5 ways to make your new house a home

5 ways to make your new house a home

Your new build house is crisp, clean and… a bit lacking in character. While you’re thrilled to own it, you’d really like to add a few touches that reflect your and your family’s tastes and lifestyle, transforming it from being just a house into a real home.

Luckily, you don’t have to upend the kids’ toy chest in the middle of the lounge floor just to make your house feel lived in! After all, you’d like to keep things tidy. A few little jobs around the house and garden, and you’ll start feeling more settled. Let’s get to work creating a comfy feel, working from the outside in, to make your new house a home.

1. A curbside welcome

Designers often use the ‘journeys’ people make through spaces to shape the way they experience them. You’ll do the same kind of thing starting at the curbside. Begin by shopping for custom address plaques. Thinking of giving your house a name as well as a number? Even better! It doesn’t have to be anything pretentious – it could even be amusing. What you choose reflects the character of the family that lives within those four walls. If you’re a keen gardener and have a border along the pavement, add your special touch here too.

2. Up the garden path

Now that you’ve seen to the initial steps in creating a sense of place, it’s time to continue the journey. There are many little details you can add that inject interest to the walk from your gate to your front door. Apart from using your favourite plants, consider adding some garden statuary or an ornamental water feature to welcome friends and family as they approach your house. The area around the door is particularly important since it’s a place where people pause. An attractive collection of potted plants is a good start, but don’t overlook the vertical wall space. Use it to display a carefully-chosen artwork, antique, or object of interest.

3. Moving indoors

Clutter is a definite no-no, but a minimalist interior can seem rather cold and impersonal. Scatter cushions and throws can make a huge difference in transforming the sterile look of a new home into something altogether warmer, friendlier and more personalised. When it comes to paintings and objects d’art, be selective. It’s better to choose one or two statement pieces than it is to fill the space with tons of knick-knacks. And while you aren’t planning to leave things lying about, a well-chosen coffee table book or two help to make the space more interesting with a lived-in-look that isn’t in the least bit messy.

4. Throw your heart into the kitchen

In the kitchen, you can really let your hair down and have a bit of fun. Brighten it up with your children’s artworks, flowers picked from your own garden, a display of your heirloom china and glassware or anything else that says ‘family’ to you. After all, it’s considered the heart of the home, and home is all about family. I love adding vintage touches like an old set of scales or granny’s handed-down mixing bowls – and no matter how modern your kitchen is, a vintage touch here and there won’t look out of place.

5. Comfortable and personal bedrooms

Assuming the basics are already there, each bedroom’s owner will add their own personal touches they like. If you have small children, they’ll need a bit of help, but you already know what they like best, even if you don’t altogether agree with their tastes. So, if your daughter wants to plaster the walls with music fan posters, or your son wants to decorate with model dinosaurs, that’s their choice. In your own bedroom, you and your spouse can reign. Work together to create a restful atmosphere in which you can both relax after a busy day.

There’s no wrong way to do it

No matter how much you like your new house, the ways you choose to make yourselves at home personalise it. What you do depends entirely on you, and there are no wrong or right ways to do it. Turn getting settled in into a family project in which you take everyone’s preferences into account. It can be fun too!

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Why you should lead a more active lifestyle

Why you should lead a more active lifestyle

You lead an active lifestyle if you engage in physical activities every day. An active lifestyle includes any activity that gets you moving. Exercise includes activities like walking and gardening. It also encompasses engaging in sports. Different from other types of activity, like reading a book, is physical exercise. Sedentary activity is what it is known as. You sit or move very little throughout the day if you lead a sedentary lifestyle. Living an active lifestyle has several advantages, including aiding in the prevention or management of health issues. You can get help with living healthily by looking to go to website.

What advantages do an active lifestyle offer?

  • You could find it easier to perform daily tasks. Your heart, lungs and muscles are healthier when you are active. You won’t get fatigued doing your daily duties as a result.
  • You can aid with weight management. Your body uses the calories you consume when you’re active rather than storing them as fat. After you stop being active, your body keeps burning calories at a greater pace.
  • Your health can improve through exercise. Your chance of developing cancer, heart disease, diabetes and stroke is lowered by exercise. Your blood pressure, blood sugar and cholesterol can all be managed with exercise. If you have arthritis, exercise can make it easier and less painful for your joints to move.
  • Your muscles, bones and joints will grow stronger. This will lessen your chance of falling and assist in the prevention of osteoporosis.
  • Your mood may be improved by exercise. Stress and depression can be lessened or prevented through exercise. Additionally, exercise can help you sleep better.

What dangers come with leading a sedentary lifestyle?

Your chance of developing conditions like diabetes, high blood pressure and heart disease rises when you lead a sedentary lifestyle. Additionally, your immune system deteriorates. It cannot effectively combat infections as a result.

How much exercise do I require?

Any activity is preferable to none at all. You will experience health benefits as you increase your level of activity from being largely inactive. The general rules are as follows:

Perform aerobic exercise on a few days per week. Walking, bicycling, dancing, swimming, and leaf raking are all examples of aerobic exercise. Aim for 75 to 150 minutes of strenuous activity or 150 to 300 minutes of moderate activity (2½ to 5 hours) per week. You can also combine strenuous and moderate activities.

Strengthen your body at least twice every week. You may maintain your current muscles and add new ones by engaging in strength training. Push ups, yoga, tai chi and weightlifting are all examples of strength training. If weights aren’t available, you can lift everyday objects such as tins of food. Try to exercise all of your major muscle groups; including your arms, legs and abdomen. Give each area two or three sets. Use a weight that’s just a little bit more than you can effortlessly lift. You can gradually increase the weight. In addition, resistance bands can be used in place of weights.

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Get their look: Pretty in pink home office

 

 
 
 
 
 
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A post shared by Anna | Pod & Her Peas (@podandherpeas)

This pink home office is the headquarters of personalised gift boutique, Rosie & Ava (named after owner Anna’s two beautiful young daughters).

It’s an obvious creative’s space – however, it’s also where the necessary day-to-day drudge of admin takes place – so do everything you can to make it as enjoyable an experience as possible!

All Anna’s office furniture, accessories and equipment are wonderfully colour coordinated; swivel chair, waste paper bin, tape dispenser, printers, keyboard, scales, computer mouse and more. She’s a self-confessed lover of pink.

She even has a pink retro kettle alongside a cute pink mini-fridge to store her cold drinks or milk for tea – no wandering off to the kitchen for a brew and getting distracted!

Get their look

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Prices & links correct at time of publication.

AstroAI 4-litre mini fridge, pink
AstroAI 4-litre mini fridge, pink
Satechi F3 smart monitor stand, white
Satechi F3 smart monitor stand, white
Lift Vertical ergonomic mouse
Lift Vertical ergonomic mouse
LOGITECH POP Keys wireless mechanical keyboard – Heartbreaker Rose
LOGITECH POP Keys wireless mechanical keyboard – Heartbreaker Rose
MUNBYN shipping scale
MUNBYN shipping scale
MUNBYN label printer
MUNBYN label printer
Cricut Explore Air 2, rose pink
Cricut Explore Air 2, rose pink
Vinyl wall sticker
Vinyl wall sticker
AstroAI 4-litre mini fridge, pink
AstroAI 4-litre mini fridge, pink
Satechi F3 smart monitor stand, white
Satechi F3 smart monitor stand, white
Lift Vertical ergonomic mouse
Lift Vertical ergonomic mouse
LOGITECH POP Keys wireless mechanical keyboard – Heartbreaker Rose
LOGITECH POP Keys wireless mechanical keyboard – Heartbreaker Rose
MUNBYN shipping scale
MUNBYN shipping scale
MUNBYN label printer
MUNBYN label printer
Cricut Explore Air 2, rose pink
Cricut Explore Air 2, rose pink
Vinyl wall sticker
Vinyl wall sticker

Designer Desire: George Mayer-Marton

Montage of George Mayer-Marton church mosaic works

 I was saddened to read about yet another priceless piece of art potentially soon to be destroyed. It’s a work by George Mayer-Marton (1897–1960) – his fresco and mosaic of the crucifixion which can be found behind the alter of the Holy Rosary Church in Fitton Hill, Oldham.

The church has been closed since 2017 and is set to be demolished… along with the mosaic inside. As you can see from our montage of before & after images above, the artwork has already been *probably* irreparably damaged; the two ends having been painted over in the 1980s, only the central figure of Christ remains.

Mayer-Marton’s mural in St Clare’s RC Church in Blackley, Manchester is the only other of his pieces which survives in situ in its original site. Another of his mosaics, Pentecost, was removed from a now demolished church in Netherton, Merseyside was luckily rescued and currently resides in Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral.

A number of representatives from arts, architecture and heritage organisations have taken campaigning action – appealing to Historic England for its rescue; they include The Victoria and Albert Museum, Save Britain’s Heritage, The Imperial War Museum, The Victoria Gallery in Liverpool and The Vivian Gallery in Swansea.

A book to help fund the campaign has been published by Baquis Press. You can find copies here.

A mere 3 days ago, the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport (DCMS) on Historic England’s recommendation gave the building – and Mayer-Marton’s mural – Grade II listed status.

Portrait of George Mayer-Marton

Additional image credits:
Craace | Manchester Evening News