Paint is the cheapest improvement you can ever make. ![]() You want people to think its like a magazine photo shoot when they come by for a showing. Also remove all your personal objects and declutter furniture. And spend money on professional pics, edited. Spend the money upfront on the best curb appeal. The gold standard in housing from 0-350k is stainless steel, double door fridge with freezer bottom, hardwood floors, granite countertops and updated bathrooms and great curb appeal. Or give a credit to get all new appliances. megh.Īs a Realtor, why not list with appliances you have and offer a credit to the buyers to get whatever fridge they want. my bathroom is scrupulously clean, and the dogs/man tend to eat off of hygienically prepared things. Short of that, I'll suck it up and keep bitchin' about trends, sigh.ĭon't judge me. scrub it down to commercial kitchen standards. and wish I had a kitchen commie whose job it was to run a station, prep me 3 tasty meals a day and then.wait for it. In short, what I am maybe kinda saying here is, sorta, I'm lazy a.f. ![]() Or my kettle that inevitably gets splashed with cooking oil that sets like lead.Īlso, so many of the 'stainless steel' appliances for non-commercial use (at least in my country) seem to actually be silver paint or cheap faux finishes? I dunno if that's a thing overseas too where the worst thing it typically deals with is some soap powder dribble that then stubbornly refuses to move and then makes watermarks for days. I was thinking more of, say, my washer's front. I totally get it for commercial kitchens. far, far easier to sanitize and harder wearing. If for any reason it looks like the kitchen is a stumbling block to a sale we can just offer an allowance as has been suggested. We will find a nice black fridge from craigslist to match and just put the cream colored fridge in the garage. The appliances are all in VERY good condition. It is kind of ironic that I would put all stainless in my house for sale, when so many of the houses I see on the market and am likely to buy have black in the kitchens.Įdit: Thank you everyone for the responses, I really appreciate it!Įdit #2: OK, after all the input, we are going to stick with black. I understand this may be cutting edge, but does it really make sense to replace everything, rather than just get a black fridge and have it all match in black? We have had a realtor walk the house and the additional input from another, and they both say, if you want to sell, replace the appliances with stainless (stainless, black stainless, gunmetal, etc). Its surface is magnetic and hides smudges and fingerprints.My wife and I are fixing our house up for sale.Ĭurrently, we have all black appliances that are all in very good shape, except for the refrigerator which is in good shape, but very old and off-white/cream color. Its matte surface is low-gloss as well.ĭark gray in color, this finish has a brushed metal look.Ī finish with a dark-gray color. This finish has a black hue and is smudge- and fingerprint-resistant. It also has a low-gloss matte surface that's magnetic. Here are some examples from major appliance manufacturers:ĭark gray in color, it's smudge- and fingerprint-resistant. So, if you cook often (and adventurously), go for a dark color scheme. And unless you're deep-cleaning regularly, high heat will sear in those marks. Grease splatter, spills and smoke can all leave their mark as your oven gains mileage. ![]() Ovens suffer the same fingerprints and smudges that refrigerators do - and then some. LG dishwashers come in the company's fingerprint- and scratch-resistant "black stainless steel" finish. GE makes these kitchen appliances in both its "slate" and "black slate" exteriors. The slate finish trend extends to dishwashers too.
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