Anonymous wrote:Ok I found it:
https://www.younghouselove.com/hoop-there-it-is/
Thankfully she does recognize in this post that she is a LUNATIC for spray painting this. If kids toys bothered me this much I think I just would have...not had kids?
Anonymous wrote:What is going on with Sherry’s latest hairstyle??? What is that ball on top of her head with the short hair? I wish someone would tell her it looks ridiculous. I like them, but geesh I can’t stand her hair right now!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Followed them since before they bought the Richmond House and then hit some kind of wall - their impoverished idea of decor kind of crashed into a wave of criticism and they took a break. Came back w/ the Florida move which I thought was smart. That Richmond house was cursed forever just with the bad juju of the time Sherry put bronze rustoleum over a child's plastic basketball hoop.
I think 1400-1600 square feet particularly in an indoor/outdoor state like FL is perfect for a family of four. I live in Brooklyn and there are upscale families of four in my building with less square footage. However it's a pre-war building so the layout works - enter into the shared living space plus kitchen (sometimes a dining room too) then the bedroom and bathroom (s) are off down a hall. Generally lots of light. None of my neighbors in those spaces seem to feel cramped. My Aunt and Uncle raised two kids in about 700 square feet and it worked - the layout was great.
This house though. The layout is dire, they have set it up so there's no flow and as usual their decor choices are off-scale and the aesthetic is a miss. I think they will stay in FL - they have always skewed beach-esque and this move was just admitting it. BUT the choice was a miss. Should have just razed the thing, gotten an architect and started over.
Ok the bold made me snort water outta my nose. I missed that post! Gotta find it...
Game over, no further commentary necessary. It's all been said in that one sentence.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Followed them since before they bought the Richmond House and then hit some kind of wall - their impoverished idea of decor kind of crashed into a wave of criticism and they took a break. Came back w/ the Florida move which I thought was smart. That Richmond house was cursed forever just with the bad juju of the time Sherry put bronze rustoleum over a child's plastic basketball hoop.
I think 1400-1600 square feet particularly in an indoor/outdoor state like FL is perfect for a family of four. I live in Brooklyn and there are upscale families of four in my building with less square footage. However it's a pre-war building so the layout works - enter into the shared living space plus kitchen (sometimes a dining room too) then the bedroom and bathroom (s) are off down a hall. Generally lots of light. None of my neighbors in those spaces seem to feel cramped. My Aunt and Uncle raised two kids in about 700 square feet and it worked - the layout was great.
This house though. The layout is dire, they have set it up so there's no flow and as usual their decor choices are off-scale and the aesthetic is a miss. I think they will stay in FL - they have always skewed beach-esque and this move was just admitting it. BUT the choice was a miss. Should have just razed the thing, gotten an architect and started over.
Ok the bold made me snort water outta my nose. I missed that post! Gotta find it...
Anonymous wrote:Ok I found it:
https://www.younghouselove.com/hoop-there-it-is/
Thankfully she does recognize in this post that she is a LUNATIC for spray painting this. If kids toys bothered me this much I think I just would have...not had kids?
Anonymous wrote:Followed them since before they bought the Richmond House and then hit some kind of wall - their impoverished idea of decor kind of crashed into a wave of criticism and they took a break. Came back w/ the Florida move which I thought was smart. That Richmond house was cursed forever just with the bad juju of the time Sherry put bronze rustoleum over a child's plastic basketball hoop.
I think 1400-1600 square feet particularly in an indoor/outdoor state like FL is perfect for a family of four. I live in Brooklyn and there are upscale families of four in my building with less square footage. However it's a pre-war building so the layout works - enter into the shared living space plus kitchen (sometimes a dining room too) then the bedroom and bathroom (s) are off down a hall. Generally lots of light. None of my neighbors in those spaces seem to feel cramped. My Aunt and Uncle raised two kids in about 700 square feet and it worked - the layout was great.
This house though. The layout is dire, they have set it up so there's no flow and as usual their decor choices are off-scale and the aesthetic is a miss. I think they will stay in FL - they have always skewed beach-esque and this move was just admitting it. BUT the choice was a miss. Should have just razed the thing, gotten an architect and started over.
Anonymous wrote:Oh didn't you hear they have magical trees that you can enjoy from the deck
Anonymous wrote:I'm new to YHL, but all the talk about the Florida home has me curious. Is there any way to see a layout overview without watching all of her videos?
Anonymous wrote:
I think 1400-1600 square feet particularly in an indoor/outdoor state like FL is perfect for a family of four. I live in Brooklyn and there are upscale families of four in my building with less square footage. However it's a pre-war building so the layout works - enter into the shared living space plus kitchen (sometimes a dining room too) then the bedroom and bathroom (s) are off down a hall. Generally lots of light. None of my neighbors in those spaces seem to feel cramped. My Aunt and Uncle raised two kids in about 700 square feet and it worked - the layout was great.
This house though. The layout is dire, they have set it up so there's no flow and as usual their decor choices are off-scale and the aesthetic is a miss. I think they will stay in FL - they have always skewed beach-esque and this move was just admitting it. BUT the choice was a miss. Should have just razed the thing, gotten an architect and started over.