Foreign.
Speaker BWelcome to around the House with Eric G. Your trusted source for all things home improvement.
Speaker BWhether you're tackling a DIY project, hiring it out, or just trying to keep your home running smoothly, you're in the right place.
Speaker BWith over 30 years of remodeling experience, certified kitchen designer Eric G takes you behind the scenes with expert advice, industry trends, and the latest innovations for your home.
Speaker AHome.
Speaker BIt's everything you need to know without the fluff.
Speaker BNow let's get this show started with our host, Eric G. And John Dudley.
Speaker CWelcome to the around the House show, your trusted source for home improvement information.
Speaker CI'm Eric G. Thanks for joining me today.
Speaker CJohn Dudley, good to see you again, my friend.
Speaker DHow are you, brother?
Speaker CGood, man, good.
Speaker CWe got Wendy Glaster back in the studio again.
Speaker COur great designer friend.
Speaker CWendy, great to see you again.
Speaker CIt's always a fun time chatting with you.
Speaker AThank you, Eric.
Speaker AIt's really great to see you too.
Speaker AAnd John, so nice to see you again as well.
Speaker DThis is great.
Speaker CWe're going to have a fun one today.
Speaker CThis is great.
Speaker CAnd this is so important.
Speaker CAnd I think these tricks and tips you have here are even great for the holidays when the people are coming over to say hi to sell your home, it's like having the relatives come over anyway.
Speaker CSo it's all the same.
Speaker AThat's so true.
Speaker CHow do you make this look as best you can without making it look like you got 50 pounds of mud in a 20 pound bag?
Speaker AExactly, Exactly.
Speaker AIt's true.
Speaker AAnd they say if you want to get things done around your home, just schedule a party and you'll get it all done.
Speaker AIt's the same when you list a house, I'm sure.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker CIt was so funny.
Speaker COne thing I learned, and we talked a little bit about it a few weeks ago on the show, but the one thing I learned on listing my house is make sure you have great cameras around the outside that you have turned on.
Speaker COh, you know why?
Speaker CBecause when everybody comes and shows the house with the realtor, they walk in, they walk around the entire house, they have their private conversation inside.
Speaker CBut human nature says when they walk out and get in front of the realtor's car or their car out in the front parking lot of your home, they talk about all the things they like about the house.
Speaker CThey think about all the things that they didn't like about the house and if they want to put an offer in and what that offer would be and what they can afford and you can watch it on your own camera system.
Speaker CReal Time Live.
Speaker DThis is Eric G. Spy 101, by the way, which I don't know if we should be publicly airing Inventing.
Speaker CBut hey, in the listing it said active, pick up that.
Speaker ABut isn't that kind of a.
Speaker AHow do you get the sound to go that far?
Speaker CEasily, if you have good cameras.
Speaker CIt works really well.
Speaker CI had it where it's quiet around there, so people are talking out there.
Speaker CI had 30 minute recorded conversations out there that were from my security system that I'd come back and go, oh, these people are.
Speaker CWow, that's the third time they've been back.
Speaker CI recognize that car.
Speaker DOh, it's an unfair advantage.
Speaker DIt's inadmissible in court, by the way, because maybe they weren't just talking about the house the whole time.
Speaker AI know.
Speaker AI was just thinking, what if they could talk about a lot of things.
Speaker CThat way in public?
Speaker CSo.
Speaker CAnd it says on the listing, you have to put in there if there's cameras that are.
Speaker CThat's the new thing with the listings.
Speaker CYou have to put in where the cameras are and if they're on in the recording.
Speaker CSo it was all there.
Speaker CIt's people's choices whether they want to follow that or not.
Speaker ABut very clever.
Speaker CGreat fact finding.
Speaker DKeep an eye on them, Wendy.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CSo, Wendy, what are some of the rules to really get your house?
Speaker CBecause, of course, everybody wants to get the most out of their house.
Speaker CThey want to get it, make it look perfect for those pictures and the walkthroughs and the 3D this, 3D that.
Speaker CWhat's the best thing to do?
Speaker AI think the first thing is to decide how much you think you can really spend on this and whether or not you'll get it back.
Speaker ABecause a lot of times people assume that they have to make their house look magazine ready.
Speaker ASo they start remodeling all the bathrooms and remodeling the kitchen, remodeling this, remodeling that.
Speaker AAnd with the way design is right now, it's such a statement of personal taste that you can spend thousands and thousands of dollars upgrading all of these areas design maybe just to have it ripped out.
Speaker AAnd then you wouldn't get your return on that investment.
Speaker ASo you do need to have an honest conversation, I think, with your realtor about that.
Speaker DI think, can we get my mother on this real quick?
Speaker DI've been having this conversation for months with her.
Speaker DI'm like, mom, you don't need to touch up the baseboards.
Speaker DSomebody's going to come in and destroy your kitchen.
Speaker DIt doesn't matter.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I think it's very hard.
Speaker AI think people watching HGTV love it or list it, all these different things, they think that's required in order to sell your home.
Speaker AAnd if you speak to an educated, talented realtor with a good reputation, they will probably tell you that's not the case.
Speaker AUnless you're a person who's flipping homes for profit, then you know how to do it, and there's a specific business model there.
Speaker ABut if you're just a regular person wanting to sell their home, I don't think you have to go crazy.
Speaker AI think you do have to go crazy.
Speaker ACleaning.
Speaker DYep.
Speaker CYes.
Speaker AI think I was thinking about this morning, getting ready to come and talk to you guys, just when you put yourself in someone else's shoes.
Speaker AI think that's the best way to approach your home.
Speaker ABecause.
Speaker AAnd I find this a lot in design and especially in luxury design.
Speaker AIf people are remodeling their home, they've been there for maybe 20 years, and they know they need to make it their forever home and make some changes.
Speaker AIt's very hard for them to see their home any other way than the way that it is, because it's their home.
Speaker AAnd that's how it's been for all this time.
Speaker AAnd that's why they bring me in, to help them see something new.
Speaker AWhen you've been living in a home for a long time and you're ready to sell, you do have to pretend you're looking at it for the first time.
Speaker AAnd you need to see the dust bunnies, and you need to see the pile of paperwork, and you need to see the dead plant in the corner, which is terrible feng shui, by the way.
Speaker AYou've got to get rid of that right away.
Speaker AYou have to close all the lids on all the toilets, like, all of the things.
Speaker AIf pretend it's an Airbnb that you want to stay at, what would it require for you to feel safe and comfortable in that space and then start going down the list?
Speaker AAnd most of it you'll find really isn't that expensive.
Speaker ABut it makes a world of difference in the way that people will experience your home as they enter and as they tour around.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CThe people are creatures of habits.
Speaker CAll of us are.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CWe clean where we clean.
Speaker CWe clean the same spot every time, and we miss the same things every time.
Speaker APick everything up off the counter and off the floor.
Speaker DYep.
Speaker DClutter and clean, declutter and clean.
Speaker CI always recommend to people, just pay 3, 4, $500, whatever it costs to have a cleaning crew come out and do a whole house move out style clean with your stuff in there, because they're going to clean places that you didn't even know were dirty.
Speaker CAnd then a better spot, I would.
Speaker ASay linens to any beds, any towels and bathrooms and all of that.
Speaker AYou can just go to Marshalls or TJ Maxx and get something really good.
Speaker ALooking for almost nothing.
Speaker AAnd it looks and smells fresh and clean, and it means you need to make the bed.
Speaker DDamn it, I'm out.
Speaker AYeah, I mean, I.
Speaker AMy husband and I have been looking for a while for something that has maybe more land because he grew up on a farm and I think he really misses getting on a tractor.
Speaker ASo we've been looking at a lot of houses and the bedrooms and the bathrooms.
Speaker AIt's like they think, you're not gonna open the closet door or like, I'm gonna open the closet door.
Speaker AI want to know how much I can fit in that closet.
Speaker AOr do I need to take the bedroom next door as my closet as well?
Speaker AIt's gonna get opened and you need about that.
Speaker AEven like your kitchen drawers, people are gonna open those up, Just vacuum them out, wipe them out.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AIt's effort, but if you are.
Speaker AIf two identical homes are for sale in terms of layout in the same neighborhood with the same amenities, and one is sparkling clean and smells good and is well lighted, and the other is a little grungy and the linen is gross and there's dust bunnies and things haven't been cleaned on the counters in a long time.
Speaker AIt's just common sense.
Speaker CIt is.
Speaker CAnd it's funny, Wendy.
Speaker CIt's like an eight year old did a.
Speaker CYou know, like an eight year old boy decided he had an hour to clean his room and he shoved it all in the closet.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker CAnd all of a sudden you open the closet and go, whoa.
Speaker CThat's where everything went.
Speaker CAnd it was great for pictures, but it doesn't work when you're walking through.
Speaker CAnd I noticed this when I was filming my around the House Northwest television show.
Speaker CEvery week I was out looking at a really nice home that was either architecturally significant or it was a new one or whatever.
Speaker CAnd some of the cool older homes, some of them, I would walk in the front door.
Speaker CWe're filming, it's been on the market and I'm like, wow, wonder where the mold problem is.
Speaker CI could smell it.
Speaker CIt smelled.
Speaker CIt was cold, it was musty.
Speaker CThere hadn't.
Speaker CIt's in the rainy season here, so they hadn't had heat on in it because they were trying to save money.
Speaker CAnd I'm like, right off the bat, I'm like, this is a money pit of a house because I can smell the water damage someplace.
Speaker CWhere is it?
Speaker AOr if you smell pets.
Speaker AAnd I love pets.
Speaker AI love pets.
Speaker AI love animals.
Speaker AI don't want to walk on cat sand.
Speaker AI don't want to walk on birdseed.
Speaker AI don't want to look outside and have there be piles of dog poopies everywhere.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker AAnd I know it sounds crazy that we're harping on just be clean, but it seems like it's hard for people to do.
Speaker AAnd it's free.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIt's just elbow grease in your time.
Speaker AAnd I think it's really important that you do that.
Speaker AAnother thing I think is important is bringing some life into the house.
Speaker AA lot of us people will say, oh, I have a black thumb.
Speaker AOr I. I'm so bad.
Speaker AWith plants, you can get very good looking, realistic looking, faux plants.
Speaker AHere we go.
Speaker AA little greenery here and there.
Speaker AAnd it really changes the way things look.
Speaker AIf you style a bathroom and there's no greenery at all and you take a picture and then you put a fern on the counter.
Speaker AThat's what I'm known for.
Speaker AI know ferns are friendly.
Speaker AAnd then you take another picture and you look at the two pictures side by side.
Speaker AYou will like the one with the fern.
Speaker AIt's a psychological thing.
Speaker APeople need to see greenery, something that's fresh, something that looks happy and has some life to it.
Speaker AAnd you can do that all over your home for a relatively little.
Speaker AAnd it makes a huge difference.
Speaker DYeah, that's.
Speaker DI'm a huge plant fan, but that's a great point.
Speaker DLike, it puts life in the rooms instead of.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker CAnd the other thing, too, Wendy.
Speaker CIt seems that I think one of the biggest mistakes people make out there is so many people, and I'm gonna say most have a clutter problem.
Speaker CToo many people.
Speaker AI don't know what you're talking about.
Speaker CWe like stuff.
Speaker CLet's be honest, Eric.
Speaker AI used to say I would try to design people tidy.
Speaker CThere you go.
Speaker AI used to have this gal that would work with me and she would say, oh, Wendy, that client, she's a messy.
Speaker AYou can't design her tidy.
Speaker AAnd I didn't believe her.
Speaker ABut she's.
Speaker AShe was right.
Speaker AI think I have a really great gal that I work with on a lot of our projects.
Speaker AShe's a professional organizer.
Speaker AAnd what I like to use her for is to organize kitchens, organize pantries, organize closets, set up systems so that you see everything and it's beautiful.
Speaker AShe's also figured out how to do this service where she and her team will go into a home and completely declutter.
Speaker AAnd by then also things like bookcases because like paperback books, while useful and good for your brain and good for imagination and not so great on a shelf.
Speaker ASo she will declutter a bookcase completely and restage it with some of the really good looking hardbound books.
Speaker AA few ferns, a picture here and there, an accessory here and there, and it completely transforms this space.
Speaker ASpace.
Speaker AThen she packs everything up and uses a moving service to store all of it while the home is being listed.
Speaker AAnd then it just moves to the next location with the client when they're done.
Speaker AAnd I just think Shelby is a genius for figuring that out.
Speaker AAnd she's based in Sacramento, but she'll come to see us.
Speaker AThe neat freak company.
Speaker AThey're so cute.
Speaker AThey even have little T shirts and.
Speaker ABut I love it because especially for me, like, sometimes I do help clients.
Speaker ALike, it's better for them to buy a new home than to remodel the one they're in.
Speaker AThat has happened with me a couple of times.
Speaker AAnd I need Shelby and her team to help me stage the first house to get the client to the next house.
Speaker ABecause when the criticism comes from me, this doesn't look good.
Speaker AAnd that's not right.
Speaker AAnd I can't believe you're.
Speaker AThat is not good for my client relationship with them.
Speaker ABut if Shelby says it, it's like, oh, she's here to help me.
Speaker AShe knows what needs to be done.
Speaker AShe's working for my highest and best purpose.
Speaker AAnd Wendy trusts her, so we're going to let her do what she needs to do.
Speaker ASo sometimes bringing in that neutral third party is really helpful.
Speaker DAbsolutely.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CMakes sense.
Speaker CAnd the other thing I think that we see mistakes are made is we all personalize stuff so much.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSo I think it's one of those things that when we personalize it, we also are scaring away maybe, maybe potential people out there because it looks still like our home.
Speaker CAnd you're trying to make it appear like it could be their home, if that makes sense.
Speaker ATrue.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThey have to imagine themselves in the space.
Speaker ASo, like, I have a family portrait wall that was a monumental effort to put together with different family members who were not excited about having their picture taken.
Speaker ASo that wall means a lot to me.
Speaker ABut if I were to list this house, that would be the first thing to go, because I don't want.
Speaker AI want, when people come in to say, oh, it's charming.
Speaker AIt's pretty.
Speaker AI love this.
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker AI can see me doing this.
Speaker AI can see me doing that.
Speaker AI can see myself out here.
Speaker AI can.
Speaker AAnd the.
Speaker ASo you need to take yourself out of the house.
Speaker AThe same with, like, children's bedrooms.
Speaker ASo many times I've walked into children's bedrooms for a home that's listed, and it is a cacophony of visual asymmetry or atonality or something is terribly wrong.
Speaker DThere's too many In Sync posters.
Speaker DYou can say it.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AI don't want to know what they're into.
Speaker AI don't want to know.
Speaker AJust take all that down.
Speaker AA nice clean wall is just finished.
Speaker AFine.
Speaker ASo it's true.
Speaker AYou really, again, if you approach your own home like it's an Airbnb, it will help you.
Speaker AAnd then if you can hire people like Shelby or a designer or organizer in your area who can help you clean that out and truly stage it like you would if it were an Airbnb, it will make it such a huge difference in how well your process goes.
Speaker DI think.
Speaker DI think the most important point you brought up was being able to.
Speaker DI know what it's like to get too close to a project, writing a song, whatever the case may be.
Speaker DYou're too close.
Speaker DI have no objective opinion.
Speaker DIf you've been in the house for 20 years, like Eric says, you personalize everything.
Speaker DYou're like, no, not moving my bowling trophy, whatever it may be, you have to go to someone else to get that outside perspective that can stand back five feet and go, no, dude, bowling trophy goes like, yep, yeah, absolutely.
Speaker AI have a trophy.
Speaker AIt's funny when you said that I have a trophy in this beautiful lighted bookcase that I have.
Speaker AIt's like a library dining room.
Speaker AAnd it's from when I was in college in debate from the Air Force Academy.
Speaker AAnd it says, big eagle.
Speaker AIt's a bowling trophy.
Speaker AI thought, oh, as I look over there, that.
Speaker AThat is different.
Speaker DMaybe, but maybe there's a.
Speaker DMaybe there's a balance, right?
Speaker DThere's a big difference between a bowling trophy and an eagle from the Air Force Academy.
Speaker DAnd there may be the one guy that walks in that goes, I could put my bowling trophy where that.
Speaker DThere you go.
Speaker CWhere can I slide that in?
Speaker CAt?
Speaker CIn here?
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker ABut, yeah, no, I think that I've seen Shelby do that now for many clients, and it's always such a huge relief to me, because I don't want to be the bad guy.
Speaker AA lot of times I had to be the bad guy.
Speaker AAnyway.
Speaker AWhen we talk about budget, even if I'm really careful with material and everything, it's not an easy conversation.
Speaker AAnd one less difficult, challenging conversation is worth it to me to pay her to go in and just help them because it preserves the relationship.
Speaker CYeah, that makes sense.
Speaker COne thing I noticed too, and my Realtor would come through and it was always interesting to see.
Speaker CWhen my Realtor was showing the house, he would come in and turn basically all the lights on and over light everything.
Speaker CTo me, it drove me nuts a little bit because I had my settings for things to look really sexy and cool because everything was automated.
Speaker CBut when I lit the place, it was like I gave myself 20% for cleaning or searching for something.
Speaker CBut I usually brought it down a little bit for the perfect light.
Speaker CAnd it was one of those things.
Speaker CI'm like, hey, man, can we.
Speaker CThis is almost uncomfortable for me.
Speaker CCan we dial it down just a little bit?
Speaker CAnd he said it was basically the lighter, the better in there to make it feel open, big and bright.
Speaker AI think that's probably a challenge that's unique to people that are designers or contractors who understand a professional lighting plan, because those can lights on at full height are really oppressive to actually live with.
Speaker AAnd that's again, where are you a guest in an Airbnb or are you living in the house?
Speaker AAnd that's where a professional Realtor really comes in, because they do really know their stuff.
Speaker AAnd just like, I. I couldn't begin to do what they do and they can't do what I do.
Speaker AThere's a lot of mutual respect there, and it's a very symbiotic relationship.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker ASo it's important, I think, to listen to your Realtor when they tell you their honest opinion, because they're not doing it to be opinion Hill.
Speaker AIt's just the way someone experiences your home.
Speaker AWalking through it for 20 minutes is definitely going to be something other than the way you experience it, living there and having enjoyed it.
Speaker AAnd as a design professional, because you and I both think, long term, how's it going to feel?
Speaker AAnd John does that when he thinks, how's this going to function for clients?
Speaker ABut again, it's like, you've got 20 minutes maybe with those people to fall in love with your house.
Speaker AAnd the Realtor knows.
Speaker AThey really do.
Speaker CYeah, it's interesting.
Speaker CAnd it's just like the Realtor has a sense.
Speaker CThey're also color.
Speaker CColor can be put off for his people as well.
Speaker CI had at my house, my office was painted this dark, stormy, moody color that kind of gave a little more of a feel of, like, maybe a cigar lounge.
Speaker CAnd he's like, too dark, man.
Speaker CWe got to fix that.
Speaker CAnd I'm like, I didn't want to have to paint it again, but he was right.
Speaker CBut I still didn't like doing it as a designer.
Speaker AYeah, it's a.
Speaker AIt's tough.
Speaker AI know.
Speaker AI.
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AYeah, tough.
Speaker CIt's tough.
Speaker CSo what is your take on color with that?
Speaker CBecause as designers, we have our opinion of really personalizing spaces, but personalizing spaces can also make it hard to sell.
Speaker AYeah, beige is your friend if you're selling your house.
Speaker DNeutral, neutral, neutral.
Speaker ABecause everybody has different tastes, so it's more about the layout of the home, the function of the home, what are the amenities in the home?
Speaker AUnless they're looking for a true designer space and they're seeking that out, looking for a particular look.
Speaker ALike in our area, there was a architect, Conrad Sanchez, and his things are sought out because of a very specific look.
Speaker ASo that's what a homeowner would want to purchase.
Speaker ABut otherwise, people are looking to make it their space, and they all have their own, thank God.
Speaker AGives me a job aesthetic.
Speaker AAnd so they had to be able to see that coming to life in the space sense.
Speaker DYes.
Speaker DThat's why you get everything out.
Speaker DThat's why you get everything neutral.
Speaker DYou've got to open it up enough for them to be able to walk in and go, oh, we could paint this wall green, and we could paint.
Speaker DAnd anything of yours that's already in there detracts from that.
Speaker DIt feels like an occupied space.
Speaker DThey don't want that.
Speaker DThey want a clean slate.
Speaker DThey want to picture their kids.
Speaker DTrophy over there, whatever.
Speaker DBut, yeah, it's opening it up and leaving a blank palette, really, so they can visualize.
Speaker DBecause you get that visualization, you're like, no, I like that house the best.
Speaker DBecause they pictured all their stuff in there.
Speaker COne of the things that I think is super smart, too, is even before you get into the staging part of it, I would pay the 500 bucks, 800 bucks, whatever costs in your area, have an inspector come through your home, get the pre inspection done so you can go, oh, I had no idea that I had water in the crawl space.
Speaker COr.
Speaker COr, oh, my gosh, I had no idea that I had a water leak over here that I need to fix.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AOr in my area, there's a lot of Ag So get the septic report, get the well report, get the roof checked, because then there are no surprises.
Speaker AAnd when you come to a negotiation and you can decide as a seller, do you want to take money off for whatever repairs need to be done, or do you want to negotiate that in the agreement, it's not something that comes up that kills the deal.
Speaker AAnd then it also, when you're transparent that way, says a lot to the buyer about your integrity as a homeowner and how you may or may not have cared for your home and how you will treat them in the sale.
Speaker ASo that does a lot, I think, in terms of establishing some baseline of trust for a transaction that large.
Speaker AThat's a great point, Eric.
Speaker AI'm glad that you brought that up.
Speaker CAnd it was funny.
Speaker CI did that on mine.
Speaker CI had no idea.
Speaker CSome of the stuff that they would come back with that was, quite frankly, even wrong.
Speaker CLike, you have water coming through the foundation where that crack was.
Speaker CAnd I'm like, no, I don't what it was.
Speaker CI had actually repaired on the outside of the foundation.
Speaker CIt was a crack in the foundation.
Speaker CWe did the proper carbon fiber and patched with the epoxy, so it was actually stronger there.
Speaker CBut that wasn't water.
Speaker CThat was epoxy glue that had penetrated through the crack like it was supposed to.
Speaker CBut the guy goes, oh, no, that's water running down.
Speaker CI'm like, guarantee it's not.
Speaker CSure enough, he went back underneath there and went, oh, yeah, that's hard.
Speaker CEpoxy.
Speaker CIt looked like water.
Speaker AWow.
Speaker DDidn't touch it.
Speaker DHe didn't.
Speaker CNope.
Speaker CI look like Disney water.
Speaker CMaybe.
Speaker DThat being said, as an inspector, you're the last guy's house I'd want inspect.
Speaker AThat's true.
Speaker AYou really excellent point.
Speaker DOr mine, for that matter.
Speaker DI wouldn't want me.
Speaker CYeah, but it was one of those things going through.
Speaker CAnd I did a lot of overbuilding, but there were some stuff that I.
Speaker CAnd there were some stuff that I was like, oh, yeah, I haven't been up on the second story line ladder and check the caulking above that window in 18 months.
Speaker CSo it was good to get those things and catch some of those things.
Speaker CThere was a water leak.
Speaker CI had no idea because it was just a little drip.
Speaker CBut this guy went through with a fine tooth comb everywhere, Which I don't do that in my crawl space because it's 18 inches high, and I don't like crawling on my stomach that far deep.
Speaker CBut he did.
Speaker CSo you learn those things beforehand.
Speaker CAnd the other Thing that I think that this solves, and I think it's important is if you have foundation issues or a roof that needs to be replaced, if at the time, you know that inspection process is at the last part of the process, unfortunately, usually now you're paying a roofer overtime or a foundation repair person over time, they got you bent over the barrel because you need to get to closing.
Speaker CYou can make that, get it on the schedule and go.
Speaker CWe're going to wait a month to list because I'm going to pay retail for it, not retail plus to get this project done in emergency so I can get through.
Speaker DSounds good in theory, but I always wait till the last minute.
Speaker DThat's just me.
Speaker DAnd notice I mumble quietly when I say that.
Speaker DOh, yeah, but you're 100% right, Eric.
Speaker DYou're 100% right.
Speaker CYeah, it's one of those things.
Speaker CA little bit of work will prevent a lot of pain later.
Speaker AYeah, that's an attitude that would be really good to try to take on as well.
Speaker ABecause I think a lot of times people have that inspection, they see the things that are wrong and they grumble and it's this big thing, like, this is all fine.
Speaker AIt's all part of life.
Speaker AIt's all something that needs to happen.
Speaker AYou're going to get to go to where you want to go.
Speaker AYou're going to move forward.
Speaker AIt's just because I have clients sometimes that will.
Speaker ANot just clients.
Speaker AMy husband does the same thing.
Speaker ALittle things come up and you're like, it's really not that big a deal.
Speaker AIt's like it's a privilege to own a home, to be able to sell it, to do something new.
Speaker AThere are just things that have to be done to get to the next thing.
Speaker AI heard Jeremy Renner did a really cool podcast interview and he said pressure is a privilege, and it really is.
Speaker AAnd selling or buying a home really is a pressure cooker type situation.
Speaker ABut it's good and it's exciting and it's a new door that's opening or an old door that's closing and it takes a little to get through it.
Speaker AWhat is it?
Speaker AThe only way out is through, but we want to get through and we want to do the next thing.
Speaker AAnd so take it on with a smile and a good attitude.
Speaker AIt'll happen faster and everybody will come out better in the long run.
Speaker ASo I keep trying to help my clients see that.
Speaker DIt's a great point.
Speaker DI've been using that the only way out is through since I was like 17.
Speaker DI'm like, what are you going to do?
Speaker DGet out and cry or get out and change the tire?
Speaker CYep, yeah, yeah.
Speaker DDown the road.
Speaker CHuge Jeremy Runner fan.
Speaker CThat guy is so amazing.
Speaker CAnd he loves homes, he loves buildings, he loves.
Speaker CThere's.
Speaker CHe's way deep, deeper than just an actor, you know what I mean?
Speaker CAlways impressed.
Speaker CWendy, what are some things to do we see now on.
Speaker COn staging homes?
Speaker CAll of a sudden you're seeing this new trend of virtual staging as well, which to me looks a little cartoonish still.
Speaker CI'm not a big A fan.
Speaker CI'm like, this is a bad version of AI trying to do something that looks pretty, pretty like a DIY program.
Speaker AThat is true.
Speaker AIt looks terrible.
Speaker ABut there are a lot of programs where you can do it where it looks absolutely realistic.
Speaker AAnd so Mid Journey is one of those.
Speaker AYou just input your photography in and then through prompts and a series of little edits, it can look completely different.
Speaker AI think in really more costly luxury homes, sometimes that's a good idea and you can even offer that as a service to try to help potential buyers see what their esthetic would look like in the space.
Speaker AThat might be a new kind of way for realtors to approach that.
Speaker ABut whatever their little standard thing is that they're using right now is not very good looking.
Speaker AIt's discouraging.
Speaker AAnd I also think it's very important to say on the listing photos, this is AI generated furniture.
Speaker ABecause when you go to the home and look around and there's nothing there, it's a little off putting.
Speaker AThere's like a trust thing that happens there.
Speaker ASo I think as long as you're very upfront about what you're doing, it's fine.
Speaker ABut if you're trying to be sneaky, it doesn't work.
Speaker CAll of a sudden it's like online dating.
Speaker AThat's true.
Speaker AOh, a little filter here, a little something there.
Speaker CPicture from high school.
Speaker DBut that, oh my God.
Speaker DNot even touching that one.
Speaker AOr designers that had their photography done like 20 years ago and they've never updated it.
Speaker AYou meet them in person, you think.
Speaker DHuh, not even the 20 year thing that gets me as much as the angles.
Speaker CHow did you do that?
Speaker DThe completely different.
Speaker AStick your neck out like this is.
Speaker DA whole different person.
Speaker DThis is what happened.
Speaker AI don't.
Speaker CNow that we're on this and my favorite thing, I said I wasn't gonna.
Speaker DTouch it, but I had to touch it.
Speaker CWhat I love is how the paneling behind now has done the straight lines of the paneling in certain areas has also changed for where they shrank and expanded.
Speaker CAnd that background sure got distorted.
Speaker CWhat happened there?
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker DThanks for the new product idea, Wendy, by the way.
Speaker ASure, no problem.
Speaker DWork in web design and AI now.
Speaker DSo I'm like, fantastic.
Speaker DThere's a tool that needs some work.
Speaker DOkay, I'll knock that out in the next six days.
Speaker AGo.
Speaker AYou can.
Speaker AI know that you can.
Speaker AThat's awesome.
Speaker CI'm going to say this too, because I learned this lesson.
Speaker CI always learn a lesson every time I sell a house.
Speaker CI probably should have staged my house differently, because I sure liked my couch.
Speaker CBut the people buying the house liked my couch, too.
Speaker CSo I had to give up $10,000 couch that I really liked.
Speaker CThat was part of the deal.
Speaker CAnd it was like, okay, how bad do I want this couch?
Speaker CHow bad do I want to sell the house?
Speaker CBecause all of a sudden, half the things in the house they wanted thrown in.
Speaker CThey almost wanted it furnished.
Speaker AYou're a designer, Eric.
Speaker AIt's not like somebody's going to walk in your house and be like, oh, that's just some sofa we can pick up wherever your things are curated and intentional.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker AAnd for the space.
Speaker AAnd anybody who's at all educated in terms of their eye is going to know that and know that there's no way they could duplicate that.
Speaker AIt speaks to how talented you are that they wanted all of those things.
Speaker CThanks.
Speaker CAnd they got most of those things.
Speaker AIt's okay, because this is because your way out is through.
Speaker AAnd so now you get to do a different aesthetic somewhere else that you're gonna love.
Speaker CAnd you're right.
Speaker CWhat would I have done?
Speaker COkay, that couch would have been stored because it wouldn't have fit in the next place.
Speaker CAnd then what am I gonna do?
Speaker CAnd it was definitely meant for that space.
Speaker CAnd so.
Speaker CYeah, but think about those things.
Speaker CIf you're like, hey, this couch or this chair in the side was my grandmother's and it's something.
Speaker CJust take it out of the house.
Speaker CDon't make a part of the conversation.
Speaker CPut something else there.
Speaker ABecause that's a great idea.
Speaker CBecause sometimes that will be a hard conversation.
Speaker CAnd you don't want to lose the sale over something because they fell in love with that.
Speaker CYou're like, that was my grandmother's, and there's no price to do that.
Speaker CTake it off the table.
Speaker CTake it off the table.
Speaker CSo it's not a point of discussion, Especially if it's cool.
Speaker AYeah, that's smart.
Speaker AVery smart.
Speaker CIt seems another thing that I see, too, that I see that people tend to ignore.
Speaker CWe talked about a little bit but lighting.
Speaker CI talked about putting my lights up.
Speaker CBut most of my house was designed with lighting in mind.
Speaker CWhere most homes really aren't.
Speaker CIt was whatever the electrician decided to do the day they put the lighting system in the house.
Speaker CWhether it was custom or a more builder spec house.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ALighting really can make or break a room.
Speaker AAnd I.
Speaker AThe single fan in each bedroom with the little light kit is not ever enough.
Speaker ANever.
Speaker APlease find good, looking good scale lamps again.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker AYou can go to TJ Maxx or Marshalls for this or home goods or wherever and plug them in, put them on a desk, put them on a side table, put them on your kitchen counter, put them on your bathroom counter.
Speaker AIt's pretty.
Speaker AAnd get the warm light, not the cool light because the cool light makes you feel like you're in a hospital.
Speaker AThat's so bad.
Speaker AAnd it, it makes a huge impact and actually just a glow of a nice lamp really warms up the space and makes it feel more inviting.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AAnd a lot of actually a lot of designers are moving away from that overhead lighting.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AAnd going more to individual lamps and for different things.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CThat's movable, replaceable, changeable because.
Speaker CYeah, that and this is, this is my belief here.
Speaker CBut if I could remove all the 6 inch can lights from the world, I would do it tomorrow.
Speaker CThat would be my magic wand.
Speaker AThat would be nice.
Speaker AThat's the first thing to go.
Speaker AIn every project I work on, people are like, I just changed all those light bulbs.
Speaker AThose are all LED lights now.
Speaker AI said no, they're not really horrible.
Speaker AThey're not really LED lights.
Speaker DWorking in an office all of a sudden.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CSterile, sterile, boring.
Speaker CBad flicker acting, the flicker, all that.
Speaker DIt's bad for your brain.
Speaker DIt really is.
Speaker CWe would go into people's homes and be filming in those cheap cam lights.
Speaker CWhen you're trying to get them on camera.
Speaker CIt was like you were in a rave dance club on camera.
Speaker CYou were trying to figure out how to get the flicker rate just to make it go away.
Speaker CAnd I've noticed that with some higher end appliances and I'm not going to name brands, but they have a similar problem when they have glass doors that all of a sudden you'll see that flickering.
Speaker CI'm like, come on guys, you could have put a little better LED in that, that it looks like a dance club rave.
Speaker CAnd I'm not going to throw any names out, but be careful out there, guys.
Speaker CIt's just when zit not ruining any relationships with me, but I'm just going to say, careful, kids.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd if you make appliances that do that, Eric will not be purchasing them for his home.
Speaker ANo, no.
Speaker AThis now there will be no brand.
Speaker CDeal or I'm going to be field modifying them before they come in.
Speaker CAnd fixing the design issue.
Speaker CYeah, done that.
Speaker AIt's also important, too, and I think I've picked up on this with all the project photography that I've done of jobs that we finished.
Speaker ABut if you can make sure the light temperature is the same and by that the color.
Speaker ASo if the can lights.
Speaker AMy friend Carrie is a.
Speaker AShe's a lighting designer and she says those are recessed lumineers.
Speaker AIt's very hard to say that, but to normal people they're called can lights.
Speaker ASo if the can lights are cool white with a blue cast, but all the beautiful lamps that you've gone out and put in here to make things feel more warm and cozy are all warm white.
Speaker ASo 3500.
Speaker AIt's going to look terrible.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker DIt's going to break your brain.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd it will change the color of your walls, it will change the color of your floors.
Speaker AAnd if you have the two colors of light in the same space, they will fight each other.
Speaker ASo it's.
Speaker AAnd it's a strange effect that happens on materials in your home.
Speaker ASo I would really caution you to try to make sure that you put the same color temperature in.
Speaker AAnd typically the human eye likes 2700 K. Amen.
Speaker CYeah, amen.
Speaker DIt really does hurt my head when lights are fighting like that.
Speaker DOh, no, I can't.
Speaker CAnd it shows up horribly on the pictures, too.
Speaker DBreaks my brain.
Speaker CIt shows up horribly on the pictures.
Speaker CNow they're trying to color correct it and make it look good, and it's just never good.
Speaker AIt's a lot of time in Photoshop and it doesn't really work.
Speaker ANow.
Speaker COne, one tip that I have for people too that are doing this all themselves.
Speaker CGo around and take pictures of the rooms like you were a photographer before, before you.
Speaker CThey come out and do this because you're going to look around and go, oh, wow, I didn't catch that.
Speaker CThat base molding here wasn't painted correctly.
Speaker COr there's a big scuff here.
Speaker CWhat's that handprint on the wall?
Speaker COr where's that spot?
Speaker CI thought we painted that way.
Speaker CWe missed it over here when the lights.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSo you'll catch a lot of those things beforehand that you've walked past a thousand times and never noticed.
Speaker CBut when it's a picture that's still in front of you, you could actually catch it and see it.
Speaker DThings like you were talking about candles the other day, Eric, and not noticing the candles will produce the lines on the ceiling.
Speaker DLike you're not going to notice that.
Speaker DMaybe if it's not visible yet, but take a photo and go, yeah, all.
Speaker CThose marks on the studs that happen because everybody loves candles.
Speaker CYeah, you notice that stuff when it shows up in the picture.
Speaker CNow you're like, all right, I got more painting to do.
Speaker AThat little smoky effect.
Speaker AYeah, that's not good.
Speaker CAnd another thing too out there.
Speaker CHealthy homes are a big thing these days, guys.
Speaker CSo don't ignore those things around the house.
Speaker CJust attention to that.
Speaker CBut Wendy, what are some of.
Speaker CBefore we run out of time here, what are some more tips that you've got out there?
Speaker CBecause you're coming so far from the design of making these spaces look beautiful and have a mass appeal.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker AI think it's important to be objective when you look at your home.
Speaker AI think it's important to pretend like you're an Airbnb guest.
Speaker AIt's important to photograph each space like you just said, Eric, before you have repairs and things done or professionally shot so that you can make those changes.
Speaker AAnd you need to maybe try to go into this knowing that you are going to have to put some work into this and it will be worthwhile and it will pay off and you will see it either sell faster or sell for a higher price.
Speaker ABut I think a lot of times people are averse to adding just one more thing to their to do list.
Speaker AAnd so they punt on some of these things and it's just, it's them who ends up paying for it really.
Speaker AI think, oh, very important.
Speaker AYour front door.
Speaker AGosh, please make sure that you get out the broom and that you hose everything down and get all of the spider webs out.
Speaker APut a fresh pretty flower there.
Speaker AMake sure that no kitty cat has been using the flower pot next to your door.
Speaker AMake sure there's no odors.
Speaker AMake sure it's clean.
Speaker AThere's a nice, some like a little wreath on the door or something welcoming or charming or good looking.
Speaker ASomething that's, that's alive and clean and gives you a nice first impression.
Speaker AWash the door down.
Speaker AA lot of times people just don't think about that.
Speaker AClean your glass windows and doors.
Speaker ASure that your puppy dog, if he smuts on your door and you have a showing, you get the smuts off the door.
Speaker ABecause those little things do make a difference.
Speaker ABut I think a lot of times those exterior places are really key.
Speaker AWhen you step out the back patio door, it needs to be blown off.
Speaker AI like those dewalt blowers with the little.
Speaker AOh, yeah, I love those things.
Speaker AI love those things.
Speaker ABut nice and clean so that people don't worry about tracking things back into your home.
Speaker AI have a hard time with people.
Speaker AOh, sorry, go ahead.
Speaker CI was going to say another thing to think about is back on your front door, your realtor will probably have the photography crew come out and do some drone shots.
Speaker CHow does it look from above looking down?
Speaker CHave you cleaned off the roof?
Speaker CHas that been maintained?
Speaker CIs there stuff in the back of the yard that's going to show up?
Speaker CThat's your junk.
Speaker CPile of stuff you got to take to the dump or the old yard, stuff from last year.
Speaker CYou know, there is no place to hide this on the property, so you really need to get it out and gone.
Speaker CThere's no corner that's not unseen.
Speaker AIt's true.
Speaker AAll your dirty laundry will be right there.
Speaker AAnd that's not good looking people.
Speaker ALife is busy for all of us and things just end up places and then you forget because you're busy and you say, oh, I'm going to come back and get to this.
Speaker ABut then you don't because there's a lot happening in everybody's life.
Speaker AI don't think anyone lives in complete perfection.
Speaker AVery few people really do.
Speaker ASo I also wouldn't take that on and feel some sense of judgment for it because we're all just doing the best that we can.
Speaker ABut it is really important to clean that up again.
Speaker APretend like you're a guest in your house and you are going to see everything.
Speaker AI know, even in my own home, if I get a gift or someone gives me a book or whatever, I just shove it in a shelf or do whatever.
Speaker AAnd then a couple months later, I stand back and I look at my bookcase or I look at my counter and I think, oh my gosh, I have to clean this up because things just get ahead of you and it's normal.
Speaker ASo no condemnation there, but just inch by inch, it's a cinch.
Speaker CThere we go.
Speaker CThere we go.
Speaker CWendy, thanks for coming on today.
Speaker CWe are running out of time, but it is always great to dive into these subjects like this because you bring such a fresh perspective to the show and I love having your expertise on there.
Speaker COne thing, how do people find you again out there?
Speaker CIf they're like, man, I'm in California or I'm anywhere in the world and I gotta have Wendy work on my project.
Speaker AThank you for staying anywhere in the world.
Speaker CIt's like, yeah, mind being in Dubai or the Caribbean in the middle of winter.
Speaker CThere's always a place for you.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker AWe can make that work.
Speaker AIt's just Wendy@WendyGlasterInteriors.com for my email address.
Speaker AWendyGlasterInteriors.com is my website.
Speaker AWendy, Glacier Interiors is on Instagram and we have stories every day about projects and things that we're doing.
Speaker ASo fun to follow us along.
Speaker AWe'd love to have you be a part of things.
Speaker AAnd thank you again so much for remembering me and inviting me back.
Speaker AIt's so nice to see you both again.
Speaker CAwesome.
Speaker CWendy, thanks for coming on.
Speaker CI'm looking forward to hopefully maybe see you in Orlando this year.
Speaker CI get it.
Speaker COrlando is so hard for us to get to from the West Coast.
Speaker CIt is, yeah.
Speaker AIn one year, Cadiz will be back in Las Vegas and It's only a 45 minute plane ride for me.
Speaker AIt's hard.
Speaker AI'm sorry.
Speaker CNo, I get it.
Speaker CI'm fine.
Speaker AI wish you luck and good cheer in your endeavors, though.
Speaker AHave a wonderful time and I can't wait to hear what you bring back.
Speaker CThat would be fun, bringing a lot back.
Speaker CI'll share it with you first.
Speaker CHow about that?
Speaker AThat sounds great.
Speaker CAll right.
Speaker CFor Johnny Dudley.
Speaker CI'm Eric G. And you've been listening to around the House.
Speaker BThanks for tuning in to the around the House show.
Speaker BMake sure you follow us on social media.
Speaker BThose links are on our website@aroundthehouse online.com or in the podcast notes on your favorite podcast player.
Speaker BHappy holidays and Merry Christmas from all of us here at around the House.