Month: December 2023
Imagine if you will its a cold, rainy day. Youre home on the couch snuggled up with a warm blanket and your favorite pet. Feeling relaxed and sleepy, youre about to drift off into a deep sleep when all of the suddenPOoot! The cute and fuzzy pet has made a stench! You can hardly stand it and your poor pet is so embarrassed. What do you do?
Pet odor is an embarrassing problem and can develop in your home, car, bathroom, furniture or spur-of-the-moment. There are hundreds of expensive products on the market claiming to kill odor but few work effectively. In order to effectively control an odor, you need to take control and use a product that contains enzymes to eat away the chemical compound creating the odor.
If odor is a constant problem, try cleaning with an enzyme-based cleaner for organic stains. Organic stains are defined by some natural, biological material- if it came out of an animal or plant, it’s organic. Enzymes break down odor. They catalyze a biological substance, and increase the rate at which it would naturally break down.
Four Easy ways to help you fight and kill the odor problem:
1: Keep litter boxes clean to maintain odor control.
2: Spray furniture with a lightly scented enzyme formulated spray. Scents like lavender and vanilla can have a calming effect.
3: Create cross circulation for pet odor control by using decorative screen doors on rooms where free air circulation is a problem. Use heavy metal screen to deter cats from tearing it when scratching.
4: Burn pet candles formulated with enzymes which eat away odor rather than masking odor
Pet odor control can be an ongoing challenge. Take control and stop stink now so you can spend less time worrying and more time enjoying your furry friends.
If you are lucky enough to live in a country cottage you will recognise the utter appeal of English cottage style furniture. There is no doubt that tasteful furniture that is in keeping with its surroundings, contributes to the convivial heart of a home and this is no more so than with the appropriate use of cottage style furniture.
Historically cottage furniture was designed to be practical, comfortable and above all affordable. Although these days many genuine antique pieces can fetch enormous sums of money, originally much of the furniture designed and created for cottages was modern in its day and was simply hewn from natural materials that were easily to hand.
These materials would have included mighty oaks, beech, ash, tall pines, wild cherry, pliable willow and the great elm trees sadly no longer with us. All were cut and felled from fields, woods, river banks and open moorland and then left to season before being turned into chairs, tables, stools, settles, four-poster beds, dressers and cupboards by skilled local craftsmen.
The dark stained and polished traditional cottage style furniture you see today, in antique shops, cottages and even old manor houses, would originally have started life as light or pale coloured wood that only darkened over the centuries. Any furniture that survived through to the modern day became more valued and much sought after items in their own right.
Many of these pieces would have originally have been part of co-ordinating sets of furniture comprising a double bed, a wash stand, a dresser, a small table, chairs, and sometimes a wardrobe. A hundred years ago or more an English cottage would have been a very small and unsophisticated dwelling occupied by local villagers and farm workers.
These were generally speaking quite poor people, who wanted nothing more than simple and affordable comfort at the end of the day. Their furniture needed to be functional and robust, which is why genuine cottage furniture is rarely elaborate, except for bucolic carvings and painted decoration.
Flowers, fruit, hedgerow plants, farming symbols, birds and animals were the most common carved features; these were done by local cabinet makers, who in the main didnt have any formal training. The painted embellishments were either slightly primitive, with a Folk Art feel to them or, if the artist was talented, featured highly detailed and beautifully executed scenes.
Furniture made from pine was the cheapest and probably the easiest to work but because it lacked the patina of the beautiful hard woods many pine pieces of furniture were painted and then decorated to enhance the rather plain appearance; although there are a few examples where the natural wood was varnished but left unpainted with the exception of some painted floral accents.
True English cottage furniture is homely and unfussy and should feel inviting when you walk into a room. It does in fact have a charming nave quality that is a large part of its appeal; indeed to people from all over the world. Many a well-worn country kitchen chair, lovingly fashioned from a piece of elm or beech, has gone on to become a collectors item, far from its native land.
Quite a lot of cottage furniture in the past could be picked up cheaply from auctions and junk shops or even be passed down from relatives. These days though original pieces of cottage furniture are less attainable, more costly and highly desirable, especially since the shabby chic style became so popular; which is why there is now a growing demand for good quality reproduction pieces.
When putting together a cottage style room it is important to be sure of which direction you want to follow so be certain to focus your ideas before you start. For instance do you want to create a classic old cottage look using mostly old oak furniture alongside lots of pretty fabrics or do you lean more towards the shabby chic look using distressed and painted furniture, with corresponding accessories? Once you’ve decided on the general theme tie your look together so that it appears effortless and uncontrived.
You can probably now see just how important it is to use the right type of cottage furniture to ensure getting the exact look you want for your home. You will not achieve a calm rural ambience in any room that looks a mish-mash of ill-chosen furniture and oddments. Keep a rigid sense of direction and try to plan as near as possible the exact layout and room position of your major signature pieces. Once these are in place the rest of your furniture and special treasures will fit naturally round them.
It is sometimes worth spending a reasonable sum of money on one stunning item if you feel it will transform a hitherto plain area into somewhere captivating and welcoming. There is no doubt that something like a beautiful polished antique chest sporting a vase of cottage garden flowers can turn a room into a masterpiece of design.
As with all dcor pick your colour schemes carefully to complement your English cottage furniture, making sure there are plenty of natures tones on the walls, floors and upholstery. Shades of pink, rose, brown, yellow, rust and green are perfect for that English cottage look but keep it subtle to maintain the antique, aged and cosy feel that is appropriate for this style. Be sure to stay well away from sleek, highly polished and modern furniture; even one inappropriate piece can destroy the whole balance of a room.
Nothing has to match, and if it doesn’t, so much the better. The overall effect you want to achieve is a look of charm and distinct comfort. Anything that you have found or bought that is a bit worse for wear can be painted or covered with new fabric to help it fit into your overall scheme. In the past it was not unusual for pieces to be adapted from one use to another, for example an old cottage door have might be remodeled into a kitchen table; dont be afraid to do the same if you have the talent.
Finally if you are furnishing a small space it is often best to choose one large focal piece of furniture and then add smaller well-chosen items to fit in around it. When a restricted space is filled with to many smaller pieces, it tends to make the room appear fussy, cluttered and even unkempt. Also avoid the temptation of pushing everything directly up against the walls, it is usually best to arrange furniture in an L shape, without blocking the natural flow of the room.
Good storage methods are a must when it comes to living in modest spaces so try to make your larger pieces of furniture such as blanket chests, dressers and settles double-up as extra storage space, this way they become dual purpose pieces and help keep your home both tidy and well-organised.
Dollhouse Unfinished Furniture
Unfinished furniture and furniture kits give you the same satisfaction and freedom that you get from building your own dollhouse kit. Furniture kits include items you put together yourself that will look like their picture once they are completed. If you want to assemble the furniture yourself, buy a furniture kit; completed items will appear as they do in the picture.
Bathroom Furniture
Most dollhouse bathroom kits are pretty simple: they include a tub, a toilet, a sink, and sometimes a mirror. However, the materials used and colors and patterns available make dollhouse bathrooms as unique as any other room. A few well-placed accessories, such as a towel closet or a tube of toothpaste and a hairbrush, will go a long way to add personality to your dollhouse bathroom.
Dining Room Furniture
Dining rooms give your home a feeling of refinementor, sometimes, a feeling of excitement Though many dining room sets are meant to be rather classy, countrified and hand-painted dining room sets are also available to add some brightness and character to your dollhouse. This is a great area of your dollhouse to play make believewhether children are pretending to have company at dinner, or you are displaying a great tea set
Dollhouse Furniture: Wicker
Wicker furniture is the art of basket weaving and furniture making combined. Wicker gets its name from the interweaving of bamboo or vine around a furniture frame. Most wicker furniture is made with wire, but there are some very ornament pieces put together with fine strips of wood. Wicker adds a modern look and appeal to your dollhouse furniture set and we would recommend that it complements contemporary or traditional dollhouse kits.
Oak Material with Dollhouses
Oak wood has a very fine grain that lends itself to a more realistic piece of dollhouse furniture. It has a lighter color that you will find coordinates with many classical or traditional dollhouses. Oak is a great choice for living room furniture as the wood beautifully accents the fabric pieces. Oak is a great pick for a traditional or modern dollhouse, but the material does lend itself to be used in most any style.
Great Porcelain Dollhouse Furniture
What comes to mind when you think of porcelain? China, and that is because it was manufactured first in china around the 600s. Ever since then porcelain has been the dominant material for most fancy dishes, pottery, and “china”. Fortunately for the miniature enthusiast it also works extremely well with dollhouse furniture. You will see most bathroom sets are made from porcelain creating a beautiful white, glazed color.
Dollhouse One Inch Furniture
Dollhouse scales tell you that the you are buying the right sized furniture for your dollhouse. On this website, all furniture is built on a 1 inch scale unless you see inch or inch in the title of the item.
Most dollhouse furniture, like most dollhouses, are built on a 1 inch scale (also known as 1:12 scale). Every inch of dollhouse furniture is equivalent to twelve inches of real furniture. So a 2 inch tall dollhouse coffee table would look like a 2 foot tall coffee table in reality. There are other scales, but they are less popular and common
For example, a dollhouse dresser that is 4 inches tall represents a 4 foot tall real dresser.