Thursday, January 28, 2016

<><> LOOKING FOR THAT SPECIAL HOME? <><>

<><><> HI FOLKS ... INTERESTED IN FINDING THAT ONE THAT FITS YOU ??? WHO'S YOUR REALTOR ??? "C.J." = YES SHE IS !~!~! <><><> CALL HER TODAY AT 909/ 910.2481 <><><>

Monday, January 18, 2016

<> 7 Smart Strategies for Bathroom Remodeling <>

HI FOLKS ... ENJOY THESE SUGGESTIONS AND POSSIBLY SAVE SOME $$$ ... AND IF YOU ARE READY TO BUY, SELL OR LEASE ... CALL Cj AT 909.910.2481. You dream about a bathroom that’s high on comfort and personal style, but you also want materials, fixtures, and amenities with lasting value. Wake up! You can have both. A midrange bathroom remodel is a solid investment, according to the "2015 Remodeling Impact Report" from the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®. A bath remodel with a national median cost of $26,000 will recover about 58% of those costs when it’s time to sell your home. Regardless of payback potential, you'll probably be glad you went ahead and updated your bathroom. Homeowners polled for the "Report" gave their bathroom renovation a Joy Score of 9.3 – a rating based on those who said they were happy or satisfied with their project, with 10 being the highest rating and 1 the lowest. 1. Stick to a Plan ... A bathroom remodel is no place for improvisation. Before ripping out the first tile, think hard about how you will use the space, what materials and fixtures you want, and how much you’re willing to spend. The National Kitchen and Bath Association (NKBA) recommends spending up to six months evaluating and planning before beginning work. That way, you have a roadmap that will guide decisions, even the ones made under remodeling stress. Once work has begun – a process that averages two to three months – resist changing your mind. Work stoppages and alterations add costs. Some contractors include clauses in their contracts that specify premium prices for changing original plans. If planning isn’t your strong suit, hire a designer. In addition to adding style and efficiency, a professional designer makes sure contractors and installers are scheduled in an orderly fashion. A pro charges $100 to $200 per hour, and spends 10 to 30 hours on a bathroom project. 2. Keep the Same Footprint ... You can afford that Italian tile you love if you can live with the total square footage you already have. Keeping the same footprint, and locating new plumbing fixtures near existing plumbing pipes, saves demolition and reconstruction dollars. You’ll also cut down on the dust and debris that make remodeling so hard to live with. Make the most of the space you have. Glass doors on showers and tubs open up the area. A pedestal sink takes up less room than a vanity. If you miss the storage, replace a mirror with a deep medicine cabinet. 3. Make Lighting a Priority ... Multiple shower heads and radiant heat floors are fabulous adds to a bathroom remodel. But few items make a bathroom more satisfying than lighting designed for everyday grooming. You can install lighting for a fraction of the cost of pricier amenities. Well-designed bathroom task lighting surrounds vanity mirrors and eliminates shadows on faces: You look better already. The scheme includes two ceiling- or soffit-mounted fixtures, and side fixtures or sconces distributed vertically across 24 inches (to account for people of various heights). Four-bulb lighting fixtures work well for side lighting. Today, shopping for bulbs means paying attention to lumens, the amount of light you get from a bulb – ie., brightness. For these bathroom task areas, the Lighting Research Center recommends: Toilet: 45 lumens Sink: 450 lumens Vanity: 1,680 lumens 4. Clear the Air ... Bathroom ventilation systems may be out of sight, but they shouldn’t be out of mind during a bathroom remodel. Bathroom ventilation is essential for removing excess humidity that fogs mirrors, makes bathroom floors slippery, and contributes to the growth of mildew and mold. Controlling mold and humidity is especially important for maintaining healthy indoor air quality and protecting the value of your home – mold remediation is expensive, and excess humidity can damage cabinets and painted finishes. A bathroom vent and water closet fan should exhaust air to the outside – not simply to the space between ceiling joists. Better models have whisper-quiet exhaust fans and humidity-controlled switches that activate when a sensor detects excess moisture in the air. 5. Think Storage ... Bathroom storage is a challenge: By the time you’ve installed the toilet, shower, and sink, there’s often little space left to store towels, toilet paper, and hair and body products. Here are some ways to find storage in hidden places. Think vertically: Upper wall space in a bathroom is often underused. Freestanding, multi-tiered shelf units designed to fit over toilet tanks turn unused wall area into found storage. Spaces between wall studs create attractive and useful niches for holding soaps and toiletries. Install shelves over towel bars to use blank wall space. Think moveable: Inexpensive woven baskets set on the floor are stylish towel holders. A floor-stand coat rack holds wet towels, bath robes, and clothes. Think utility: Adding a slide-out tray to vanity cabinet compartments provides full access to stored items and prevents lesser-used items from being lost or forgotten. 6. Contribute Sweat Equity ... Shave labor costs by doing some work yourself. Tell your contractor which projects you’ll handle, so there are no misunderstandings later. Some easy DIY projects: Install window and baseboard trim; save $250. Paint walls and trim, 200 square feet; save $200. Install toilet; save $150. Install towel bars and shelves; save $20 each. 7. Choose Low-Cost Design for High Visual Impact ... A “soft scheme” adds visual zest to your bathroom, but doesn’t create a one-of-a-kind look that might scare away future buyers. Soft schemes employ neutral colors for permanent fixtures and surfaces, then add pizzazz with items that are easily changed, such as shower curtains, window treatments, towels, throw rugs, and wall colors. These relatively low-cost decorative touches provide tons of personality but are easy to redo whenever you want. By: John Riha

Monday, January 11, 2016

<>*<> SOME EASY WINTER PROJECTS <>*<>

*** 12 Simple Home Repair Jobs to Lift You Out of Winter’s Funk *** Accomplishments — even little ones — go a long way toward a sunny outlook. Fortunately, there are plenty of easy, quick home repair chores you can do when you’re mired in the thick of winter. For max efficiency, make a to-do list ahead of time and shop for all the tools and supplies in one trip. On your work days, put the basics in a caddy and carry it from room to room, checking off completed tasks as you speed through them. What to Look (and Listen) For In each room, look around and take stock of what needs fixing or improving. Focus on small, quick-hit changes, not major redos. Here are some likely suspects: 1. Sagging towel rack or wobbly toilet tissue holder. Unscrew the fixture and look for the culprit. It’s probably a wimpy, push-in type plastic drywall anchor. Pull that out (or just poke it through the wall) and replace it with something more substantial. Toggle bolts are strongest, and threaded types such as E-Z Ancor are easy to install. 2. Squeaky door hinges. Eliminate squeaks by squirting a puff of powdered graphite ($2.50 for a 3-gram tube) alongside the pin where the hinge turns. If the door sticks, plane off a bit of the wood, then touch up the paint so the surgery isn’t noticeable. 3. Creaky floor boards. They’ll shush if you fasten them down better. Anti-squeak repair kits, such as Squeeeeek No More ($23), feature specially designed screws that are easy to conceal. A low-cost alternative: Dust a little talcum powder into the seam where floorboards meet — the talcum acts as a lubricant to quiet boards that rub against each other. 4. Rusty shutoff valves. Check under sinks and behind toilets for the shutoff valves on your water supply lines. These little-used valves may slowly rust in place over time, and might not work when you need them most. Keep them operating by putting a little machine oil or WD-40 on the handle shafts. Twist the handles back and forth to work the oil into the threads. If they won’t budge, give the oil a couple of hours to penetrate, and try again. 5. Blistered paint on shower ceilings. This area gets a lot of heat and moisture that stresses paint finishes. Scrape off old paint and recoat, using a high-quality exterior-grade paint. Also, be sure everyone uses the bathroom vent when showering to help get rid of excess moisture. 6. Loose handles or hinges on furniture, cabinets, and doors. You can probably fix these with a few quick turns of a screwdriver. But if a screw just spins in place, try making the hole fit the screw better by stuffing in a toothpick coated with glue, or switching to a larger screw. Safety Items You know those routine safety checks you keep meaning to do but never have the time? Now’s the time. 7. Carbon monoxide and smoke detectors. If you don’t like waking up to the annoying chirp of smoke detector batteries as they wear down, do what many fire departments recommend and simply replace all of them at the same time once a year. 8. Ground-fault circuit interrupter (GFCI) outlets. You’re supposed to test them once a month, but who does? Now’s a great time. You’ll find them around potentially wet areas — building codes specify GFCI outlets in bathrooms, kitchens, and for outdoor receptacles. Make sure the device trips and resets correctly. If you find a faulty outlet, replace it or get an electrician to do it for $75 to $100. Another good project is to replace your GFCIs with the latest generation of protected outlets that test themselves, such as Levitron’s SmartlockPro Self-Test GFCI ($28). You won’t have to manually test ever again! 9. Exhaust filter for the kitchen stove. By washing it to remove grease, you’ll increase the efficiency of your exhaust vent; plus, if a kitchen stovetop fire breaks out, this will help keep the flames from spreading. 10. Clothes dryer vent. Pull the dryer out from the wall, disconnect the vent pipe, and vacuum lint out of the pipe and the place where it connects to the machine. Also, wipe lint off your exterior dryer vent so the flap opens and closes easily. (You’ll need to go outside for that, but it’s quick.) Remember that vents clogged with old dryer lint are a leading cause of house fires 11. Drain hoses. Inspect your clothes washer, dishwasher, and icemaker. If you see any cracks or drips, replace the hose so you don’t come home to a flood one day. 12. Electrical cords. Replace any that are brittle, cracked, or have damaged plugs. If you’re using extension cords, see if you can eliminate them — for example, by replacing that too-short lamp cord with one that’s longer. If you don’t feel up to rewiring the lamp yourself, drop it off at a repair shop as you head out to shop for your repair materials. It might not be ready by the end of the day. But, hey, one half-done repair that you can’t check off is no big deal, right? By: Jeanne Huber

Sunday, January 10, 2016

** YES WE DO **

<><> Haha ... HERE'S A FUNNY FOR TODAY! ............ BUT ON THE OTHER HAND, I CAN HELP AT 909.910.2481 ASK FOR CJ <><>

Friday, January 8, 2016

**~** LOCATION - LOCATION - LOCATION **~**

***~*** TEE HEE FOLKS ***~*** SERIOUSLY, LOCATION IS ALWAYS SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT WHEN PURCHASING ** CALL 909.910.2481 FOR HELP AND ASK FOR CJ ***~***

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

<>*<> MY BUSINESS MAP <>*<>

**<>** HI FOLKS ** ALTHOUGH I DO A GOOD AMOUNT OF BUSINESS IN AND AROUND CHINO VALLEY, I HAVE SOLD ALL OVER SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ** ARE YOU THINKING OF SELLING ??? ** ARE YOU LOOKING TO PURCHASE A HOUSE ??? ** ARE YOU A OWNER OF A RENTAL PROPERTY AND NEED HELP FINDING A QUALIFIED TENANT ??? ** ARE YOU A TENANT LOOKING FOR THE PERFECT HOME TO LEASE ??? ** FEEL FREE TO CALL ME AT 909/ 910.2481 AND ASK FOR CJ **<>**

Monday, January 4, 2016

<><> GETTING THE JOB DONE IN 2015 <><>

**** HAPPY NEW YEAR FOLKS **** ARE YOU READY TO MAKE A MOVE IN 2016 ??? *** I WILL GET YOU TO YOUR GOAL !!! *** CALL CJ AT 909/ 910-2481 AND LET's GET YOUR 2016 MOVE IN MOTION !!! ****