “There are many fruiting shrubs and dwarf trees that will provide food for family, friends and wildlife. Those that have displays of bloom, fragrance and fall color can add a seasonal dimension of change to your landscape.” Hedges are used primarily for creating property borders, establishing visual screens and directing traffic flow, Bates said. “We are impatient and want instant gratification when we can get it,” she said. “Fences are faster than hedges and serve the purposes equally well. (But) for plant people who root themselves in their garden abodes, the era of hedgerows continues.” Hedges are practical, with tree and shrub barriers tending to outlast fences, said Michael Kuhns, an extension forester with Utah State University at Logan. They also act as windbreaks and protected spaces where animals, songbirds, game birds and pollinators shelter. “You can use these barriers, especially the taller ones, to create microclimates,” Kuhns said. “Certain fruits and garden vegetables are pollinated better where the wind isn’t blowing, increasing pro- duction. Fruit quality is enhanced, too, because there’s less ‘rub’.” If it’s a wildlife hedge you’re after, then stay away from highmaintenance shrubs such as formalized boxwoods or tightly groomed topiaries. “Some things are traditionally clipped but don’t have to be,” said Sharon Yiesla, a horticulturist with the Lake County Unit of University of Illinois Extension. “That’s especially the case with many of the flowering plants popular with pollinators. All you do when you trim is remove the flowers and follow-on food sources for birds. It’s better just to leave them alone and let them go natural.” Many old-fashioned shrubs that have fallen out of favor have worked well as hedges. Aromatic and long-blooming rugosa roses, for example, grow quite large, although a few of the newer hybrids are smaller. “The rugosas produce fruit in the form of rose hips late in the season,” Yiesla said. “They also provide nice fall colors — yellow leaves mixed with orange. Another plus is that they have good disease resistance. They’re rugged plants.” So rugged they may be considered invasive in some areas. Check with your county extension office to be sure. Thorny shrubs make useful barriers but require care- Bird motifs, soft tones return for spring Bring the outdoors inside By KIM COOK FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The return of birds and birdsong are one of spring’s most welcome signs. This year, retailers are acknowledging this with pretty avian motifs on all sorts of home decor. Pottery Barn’s collection features sparrow printed bedding and table linens, embroidered and printed pillows, and even a wall canvas with an antique bird illustration. There are stoneware birdbath serving bowls, and mugs with wee “nests” tucked into the handles. For a more modern take on the theme, MOMA stocks a flock of perky, colorful bird-shaped clips that could hold artwork or undies on the line. Urban Outfitters has an interesting set of First Flight wall decals, plus a sturdy hook shaped like a bird’s silhouette. CB2’s spring line features a striking accent pillow designed by artist Douglas Sheran, who is a member of Creativity Explored, a nonprofit visual arts center for the developmentally disabled in San Francisco. CARPET HARDWOOD His bird illustration, in a swath of rich green over black and white, resembles Japanese brush painting. The adaptable blues are back in a big way. They’re popping up all over soft furnishings and tabletop pieces. Bright versions give a room a bracing shot of color, while muted versions, paired with white or chalky yellows, are soothing. For inspiration, check out the Grandeur and Harmony palettes in Olympic Paint’s new Audubon collection. Anthropologie offers a beautiful ceramic knob festooned with bright blue dots; a set of those would refresh the kitchen cabinets. There’s the charmingly named Grace towel collection too, in blues and pinks, embroidered with springy flowers. French blue and Wedgwood blue are elegant tones: Homegoods’ blue crocodile-printed leather slipper chair looks swanky, but is priced modestly. Pottery Barn’s soft, silky blue throw will comfort on a rainy spring day. Z Gallerie is stocking a French blue filigreed urn, and a beautiful resin plaque embossed with a realistic blue chrysanthemum. Pier 1 and Homegoods have several unusual bowls in their spring collections that look like melted blue beach glass, as well as new versions of the multifunctional ceramic stool, this year in vibrant turquoise. LAMINATES VINYL CERAMIC Shaw • Coronet • Mohawk • Armstrong • Mannington • Congoleum 419-423-1465 350 E. 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