Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Make sure the shower insect is bigger than you think you will need. It’s amazing how many bottles of shampoo and what not accumulate.
If there’s a specific paint color, you wind up having your heart set on, make sure whoever is doing your bathroom no, you do not want them to substitute a different brand of paint after a lot of thinking about it and testing samples, I landed on the perfect blue color for my bathroom. But the contractor used a different brand and had the paint store look up the translation from one branch to the other. Unfortunately, the color isn’t the same and what they wound up giving me is much more green than I wanted. It’s a small thing, but it bugs me about three times a week even years later.
Make sure you pick everything out ahead of time so that you have everything ready to go when I get to that part of the job. Do not put off picking out towel rods, or toilet paper holders.
If you are doing the floors, put heated floors in. Decide if you can live with a Toto washlet, which is much cheaper than an actual Toto toilet. Look for lots of inspiration photos, and find something that you would like to replicate if that seems like the easiest and safest path for you.
This. A painting contractor did the same to me. I wanted to use an old Benjamin Moore Oriental Silk in a lot of our downstairs and without talking with me, the contractor got Sherwin Williams to mix something similar. It wasn't. It was a harsh yellow and they had done most of my first floor when I saw it. I knew something was off but just thought it was the light. I found the paint buckets and he admitted it. It really sucked.
Anonymous wrote:Make sure the shower insect is bigger than you think you will need. It’s amazing how many bottles of shampoo and what not accumulate.
If there’s a specific paint color, you wind up having your heart set on, make sure whoever is doing your bathroom no, you do not want them to substitute a different brand of paint after a lot of thinking about it and testing samples, I landed on the perfect blue color for my bathroom. But the contractor used a different brand and had the paint store look up the translation from one branch to the other. Unfortunately, the color isn’t the same and what they wound up giving me is much more green than I wanted. It’s a small thing, but it bugs me about three times a week even years later.
Make sure you pick everything out ahead of time so that you have everything ready to go when I get to that part of the job. Do not put off picking out towel rods, or toilet paper holders.
If you are doing the floors, put heated floors in. Decide if you can live with a Toto washlet, which is much cheaper than an actual Toto toilet. Look for lots of inspiration photos, and find something that you would like to replicate if that seems like the easiest and safest path for you.
Anonymous wrote:I don't have any experience with remodeling; this will be the first. ISO advice and recommendations. How do I go about finding a good contractor? I presume a bath shop might be a one-stop place to pick up all supplies and get a recommended contractor.
Do you have a contractor you recommend? What should I know and what to avoid? Thank you.