Ad says "95% new". 95% new, eh? "New to you" new, or "recently bought in a store and installed" new? And what kind of time frame does "new" represent? Within this lifetime? According to the ad, the house was built just a few years ago (although it looks like a much older home with its classic design, and is quite attractive on the outside). So there's a designer or contractor someplace that put this together in the 21st century, on the same planet that you and I live on?
The bathroom is horrid. Who puts what looks like shiny aluminum tile over a block glass window in a diamond formation - and even worse, cuts the diamond formation into the tile? It's not like the entire design was set up in a diamond formation. Someone is responsible for this.
I hope these homeowners are regaining their investment, because the fug tax can be high indeed.
Are these shots part of a photography class assignment, or are we trying to sell a house here? Because I can't get any sense of the room sizes, condition of the home, or even whether it actually has any bedrooms from this portfolio here. Maybe that's the point.The descriptive text doesn't help much either: "Very nice.....pleasure to show...." yadda yadda yadda. The text even mentions the laundry room. The laundry room: every home buyer's highest-focus feature.
Wait! Finally, a photo of something of substance in the house, the double vanity in the bathroom! The sinks are nice, the floor looks cheap though.
They did! They did fill in (or at least cover up) their fireplace with a flat-screen television set!
Makes me wonder what's in that fireplace that they don't want people to see. Fireplaces usually stay with the house, TVs don't, so why would you take away from the included asset with a not-included one?
There's something about this fireplace the sellers don't want you to know.
To prove I don't hate all contemporary and modern design (although it doesn't always age well), I present: House designed by B. Goldberg. It's on the market for just over half a mil.
Clean lines, every element is essential, not too much and not too little. It good, I say.
Here are a few rooms whose decor I find "interesting," not necessarily fug, not necessarily anything I'd want in my place of residence, but...well...OK....they're inspirational, I guess. I could be inspired to outfit a Lhasa Apso with a raven's nest disguised as a party hat. Certainly these rooms are different, but so is a Lhasa Apso wearing a raven's nest as a party hat. Don't tell the ravens about this.
Oh, and another thing: they're all taken from expensive homes ($750K and up). Ah, those good pals, Creativity and Money. They breed interesting babies together.
Love? Hate? Let's see: 60s house, terra cotta looking tile floors in a ginormous kitchen, wooden beams on the ceilings, giant fridge. All OK so far. Six different colors, fridge and cabinetry are green while the rest of the colors are reds, yellows and oranges signal a visit from the WTF Monster. I want to give this room a passing grade, but...but....but....
NOT fug: This is a very tastefully decorated dining room from a different house, and it demonstrates how to incorporate a bunch of colors and do it correctly. Take that, green kitchen from the WTF Monster!