#and LOTS of retirees with money to spend and a new florida house to decorate
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mokeonn · 10 months ago
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I gotta say, really glad that the main criticisms for my "artists have more options" post has been that it is very USA centric and doesn't work for people in low populated areas without an art community. This has led to people giving more perspectives and options, which is always appreciated, and also because it's a completely correct criticism. Like yeah it is in fact made from the perspective of a USAmerican who lives in a highly populated state with a thriving art community especially in rural areas, you got me there, can't argue with that, gimme some fresh perspectives I love to hear that. Thank you for not making my notifications hell, and thank you for giving me more perspectives im going to give you a little kissy on the forehead
#simon says#i was worried that since it hit 10k notes#I was gonna deal with a lot of people with low confidence getting mad at me bc 'they are too much of a failure to do this how dare you'#but im so glad because it hasn't been that#it has been people bringing up good counterpoints and perspectives I appreciate hearing!#like yeah I knew it was gonna end up being US (and probably Canada) centric because I'm American and never left the country before#so my perspective on career artistry outside the country is very VERY limited to say the least#but I didn't even consider that my perspective is also skewed by where in the US I live#I live in Florida which I mentioned before and feel safe mentioning because it's a very populated state#and a majority of the economy is tourism based#so there's a pretty huge thriving art community here because there's LOTS of people visiting who want cool art for whatever reason#and LOTS of retirees with money to spend and a new florida house to decorate#and LOTS of college age kids without money but an apartment they wanna furnish so they'll buy art anyways#shows and shops and gallery work are huge here for a reason#5 percent of the entire population are snowbirds. people from the north who live here during the winter#so needless to say it's far easier to start making art selling prints and handmade magnets at a booth for a weekend event here in Florida#compared to say... rural Nebraska#so I didn't even consider that because my journey as an artist started in a state with a small but passionate and growing art community#and my journey as a PROFESSIONAL artist started in another state that has a large and thriving art community even in rural areas#that it would absolutely have an effect on my perspective#i still believe there's always more options out there than you would believe and it's always good to explore and look#and if you're able to start building an art scene in a place that doesn't have one you should#but I definitely understand some folks better when they say that it's not always accessible to do so#art careers are not about fame or social media following but rather networking I still believe that because it's true#but yeah if you're in an area where your only option IS to sell online there's no shame in that#anyways hopefully that was coherent I just woke up from a nap and now im gonna play Frog Detective for the first time#smooching you all on the foreheads gently and lovingly thank you for opening my mind and not making my inbox hell
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bestforlessmove · 6 years ago
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Spending Big Bucks to Make a New House Look Old
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Julie Bidwell for The Wall Street Journal
Wealthy homeowners are spending big to make brand new construction look old. The trend that started with reclaimed wood flooring is now moving to a whole new level, as homeowners integrate huge architectural artifacts-from intact staircases to 20-foot-long wooden bars-into newly built homes.
Salvaged from old buildings or junkyards, these items ensure a home's uniqueness, proponents say, and can boost resale value if done well. But incorporating large artifacts into a 21st century home demands willing and skilled craftsmen, lots of patience-and plenty of money.
“I thought my plumber was going to kill me,” groans Liz Tiesi of Threshold Interiors in New York City, recalling the process of installing a vintage sink in her Manhattan apartment. Ms. Tiesi happily paid about $800 for the oversize sink, which hailed from the old Tastykake factory in Philadelphia and worked perfectly with the industrial aesthetic she wanted. But then she learned it was nearly impossible to find a drain and drain pipe to fit. When her long-suffering plumber finally got it to work, “I was so happy,” she says. “A sink like that-you will not see another one of those for a long time.”
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The Rhode Island home of Todd and Debbie Martin contains a number of salvaged artifacts. The kitchen island was once a church altar; the lights above it also came from a church.
Julie Bidwell for The Wall Street Journal
Joel Zettler, owner of Oley Valley Architectural Antiques in Denver, Pa., said until five years ago most of his clients were restaurants, hotels and other commercial venues. Now, roughly half of his customers are homeowners snapping up his most popular items-antique wooden bars from old hotels and saloons that usually span 14 to 24 feet and sell for $50,000 to $200,000 (not including shipping and installation).
Salvaged items can add an instant sense of history to an otherwise bland new house, said Jessica Engholm, founder of architectural salvage company Cultheir. “We're going into an era of building where a house can be put up overnight,” she says. Reusing older items can “introduce character that otherwise wouldn't be there.”
Todd and Debbie Martin bought seven stained glass windows, salvaged from an 1870s church in rural Pennsylvania, before they “even had the blueprints” for the addition to their house in Tiverton, R.I., Mr. Martin said. After spying the ornate windows in the Philadelphia showroom of Provenance Companies, which specializes in reclaimed materials, the couple was determined to use them in the new structure.
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The Martins discovered that installing the antique stained glass windows was far more complicated than they expected. 'I thought, “you buy the window, you put it in, that's it”,' says Mr. Martin.
Julie Bidwell for The Wall Street Journal
It took multiple craftsmen nearly a year to prepare the 150-year-old glass for installation. One firm reinforced the delicate glass with zinc; another built custom wooden window sashes and a third fashioned clear glass windows in the same shape as the stained glass, to protect it from the elements and provide insulation. Meanwhile, the home's walls had to be carefully designed to accommodate the arched windows. “It's almost like putting the space station together,” says Mr. Martin, a 48-year-old retiree.
While the Martins paid about $4,000 for the windows themselves, it cost about $15,000 to retrofit and install them in the house. Altogether, the Martins spent about $800,000 on the addition-more than double what the project would have cost if they'd skipped the reclaimed items they gathered on various road trips, Mr. Martin estimated. It was also twice what they spent on the house itself; they paid $397,500 in 2013.
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Bron Roylance, the developer of the Monastery, with his wife Kari.
Lindsay Salazar for The Wall Street Journal
Building “the Monastery,” a Sundance, Utah, spec house that includes a number of salvaged pieces, cost more than $4 million, according to developer Bron Roylance, who said his aim was to make the home resemble an ancient structure. “I love to take old pieces and retrofit them and bring them back to life rather than letting them die in a dump,” says Mr. Roylance.
After paying approximately $6,000 for four, roughly 200-year-old stained-glass windows from a now-abandoned French colony in Egypt, Mr. Roylance-a 62-year-old Hollywood makeup artist who also dabbles in development-insisted they be installed in their original dirty and broken state.
He spent about $3,500 on a set of iron gates from the same colony for the home's subterranean wine cellar. The gates didn't come with the clasps necessary to close them, so a blacksmith created them from an old piece of metal he found along the railroad tracks in the area.
Then there was the early-1900s cabinet from an old general store. Mr. Roylance wanted to use it as a bathroom towel holder. Recessing the 5-foot by 5-foot piece into a wall required calling the HVAC crew to move an air duct that was in the way. Eventually, “I was able to get my way,” he says, but at a cost of about $1,500-several hundred more than he paid for the cabinet itself.
The Monastery has been on the market asking $9 million for roughly a year with Paul Benson of Engel & Völkers Park City. Marcus Wood, a member of Mr. Benson's team, says the strategy is “waiting for that perfect buyer to come along.”
Tumblr media
A set of iron gates Mr. Roylance used for the home's subterranean wine cellar were salvaged from a now-abandoned French colony in Egypt. Mr. Roylance paid about $3,500 for the gates.
Lindsay Salazar for The Wall Street Journal
Mr. Wood says reclaimed artifacts don't necessarily increase a home's value by themselves; they have to be installed in a tasteful way. “People can take an old antique piece and try to integrate it, but they don't piece it together well,” he says. Mr. Roylance's skill in selecting and integrating the artifacts adds value in his projects, Mr. Wood says.
Homeowners hoping to integrate large artifacts in their homes sometimes face a challenge finding someone to install them.
After paying $2 million in 2000 for a property on a rock outcropping above the ocean in Malibu, Calif., Liz Edlich and her husband spent years integrating architectural artifacts into the home they built there.
“I wanted it to be a jewel box, so when you walk in, you see treasure after treasure,” says Ms. Edlich, co-founder of the skin care line Radical Skincare.
After the house was built, she decided to liven up the den with a roughly 20-foot-long, carved wooden ceiling from Sri Lanka that she purchased at a Los Angeles antique store for “thousands and thousands of dollars.” But several contractors she approached refused to install it. “They said 'You're insane,' ” she says.
Tumblr media
Nearly everything in the Duprees' home is salvaged. Mr. Dupree, a former mechanic who now runs a motor home brokerage, was able to install many of the items himself.
Deborah Whitlaw Llewellyn for The Wall Street Journal
Finally, she found a team willing to tackle the project. It ultimately took “probably 20 or 30 guys” to transport the piece inside, she says. The custom-built house went on the market this spring for $57.5 million.
While integrating salvaged items into their Georgia home, Carol and Randy Dupree-unlike most homeowners-were able to do much of the work themselves. The couple had purchased a roughly 130-year-old brick warehouse for $70,000 in 2006, and converted it into a home.
Tumblr media
This wrought-iron staircase was salvaged from a building in Florida before it was torn down. The Duprees found it for sale on Craigslist, and when they went to see it, the intact staircase was sitting in a field. They bought it for about $1,000, then power-washed it, painted it and installed it in their house.
Deborah Whitlaw Llewellyn for The Wall Street Journal
When they paid $1,000 for an intact wrought-iron staircase they found on Craigslist, Mr. Dupree-a former mechanic who now runs a motor home brokerage-was able to install it himself, adding a piece to the bottom to make it fit. Because they saved on labor costs, using salvaged items reduced the cost of the Duprees' renovation to about $150,000.
Despite the effort required in repurposing large artifacts, the owners invariably say their efforts were worth it. “Our friends say, 'Yup, this is your crazy kind of house,' ” Mr. Martin says.
How to fit old pieces into a new home
Integrating large antiques into the structure of a new home can be tricky, since the items are often fragile, damaged or oddly sized, and building codes are far stricter than in the past. “There's always a balance between what people see as aesthetic solutions and the building code,” said Milwaukee architect Wade Weissmann, who has worked on several projects featuring large reclaimed items. One solution, he said, is to use artifacts for decoration rather than function: for example, placing antique windows inside the house rather than on an exterior wall to avoid issues with weatherproofing. And the earlier an artifact is introduced in the planning process, the better. That way the architect and builder have plenty of time to make any necessary changes to the design.
The post Spending Big Bucks to Make a New House Look Old appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.
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davidoespailla · 6 years ago
Text
Spending Big Bucks to Make a New House Look Old
Julie Bidwell for The Wall Street Journal
Wealthy homeowners are spending big to make brand new construction look old. The trend that started with reclaimed wood flooring is now moving to a whole new level, as homeowners integrate huge architectural artifacts—from intact staircases to 20-foot-long wooden bars—into newly built homes.
Salvaged from old buildings or junkyards, these items ensure a home’s uniqueness, proponents say, and can boost resale value if done well. But incorporating large artifacts into a 21st century home demands willing and skilled craftsmen, lots of patience—and plenty of money.
“I thought my plumber was going to kill me,” groans Liz Tiesi of Threshold Interiors in New York City, recalling the process of installing a vintage sink in her Manhattan apartment. Ms. Tiesi happily paid about $800 for the oversize sink, which hailed from the old Tastykake factory in Philadelphia and worked perfectly with the industrial aesthetic she wanted. But then she learned it was nearly impossible to find a drain and drain pipe to fit. When her long-suffering plumber finally got it to work, “I was so happy,” she says. “A sink like that—you will not see another one of those for a long time.”
The Rhode Island home of Todd and Debbie Martin contains a number of salvaged artifacts. The kitchen island was once a church altar; the lights above it also came from a church.
Julie Bidwell for The Wall Street Journal
Joel Zettler, owner of Oley Valley Architectural Antiques in Denver, Pa., said until five years ago most of his clients were restaurants, hotels and other commercial venues. Now, roughly half of his customers are homeowners snapping up his most popular items—antique wooden bars from old hotels and saloons that usually span 14 to 24 feet and sell for $50,000 to $200,000 (not including shipping and installation).
Salvaged items can add an instant sense of history to an otherwise bland new house, said Jessica Engholm, founder of architectural salvage company Cultheir. “We’re going into an era of building where a house can be put up overnight,” she says. Reusing older items can “introduce character that otherwise wouldn’t be there.”
Todd and Debbie Martin bought seven stained glass windows, salvaged from an 1870s church in rural Pennsylvania, before they “even had the blueprints” for the addition to their house in Tiverton, R.I., Mr. Martin said. After spying the ornate windows in the Philadelphia showroom of Provenance Companies, which specializes in reclaimed materials, the couple was determined to use them in the new structure.
The Martins discovered that installing the antique stained glass windows was far more complicated than they expected. ‘I thought, “you buy the window, you put it in, that’s it”,’ says Mr. Martin.
Julie Bidwell for The Wall Street Journal
It took multiple craftsmen nearly a year to prepare the 150-year-old glass for installation. One firm reinforced the delicate glass with zinc; another built custom wooden window sashes and a third fashioned clear glass windows in the same shape as the stained glass, to protect it from the elements and provide insulation. Meanwhile, the home’s walls had to be carefully designed to accommodate the arched windows. “It’s almost like putting the space station together,” says Mr. Martin, a 48-year-old retiree.
While the Martins paid about $4,000 for the windows themselves, it cost about $15,000 to retrofit and install them in the house. Altogether, the Martins spent about $800,000 on the addition—more than double what the project would have cost if they’d skipped the reclaimed items they gathered on various road trips, Mr. Martin estimated. It was also twice what they spent on the house itself; they paid $397,500 in 2013.
Bron Roylance, the developer of the Monastery, with his wife Kari.
Lindsay Salazar for The Wall Street Journal
Building “the Monastery,” a Sundance, Utah, spec house that includes a number of salvaged pieces, cost more than $4 million, according to developer Bron Roylance, who said his aim was to make the home resemble an ancient structure. “I love to take old pieces and retrofit them and bring them back to life rather than letting them die in a dump,” says Mr. Roylance.
After paying approximately $6,000 for four, roughly 200-year-old stained-glass windows from a now-abandoned French colony in Egypt, Mr. Roylance—a 62-year-old Hollywood makeup artist who also dabbles in development—insisted they be installed in their original dirty and broken state.
He spent about $3,500 on a set of iron gates from the same colony for the home’s subterranean wine cellar. The gates didn’t come with the clasps necessary to close them, so a blacksmith created them from an old piece of metal he found along the railroad tracks in the area.
Then there was the early-1900s cabinet from an old general store. Mr. Roylance wanted to use it as a bathroom towel holder. Recessing the 5-foot by 5-foot piece into a wall required calling the HVAC crew to move an air duct that was in the way. Eventually, “I was able to get my way,” he says, but at a cost of about $1,500—several hundred more than he paid for the cabinet itself.
The Monastery has been on the market asking $9 million for roughly a year with Paul Benson of Engel & Völkers Park City. Marcus Wood, a member of Mr. Benson’s team, says the strategy is “waiting for that perfect buyer to come along.”
A set of iron gates Mr. Roylance used for the home’s subterranean wine cellar were salvaged from a now-abandoned French colony in Egypt. Mr. Roylance paid about $3,500 for the gates.
Lindsay Salazar for The Wall Street Journal
Mr. Wood says reclaimed artifacts don’t necessarily increase a home’s value by themselves; they have to be installed in a tasteful way. “People can take an old antique piece and try to integrate it, but they don’t piece it together well,” he says. Mr. Roylance’s skill in selecting and integrating the artifacts adds value in his projects, Mr. Wood says.
Homeowners hoping to integrate large artifacts in their homes sometimes face a challenge finding someone to install them.
After paying $2 million in 2000 for a property on a rock outcropping above the ocean in Malibu, Calif., Liz Edlich and her husband spent years integrating architectural artifacts into the home they built there.
“I wanted it to be a jewel box, so when you walk in, you see treasure after treasure,” says Ms. Edlich, co-founder of the skin care line Radical Skincare.
After the house was built, she decided to liven up the den with a roughly 20-foot-long, carved wooden ceiling from Sri Lanka that she purchased at a Los Angeles antique store for “thousands and thousands of dollars.” But several contractors she approached refused to install it. “They said ‘You’re insane,’ ” she says.
Nearly everything in the Duprees’ home is salvaged. Mr. Dupree, a former mechanic who now runs a motor home brokerage, was able to install many of the items himself.
Deborah Whitlaw Llewellyn for The Wall Street Journal
Finally, she found a team willing to tackle the project. It ultimately took “probably 20 or 30 guys” to transport the piece inside, she says. The custom-built house went on the market this spring for $57.5 million.
While integrating salvaged items into their Georgia home, Carol and Randy Dupree—unlike most homeowners—were able to do much of the work themselves. The couple had purchased a roughly 130-year-old brick warehouse for $70,000 in 2006, and converted it into a home.
This wrought-iron staircase was salvaged from a building in Florida before it was torn down. The Duprees found it for sale on Craigslist, and when they went to see it, the intact staircase was sitting in a field. They bought it for about $1,000, then power-washed it, painted it and installed it in their house.
Deborah Whitlaw Llewellyn for The Wall Street Journal
When they paid $1,000 for an intact wrought-iron staircase they found on Craigslist, Mr. Dupree—a former mechanic who now runs a motor home brokerage—was able to install it himself, adding a piece to the bottom to make it fit. Because they saved on labor costs, using salvaged items reduced the cost of the Duprees’ renovation to about $150,000.
Despite the effort required in repurposing large artifacts, the owners invariably say their efforts were worth it. “Our friends say, ‘Yup, this is your crazy kind of house,’ ” Mr. Martin says.
How to fit old pieces into a new home
Integrating large antiques into the structure of a new home can be tricky, since the items are often fragile, damaged or oddly sized, and building codes are far stricter than in the past. “There’s always a balance between what people see as aesthetic solutions and the building code,” said Milwaukee architect Wade Weissmann, who has worked on several projects featuring large reclaimed items. One solution, he said, is to use artifacts for decoration rather than function: for example, placing antique windows inside the house rather than on an exterior wall to avoid issues with weatherproofing. And the earlier an artifact is introduced in the planning process, the better. That way the architect and builder have plenty of time to make any necessary changes to the design.
The post Spending Big Bucks to Make a New House Look Old appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.
Spending Big Bucks to Make a New House Look Old
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