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Home Maintenance

Easy Exterior Home Tweaks

Whether
your home is an often-renovated Cape Cod or Craftsman or a relatively new
build, chances are good there’s something you don’t like about the exterior.

A
complete exterior home remodel can be expensive. Luckily, there are some easy
tweaks you can do yourself that will boost your home’s curb appeal and
transform it into a house everyone wants to visit. Read on for a few
suggestions.

Change Outdoor Lighting Fixtures

You
may only need one light to see by in order to get your key in the lock, but
does it have to be ugly? Does it have to be centered over the door? Think about
your home’s symmetry when replacing light fixtures and choose a design that
works with your home’s style. Eclectic exteriors can quickly become
neighborhood eyesores, so “ye olde carriage lantern” fixtures are unlikely to
work on a Craftsman style house.

Make Your Door the Focal Point

If
you’ve got an old or standard builder’s door, think about replacing it with a
door that welcomes visitors. Red doors signify welcome to travelers in American
tradition, and in feng shui red is believed to drive away evil forces and
promote positive energy. There may, of course, be some exterior colors that
just won’t work with a red door. But if you can pull it off, it’s well worth
it. If your interior entryway is dark, buy a door with a decorative glass
pattern at the top and consider installing glass panels on either side of the
door. It gives the illusion of a much bigger, more expansive entryway. If you
worry about privacy, you can always apply adhesive panels that let light in but
prevent people from seeing your interior hallway. Door panels come in dozens
and dozens of designs these days, and they’re another way to showcase your
home’s personality.

While
you’re working on your home’s entryway, consider replacing your street numbers
with ones that are easily visible from the street.



Rethink Front Yard Landscaping

There
is lush and there is jungle. As your home matures, trees, shrubs, and
perennials expand to fill the space available to them. While there’s no doubt
the shade from a deciduous tree can lower your cooling costs significantly, it
can also darken your interior in a way you can’t control. If you have mature
trees that are reaching the end of their lifecycle, consider removing some of
them and installing shutters instead. That way you can keep heat out when you
need to and let light in when you want it.

As
our summers get hotter, replacing standard grass that needs constant watering
with drought-resistant plants and lawn cover that never needs mowing makes
sense. You can still get a lush, bursting out all over midsummer look you want
by installing hanging baskets and porch-flanking flower containers. You can
donate perennials you no longer want at plant exchanges, and you may be
surprised by the visual impact a less-is-more approach to landscaping can have.

Paint and Restore

Sometimes
builders or previous owners just don’t get it right. A combination of brick,
stone or stucco on one part of the house with the wrong color siding on the
rest of the exterior can be jarring. The good news: brick, stonework and stucco
can all be painted, and this is one of the cheapest
and most dramatic exterior transformations there is. If you decide to replace
the siding instead, remember you can always replace the siding at the front of
the house and leave the existing siding on the sides and back for a later date.

If
you live in an older home whose exterior has been renovated in a way that
doesn’t match its original design, consider restoring it. Wrought iron porch railings are never going to work on a
Craftsman home, and replacing them with something more in keeping with the
home’s original design will eliminate the visual disconnect.

Transform Your Porch

An enclosed front porch can be claustrophobic if it’s too small, and unless you use it often, you might want to consider ripping it off and installing a portico instead. The inherent drama of a classic, column-supported portico gives your house instant curb appeal and the open front and sides give the same impression of space as high ceilings do in a home’s interior. This is one of the easiest exterior home remodels you can make. And if you invest in stylish bistro set and some nice pavers, you may find yourself sitting out in your front yard more than you ever thought possible.