Monday, August 30, 2010

Best Wishes to Nick Wilmott

Today is Nick's last day at Honours Properties in Gulf Shores, AL.  He has  been offered a wonderful opportunity with Community Health Systems in Orange Beach.  We are very appreciative of Nick's contributions to The Peninsula and Honours Properties over the past year.  We wish him and his family the best as he takes on his new role. 


Thanks Nick, We Will Miss You!

Monday, August 23, 2010

Just Sold @ Honours Properties

Just Sold In Foley, Al By Nick Wilmott:
Lot 8 Green Acres Estates

Want To Sell Your Property?  
Contact Honuors Properties @ 251-968-7800

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

7 Kitchen Back Splash Ideas

Spice Up Your Kitchen With A New Look 
Without Draining Your Bank Account
With These Back Splash Ideas:


Kitchen back splashes can run the entire length of the counter, as well as just the area behind the sink. In this case, a rich Tuscan look is achieved with cream tiles off-set by a tile centerpiece or medallion. This medallion was built from scratch by the tile-setters, turning the tiles diagonally to distinguish them from the surrounding tiles.



You're looking at tiles that are individually 1 inch high, 2 inches wide, giving your kitchen back splash more visual "length." Not only that, but they just look cool. These 1"x2" tiles come in 12 inch sheets for easy installation. To finish off the bottom and prevent water intrusion to the walls, this homeowner has installed a three-inch marble border.







 Why be boring? For a bold kitchen back splash idea, install 8" tiles in multiple colors. This homeowner has a contemporary IKEA kitchen design, so she was able to install purple and pink tiles in vertical columns. Installation is easy, because you are dealing with bigger tiles, and thus have less grouting to contend with.



A seriously easy kitchen back splash design. 
How easy?
Measure the width and height of your back splash area. Don't omit any cut-outs (i.e., electrical outlets) unless they are more than a few feet square.
Purchase Daltile's Egyptian Glass Series, Mediterranean Blue. That's the field tile, the main area. In the field, each tile is 1" x 1", but don't worry. These come pre-mounted on mesh backings that are one foot square. 


 Wait. How did they do this kitchen back splash?
At first glance, it looks like it is inset in the wall. But before you think, "Ah, I don't have a wall alcove," notice that the inset is actually an off-set: a simple structure of dimensional lumber, drywall, and an off-the-shelf shelf (yes, repetition intended) from your local big box home improvement store. It's quick work for a handyman, or a couple of weekends for the ambitious DIY homeowner. 



A bold kitchen back splash design from American Olean. The main feature of this back splash is a pair of coordinated harlequin tiles--harlequin, meaning diamond-shaped--called Mink and Smoky Sky. Each tile is six inches vertical, three inches horizontal.
The bottom-most border is Sylvan Accent Strip Rattan, 4" x 8". 



 

This is fabulous stuff.
From a distance, this kitchen back splash looks like regular ceramic tile of three different colors. But on closer examination, you would see that we're actually dealing with a glass tile back splash made of 4 1/4" tile.
This kitchen back splash catches the light from the vent hood and makes the tile appear luminescent.
If you're uncomfortable cutting glass tile, then have an tile installer do the job. Other than the cutting, it's a fairly straight-forward back splash installation.


Do You Know What This Sign Means?



Do you recognize the symbol here?

It lights up in your instrument panel and looks like a
U-shaped pictograph with treads and an exclamation point in the middle.




Do you understand what it means now?

If you guessed a low tire-pressure warning, you are right. If you didn’t recognize the symbol, that’s also understandable because one out of three drivers do not, according to Schrader, a company that makes tire pressure monitoring systems.

The warning for the TPMS lights up when one or more of your vehicle’s tires is 25% below the manufacturer’s recommended pressure. The system is now required on all vehicles starting with the 2008 model year.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

What To Do After A Closing

  • Start packing! Staying organized will make your move much easier. If you do your own packing, it is a good idea to use boxes that can be easily carried. Label them with the contents and where they go in your new home. Pack a lot of filler in boxes to protect fragile items.
  • Contact the local utility companies to hook up electricity, gas, and water to your new home. Contact the phone company to hook up phone service lines and to receive your new phone number. Notify the cable television company or satellite provider. While some providers may need as little notice as a day to activate your services, it’s best to give them a few weeks.
  • Touch up paint or repaint before you move your furniture in.
  • Measure the door frames to be certain that larger pieces of furniture will fit.
  • Notify the post office of your address change and request that your mail be forwarded.
  • Notify your creditors, business associates, friends, employer, and child’s school or caregiver of your new address and phone number.
  • Update your bank checks with your new address.
  • Update the address on your drivers license within 30 days of moving.
  • Change the locks on the doors of your new home.

Meeting Your New Financial Obligations
You should have received a payment coupon for your first house payment at closing. Do not be surprised if you receive a letter from the lender telling you that the loan has been sold. This is a very common practice. The lender will tell you where to mail your payments if your loan was sold, and you should receive a coupon booklet in the mail from the new lender, which is now your loan servicer. Even if you don’t receive a payment coupon, you need to make your payments on time. Contact the loan servicer for payment information.

The loan servicer will keep track of your payment history. The servicer applies your monthly loan payment to the loan balance and escrow reserves. The loan servicer is responsible for paying your real estate taxes and hazard insurance from the escrow reserves. While the tax and insurance bills should go directly to the loan servicer, they may come to you. If so, just forward them to the servicer for payment.

Your payment may increase in the future if a higher escrow balance is needed to meet rising real estate tax or insurance costs. The loan servicer will provide a year-end interest statement and account analysis so that you can monitor this. You will also need this information when you file your taxes to ensure you take the appropriate deductions for the interest and real estate taxes you have paid. Consult your tax adviser with any questions.
Another aspect to your new financial responsibilities is maintaining good credit. Your credit affects your future borrowing ability if you decide to obtain a home equity loan, or if you decide to sell and buy a new home. One of the most important credit decisions you can make is to pay your mortgage on time. Never let other debts take precedence over your home loan. The effect on your credit can be irreparable if you don’t pay your mortgage. If you fall behind on your payments, the lender has the legal right to foreclose on the loan, meaning that you will be forced to move out and the property will be sold.
If you do fall behind in your payments or suffer a financial hardship beyond your control, notify your loan servicer immediately. Always stay in touch and try to make arrangements for repayment. In addition, if you are having trouble making your mortgage payments due to a job loss and received a North Carolina Housing Finance Agency low-interest mortgage loan, we may be able to help you. In addition, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development provides guidance on avoiding foreclosure.

Monday, August 16, 2010

25 Secrets to Ruining Your Financial Life Before You Are 30

25 Secrets to Ruining Your Financial Life Before You Are 30:

1. Take out three times as much in student loans as your first year’s salary.
I’m all for following your passions, but if your passion only pays $35,000 a year, please reconsider borrowing $100k to get the required degree.

2. Trash your college enemies on Facebook and Twitter.
Might be funny now, but your future boss probably won’t see the humor in it. Remember, the Web is an open book, and down the line things you say online can and will be used against you.

3. Trash yourself on Facebook and Twitter.
The picture of you half-naked partying on the beach at Spring Break will probably get you a few more followers, but remember that future boss?

4. Just get a degree…in anything.
Don’t “just get a degree” for the sake of getting a degree. Learn something, and prepare to apply it in the real world.

5. Accept a job you hate right out of school because it pays a lot.
This ties in with student loans. Many graduates are so saddled with debt, they have little choice than to go after the biggest salary, even if it isn’t the best opportunity.

6. Form a partnership with three old fraternity brothers from college.
It’s been said the only type of ship that won’t float is a partner-ship. Let the one with the most capital start the business and hire the other two. Much cleaner, and if the business fails, you can all walk away and still be friends.

7. Borrow thousands to start a new business.
 Entrepreneurship is the spirit that built this country, and I’m all for it. However, consider saving and starting up with cash.built this country, however, consider saving and starting up with cash.

8. Accept your first job offer without negotiating.
A little wiggle room often exists in salary ranges, schedule flexibility, paid days off, etc, but you have to ask.

9. Spend $2,000 on your new corporate wardrobe before getting your first check.
One of the classic mistakes by new earners. As with most things, it pays to pay with cash. Buy a couple nice outfits for interviews and your first day on the job, but beyond that, make do with what you’ve got until you get your first check or two. Then pay cash to add a new outfit to your wardrobe over time.


10. Cosign a car loan for your best friend.
I no longer borrow money to buy cars. And I especially wouldn’t borrow money to buy someone else a car, which is essentially what you do when cosigning a car loan. As a cosigner, you are on the hook if they default. And if they need a cosigner, there’s a good chance they will.



11. Give up credit virginity for a free t-shirt.
You know those booths before games that offer free shirts and towels if you sign up for a credit card?  Don't, it's cheaper to pay $12 for the shirt than have the credit card sit and build interest.


12. Pay off a credit card with a credit card, without closing one of them.
Performing a balance transfer from a particularly high-rate to a low-interest rate credit card makes sense in the short run. That is, unless you fail to close the old credit card. If you leave both accounts open, chances are you’ll eventually wind up with double the debt.

13. Borrow money from your parents.
What kid wants to borrow money from their parents? Not only does it change the relationship between parents and kids, it makes it tough to declare financial independence when we constantly have to turn to the First National Bank of Mom and Dad.

14.Buy a car because you can “afford the payments.”
Ever wonder why car dealers advertisers the cost of a car in monthly payments? It’s because writing $32,000 in window paint isn’t quite as catchy as $379 a month (for 60 months with a balloon payment at the end). See, it just doesn’t have the same ring to it, does it?


15. Spend six months of salary on an engagement ring.
If you have to spend half a year’s salary on an engagement ring to impress someone, you might want to think twice about your choice of partner.One months salary is sufficient and pay cash!


16. Blow thousands you don’t have on a wedding.
If you are debt free, and are marrying a partner who is debt free, stick to a reasonable wedding and avoid putting yourselves, or your parents, deep in debt.


17.  Buy a house without an emergency fund.
Something interesting happens you buy your first home. Right away, your name is put on a list of those who should be tested, financially. I’m being a little sarcastic here, but it does seem like the minute you stretch to buy a home without proper savings, something will break causing you to immediately reach for the credit cards.

18. Share a mortgage with your boyfriend/girlfriend.
I’m not being a prude here. Even if you decide to share living quarters with someone before marriage, please avoid sharing a mortgage (or lease) with them. If you split up, and chances are you probably will, the financial impact is a lot messier with joint ownership.

19. Sign a long-term lease based on the salary you think you will earn out of college.
Wait until the ink has dried on that first job offer letter before signing a lease (or a mortgage) for your first place. Better yet, wait six months to make sure you really can afford the payment, else you risk being house-poor right out of the gate.

20. Don’t put any money down on that new mortgage.
As many have discovered the hard way, homes can lose value. If you finance 100% of your new home, you have zero breathing room should your home lose value and you be forced to sell. Buying a new home is not cheap, but try to buy yourself a little breathing room by putting 10-20% down (close to 20% is best to avoid paying private mortgage insurance).

21.Stretch to get into a new home because it is a good investment.
 Repeat after me – my home is not an investment. We need to break this thinking that all young people should buy homes because they are a great investment. Yes, they can increase in value, but like all investments, they can lose value, too. The difference is, when your shares of Apple go down, you aren’t putting the roof over your head at risk.

22. Shop for clothes with labels that impress your “friends.”
It’s time to be a grown up. Impressing your friends with clothes is something we did in high school.



23. Eat out every single meal. Eating out has its benefits.
No preparation, no clean up, more social interaction, etc. However, it will clean out your wallet a lot faster than cooking at home. If you are a horrible cook, spend the difference on a few cooking classes.


24. Buy a television that consumes 80% of the square footage of your apartment’s living room.
 Unless you sit 30 feet from your television in a giant living room in a McMansion, it’s hard to justify a television worth more than your vehicle.


25. Don’t set up a monthly budget. “If you fail to plan, you plan to fail.” Nothing could be truer when it comes to managing your money. Get over your fear of creating a personal budget and spend a little time telling your money where to go.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Just Listed Behind the Gates at The Peninsula


3 Bedroom/3 Bathroom Condo $259,000

Just Listed Behind the Gates at The Peninsula




Golf Course Lot Listed in the prestigious gated golf/tennis bay community in Gulf Shores, AL.
Call Honours Properties for more information: 251-968-7800

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Worlds Most Unique/Craziest Homes


The AURA Residence on the island of Cyprus is a "very modern and futuristic-looking villa" that is being entered into the World Architecture Awards. "The philosophy behind the (exterior) design of The AURA Residence was based on the Great Wave off Kanagawa, a famous woodblock printing by the Japanese artist Hokusai.



The Dome Homein Pensacola Beach, Florida, constructed to withstand hurricane force winds, has proved its worth! While most of the homes around it were destroyed or heavily damaged, the Dome Home was basically unharmed.




Architect Frank Lloyd Wright's designed house, Fallingwater, completed in 1939 as a weekend cottage for Pittsburgh department store owner Edgar J. Kaufmann, sits over a waterfall May 20, 2002 in Mill Run, PA. The house is undergoing an $11.5 million restoration project targeted at preserving the home.




This primarily glass, spacship-looking home is located on 5.6 acres of lush green land 20 miles outside of London. It has three bedrooms, sitting room with games area, indoor swimming pool, and of course - a crazy design.



This odd bubble-shaped pink home sits on U.S. Route 280.




Vertical lines and large windows set this modern, single family house apart from the crowd




Mushroom houses in the Via Lepanto, Milan, 4th March 1969. These unusual dwellings were eventually demolished to make way for blocks of flats.



This 8,500-square-foot, crazy home in Mallorca, Spain is actually a renovation of a 1960s Mediterranean villa - though you'd never know it from its uber-modern facade.



This home gives the phrase "have you been living under a rock?" a whole new meaning. The house, built into a gigantic boulder, sits near the coast of Portugal.


To Find A Home In Baldwin County
Contact Honours Properties
251-968-7800

Monday, August 9, 2010

8 Tips for Adding Curb Appeal to Your Home

Curb appeal has always been important for homesellers. With the vast majority of today’s homebuyers starting their search on the Internet, the appearance of your property is more critical than ever. You only have a few seconds to catch their attention as they scroll through listings online to get them to stop and take a closer look.
But the role of curb appeal goes beyond just making a good first impression. The way your house looks from the street can impact its value. It can also shorten the time it takes to sell your house.

1. Paint the house.

Hands down, the most commonly offered curb appeal advice from our real estate pros and appraisers is to give the exterior of your home a good paint job. Buyers will instantly notice it and appraisers will note it on the valuation.


“Paint is probably the number one thing inside and out,” says Frank Lucco, managing partner of Houston-based IRR-Residential Appraisers and Consultants. “I’d give additional value for that. If you’re under two years remaining life (on the paint job), paint the exterior because it tends to show wear badly.”


Just make sure you stay within the range of accepted colors for your market. A house that’s painted a wildly different color from its competition will be marked down in value by appraisers.


2. Have the house washed.

Before you make the investment in a paint job, though, take a good look at the house. If it’s got mildew or general grunge, just washing the house could make a world of difference, says Valerie Torelli, a California real estate agent with a background in accounting.


Before she puts a house on the market, Torelli often does exterior makeovers on her clients’ homes, a service she pays for herself to get higher selling prices. Overall, she says her goal is to spend less than $5,000, with a goal of generating an extra $10,000 to $15,000 on the sale price.


Torelli specifies pressure-washing—a job that should be left to professionals. Pressure washing makes the house look “bright and clean in addition to getting rid of unsightly things like cobwebs, which may not be seen from the yard but will detract from the home’s cleanliness when seen up close,” she says.


The cost to have a professional cleaning should be a few hundred dollars—a fraction of the cost of having the house painted.


3. Trim the shrubs and green up the yard.

California real estate agent Valerie Torelli says she puts a lot of emphasis on landscaping, such as cutting down overgrown bushes and replacing them with leafy plants and annuals mulched with beautiful reddish-brown bark. “It runs me $30 to $50,” says Torelli. “Do you get a return on your money? Absolutely. It sucks people in.”


You also don’t want bare spots. Take the time to fertilize the yard, throw out some grass seed, and if need be, add some sod.


4. Add a splash of color.

It could be a flower bed of annuals by the mailbox, a paint job for the front door, or a brightly colored bench or an Adirondack chair. “You can get a cute little bench at Home Depot for $99,“ Torelli notes. “Spray paint it bright red or blue and set it in the yard or on the front porch.”

It’s not a bad idea, but don’t plan on getting extra points from an appraiser for a red bench, says John Bredemeyer, president of Realcorp in Omaha. “It’s difficult to quantify, but it does make a home sell more quickly,” Bredemeyer says. “Maybe yours sold a couple weeks faster than the house down the street. That’s the best way to look at these things.”


5. Add a fancy mailbox and house numbers.

An upscale mail box and architectural house numbers or an address plaque can give your house a distinctive look that stands out from everyone else on the block. Torelli makes them a part of her exterior makeovers “I’ve gotten those hand-painted mailboxes,” she says. “A nice one runs you $40 to $50.” Architectural house numbers may run as high as a few hundred dollars.

6. Repair or clean the roof.

Springfield, Va.-based home inspector and former builder Reggie Marston says the roof is one of the first things he looks at in assessing the condition of a home. He’ll look at other houses in the neighborhood to see if there are a lot of replaced roofs and see if the subject house has one as well. If not, he’ll look for curls in the shingles or missing shingles. “I’m looking at the roof for end-of-life expectancy,” he says.

You can pay for roof repairs now, or pay for them later in a lower appraisal; appraisers will mark down the value by the cost of the repair. That could knock thousands of dollars off your appraisal. According to Remodeling Magazine’s 2009-2010 Cost vs. Value Report, the average cost of a new asphalt shingle roof is more than $19,000.

“Roofs are issues,” Lucco says. “You won’t throw money away on that job. You gotta have a decent roof.”

Stains and plant matter, such as moss, can be handled with cleaning. It’s a job that can often be done in a day for a few hundred dollars, and makes the roof look like new. It’s not a DIY project; call a professional with the right tools to clean it without damaging it.

7. Put up a fence.

A picket fence with a garden gate to frame the yard is an asset. A fence has more impact in a family-oriented neighborhood than an upscale retirement community, Bredemeyer says, but in most instances, appraisers will give extra value for one, as long as it’s in good condition. “Day in a day out, a fence is a plus,“ Bredemeyer says. Expect to pay $2,000 to $3,500 for a professionally installed gated picket fence 3 feet high and 100 feet long.

8. Perform routine maintenance and cleaning.

Nothing sets off subconscious alarms like hanging gutters, missing bricks from the front steps, or lawn tools rusting in the bushes. It makes even the professionals question what else hasn’t been taken care of.

“A house is worth less if the maintenance isn’t done,” Lucco says. “Those little things can add up and be a very big detractor. When people say, ‘I’d buy it if it weren’t for all the deferred maintenance,’ what they’re really saying is, ‘I’d still buy it if you reduce the price.’”

Read more: http://www.houselogic.com/articles/8-tips-adding-curb-appeal-and-value-your-home/#ixzz0w7e5Tohr

Friday, August 6, 2010

Just Sold Behind the Gates at The Peninsula

Another Home Sold
By Honours Properties Behind the Prestigious Gates at The Peninsula in Gulf Shores, AL.


Fall & Winter Maintenance Guide for the Home

Certain home maintenance tasks should be completed each season to prevent structural damage, save energy, and keep all your home’s systems running properly. These maintenance tasks are most important for the South in fall and winter. For a comprehensive list of tasks by season, refer to the to-do lists at the end of this article.
Fall and winter conditions in the South vary dramatically from the northern part of the region to the southern coastline. But basic maintenance tips apply no matter where you live.

Key maintenance tasks to perform

• Get your heating system in order. Heating systems in the South vary—there are generally more gas furnaces in the northern areas, and more electric heat pump systems toward the coastal South. Programmable thermostats are important for both kinds of heating systems, as they can help save around $180 a year on your energy bills.

If you have a heat pump, make sure you install a programmable thermostat especially designed for heat pumps, says home inspector Bill Loden of Insight Home Inspection in Madison, Ala. Programmable thermostats for heat pumps are specially designed to keep these systems working at peak efficiency.

Schedule your fall HVAC checkup promptly; you can expect to pay $50 to $100 for a heating tune-up. Make sure your HVAC professional checks all electrical connections, lubricates any moving parts if necessary, and inspects the condensate drain and trap. If you have a gas furnace, make sure he also checks gas connections and pressure, burner combustion, and the heat exchanger.

Inspect your furnace filters monthly and change them whenever they are dirty. Inspect floor grates and return ducts regularly and clean them out with a vacuum cleaner brush.


• Clean your gutters. In the South, you’re less likely to have ice form in your gutters than in other parts of the country. Nevertheless, debris in your gutters can easily divert water onto the roof or siding, setting the stage for mold and rot and dramatically shortening the lifespan of shingles and paint. Inspect and clean your gutters in the late fall after leaves have dropped.

• Put away lawn and garden equipment. Pick up anything in the yard that could be damaged by cold or snow, such as garden tools, hoses and nozzles, and patio furniture and accessories. Run your lawn mower until it’s out of gas, if possible; if you leave gas in the tank over the winter, it can degrade and lose some of its combustion ability. Worse, gas can react with the air in the tank and oxidize, forming deposits that affect the machine’s performance; worse still, moisture can   condense inside the tank and cause rust that blocks the fuel lines.

If you know you’re going to leave gas in the tank over the winter, add a stabilizer to the last gallon of gas you put in (mix it in the gas can, not the mower tank, so that you get the mixing ratio correct).


• Trim back vegetation. In some areas of the South plants grow year-round, so it’s important to keep an eye on whether they’re encroaching on the roof and walls. Trim trees so that branches don’t hang over the roof, and keep heavy, dense growth away from siding. A good rule of thumb is to trim back bushes and shrubs so that there’s enough room to walk easily between plantings and your house.



• Pick up a paintbrush. Fall is a great time to paint your house’s exterior if necessary, sealing all surfaces before winter’s moisture has a chance to do damage. It’s possible to touch up small areas only, but note two things: 1) odds are you’ll end up with a slightly different color than the rest of the house, so don’t do it in a prominent spot; and 2) if you have a small area that’s consistently peeling or losing paint, you likely have a moisture issue that needs to be addressed first. Look for signs of leaky gutters, crumbling caulk, and loose siding that can trap moisture underneath.





• Check weatherstripping and caulk. Open all your exterior doors and check the weatherstripping; if yours is crumbly or has gaps, replace it. Remove the old weatherstripping with a utility knife and clean the surface with household cleaner, getting as much of the old debris and adhesive off as possible. When the surface is dry, apply peel-and-stick foam weatherstripping. Start at the top of the door frame and work your way down, being careful not to stretch the foam strip, which can weaken the adhesive.


Inspect windows and doors for any gaps between the trim and the exterior siding that allow air to penetrate from the outside; these gaps should be caulked. Be sure to scrape out any crumbling old caulk or paint — applying new caulk over old is fine, but first get rid of loose chunks and remove any grit with household cleaner.

Spending a few hours here and there on home maintenance tasks helps you spot developing problems quickly and prevent costly repairs. For best results, complete the tasks described above as well as those on the to-do list following this article.


Read more: http://www.houselogic.com/articles/fall-winter-seasonal-maintenance-guide-south/#ixzz0vprh0y8r

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Just Sold

Finding Local Officials When You Need Help

From getting a pothole filled on your street to finding out code requirements for your new bathroom, there’s a local government official who can help. The thought of calling around, though, trying to get someone’s attention at City Hall, can seem like a good way to drive yourself crazy. But it doesn’t have to be.



More and more cities, counties, and townships are making it easier to find what you need and to monitor how well they’re responding to requests. And whether you’re a community organizer or a concerned homeowner, you shouldn’t feel like you’re heading into uncharted waters. More than half of citizens had contact with local government within the last year, according to Tom Miller, president of the National Research Center.

Getting Started

Every city and town is unique, of course, but basic services for the community and homeowners tend to be similar. Local governments typically have a version of these agencies:

Code Enforcement: Also known in some places as the Department of Buildings, this is where you call about the neighbor with 100 cats or a back porch that’s falling down.


Parks and Recreation: Typically responsible for maintaining and developing local playgrounds, parks, and other recreational amenities.
Gulf Shores: 251-968-1420

Police: If the party down the block is still going strong at 3 a.m., dial the non-emergency number for your local law enforcement.
Gulf Shores: 251-968-2431    Orange Beach: 251-981-9777

Public Works: When you need a dangling tree limb removed after a big storm or the street repaved, call here. In a bigger city, this may be broken into specific entities: streets, sanitation, sewers, forestry, and so on.
Gulf Shores: 251-968-1156   Orange Beach: 251-974-5681

Recorder of Deeds: The county is usually responsible for housing deeds, and this is the place for a copy of yours or any related questions.

Orange Beach: 251-981-6779

Read more: http://www.houselogic.com/articles/finding-local-officials-when-you-need-help/#ixzz0vk0BGVZg

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Outdoor Lighting for Curb Appeal & Safety

Think about it: Most of your guests (and if your home is on the market, many would-be buyers) see your home only in the evening, when its best features may be lost in the shadows. Well-executed outdoor lighting enhances architectural detail and plays up landscape features, casting your home in the best possible light and adding an abundance of curb appeal

Outdoor lighting also adds value. Judith Patriski, an appraiser and owner of Quad Realty Co. near Cleveland, estimates that for upper-bracket homes, an investment in outdoor lighting can yield a 50% return. “When you pull into a driveway and see a gorgeous home, you’re going to pay more for it,” says Patriski.
And she emphasizes that it’s not only about aesthetics: “In all price ranges, lighting for security is important”—both to protect against intruders and falls. Here are the elements of successful outdoor lighting.

Mimicking Moonlight
Much of the success of exterior lighting hinges on its design. Hang around lighting designers long enough and you’ll hear a lot of talk about “moonlight effect.” That’s a naturalistic look that features light no more intense than that of a full moon, but still strong enough to make beautiful shadows and intense highlights.

Other Techniques Outdoor Lighting Designers Use

Highlight trees: Whether illumined from below or given presence by a light mounted in the tree itself, trees make stunning features.
Use uplights: Uplighting is dramatic because we expect light to shine downward. Used in moderation, it’s a great way to highlight architectural and landscaping features.
Have a focus: The entryway is often center stage, a way of saying, “Welcome, this way in.”





Combine beauty and function: For example, adding lighting to plantings along a pathway breaks up the “runway” look of too many lights strung alongside a walk.
Vary the fixtures: While the workhorses are spots and floods, designers turn to a wide range of fixtures, area lights, step lights, and bollards or post lights.




Stick to warm light: A rainbow of colors are possible, but most designers avoid anything but warm white light, preferring to showcase the house and its landscape rather than create a light show.

Orchestrate A Timer: with confirmation from a photocell, brings the display to life as the sun sets. At midnight it shuts down everything but security lighting. Some homeowners even set the timer to light things up an hour or so before dawn.




Adding Safety & Lamp Security
Falls are the foremost cause of home injury, according to the Home Safety Council. Outdoors, stair and pathway lighting help eliminate such hazards.
Often safety and security can be combined. For example, motion-detecting security lighting mounted near the garage provides illumination when you get out of your car at night; the same function deters intruders. Motion detecting switches can also be applied to landscape lighting to illuminate shadowy areas should anyone walk nearby.
Even the moonlight effect has a security function: Soft, overall landscape lighting eliminates dark areas that might hide an intruder, exposing any movement on your property. Overly bright lights actually have a negative effect, creating undesirable pockets of deep shadow.

Read more: http://www.houselogic.com/articles/outdoor-lighting-curb-appeal-and-safety/#ixzz0veeT9VHv