Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have also heard that no pictures on the wall is a good idea so people can imagine themselves there, but it always seemed odd to me when there were no family pics in the house. It really felt better for me when I could see pics of the people who were living there, so I wasn't busy imagining what they were like. It didn't make it feel like "their" house.
Agree here. We had a realtor over last week as we plan to sell. She emphasized a shit-ton of de-cluttering (as in whole pieces of furniture), and only noted a botched repair job of mine that needed tending....which was my failed attempt to paint part of our ceiling to clean candle soot. She never said we need to repaint the house, just the ceiling that needs it. She also complimented our family pics and refuted that theory that they need to go.
OP, also take note of a previous conversation about the fact that fresh paint smell can be a turn off and some buyers think its masking other flaws.
And you can always bake a batch of cookies right before the open house to mask any smells.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have also heard that no pictures on the wall is a good idea so people can imagine themselves there, but it always seemed odd to me when there were no family pics in the house. It really felt better for me when I could see pics of the people who were living there, so I wasn't busy imagining what they were like. It didn't make it feel like "their" house.
Agree here. We had a realtor over last week as we plan to sell. She emphasized a shit-ton of de-cluttering (as in whole pieces of furniture), and only noted a botched repair job of mine that needed tending....which was my failed attempt to paint part of our ceiling to clean candle soot. She never said we need to repaint the house, just the ceiling that needs it. She also complimented our family pics and refuted that theory that they need to go.
OP, also take note of a previous conversation about the fact that fresh paint smell can be a turn off and some buyers think its masking other flaws.
Anonymous wrote:I have also heard that no pictures on the wall is a good idea so people can imagine themselves there, but it always seemed odd to me when there were no family pics in the house. It really felt better for me when I could see pics of the people who were living there, so I wasn't busy imagining what they were like. It didn't make it feel like "their" house.
Anonymous wrote:I agree that there's no need to repaint with those soft colors. Wouldn't bother me at all. I do get annoyed when I see very intense colors on bedroom walls because they aren't as easy to cover, but I wouldn't pass on a really great house over paint colors no matter how much I hated them.
The key is for the house to be sparkling clean. And I mean CLEAN. No scuff marks on the walls, no dirt on the carpets, no rust on bathroom fixtures. If I see that kind of carelessness, I immediately assume the owner is negligent and has also neglected important maintenance.
Anonymous wrote:I know this has nothing to do with your question, but I hate the whole staging thing. People spend all this money repainting their walls off-white (usually with crappy builder grade paint), only to have the new buyers come in and re-paint using colors to their own liking. It's so wasteful.
I wish people could look past stupid shit so owners could spend more time on important things like leaky roofs.
Anonymous wrote:I know this has nothing to do with your question, but I hate the whole staging thing. People spend all this money repainting their walls off-white (usually with crappy builder grade paint), only to have the new buyers come in and re-paint using colors to their own liking. It's so wasteful.
I wish people could look past stupid shit so owners could spend more time on important things like leaky roofs.