Showing

I had an open house on Sunday and we got a decent turnout (7 couples), though a couple of the people were neighbors.  We have also had a number of private showings and have another scheduled for tonight too.  So far, I haven’t done much advertising beyond asking friends to spread the word and placing a couple ads on Craigslist.  We have had a lot of positive feedback about the house showing well too.

We are looking at the possibility of placing our house on the local MLS.  I have heard that houses in our neighborhood/pricepoint are flying off the shelves right now.  I am feeling pretty optimistic that we can get this thing sold in a reasonable time frame.

If anyone reading this has experience selling FSBO and working with buyer’s agents, I would love to hear a little about your experience (either in the comments or privately).   Any suggestions/advice would be much appreciated.

I can’t believe how relieved I am to have the house on the market.  It feels like all my house-craziness has been shelved for the time-being.  I am not obsessively looking at listings or imagining dream houses, because I know we will find the house we are supposed to have when the time is right…AND (knock on wood)  we will be able to move on making an offer without the added complication of having to carry 2 mortgages.  What a relief!

Follow up questions

Now that I have actually sent the house website out into the world, I am a little nervous.  Nothing a glass or two of wine can’t fix, fortunately.  On the comments of the last post,there were a couple questions.  I am going to distract myself a little by answering them.

Debbie didn’t know what a Cape Cod house looks like.  Around here, they usually look something like this. Ours is pretty typical, but the bump outs for the windows are in the back, so in the front we have a very steep plain roof.  Then we  have an additional room and a garage tacked on to one side.

Jody asked: Could you write a little bit about how you schedule time for all the projects you’ve been doing? It seems as if this has been on your agenda for a good long while now, and I’m fascinated (and a little intimidated) by your ability to do so many time-intensive projects. Especially given A’s busy work schedule.

I don’t really schedule time. I just try to squeeze it in.  Mr. A takes the girls after dinner (and does the dishes) so if I am in the middle of a big project, I work on it then and after bedtime.  Usually, I try to break my bigger projects into smaller tasks and do them a little at a time.  Except for the last 5-10%.  That I usually leave for a year or so later.  I have a hard time finishing things.    I also try to get a lot done on the weekends, so I send Mr. A and the girls out of the house.  Mr. A isn’t very handy so I do a lot of stuff on my own or when my dad can come over and help me.

CherylC asked: Would you be willing to share roughly how much a house like that goes for in Ohio? I don’t mean your specific house, but even within a $50,000 range would be interesting. I’d love a house like that, but even today, in Seattle it would be at least $350,000.

You know me, I don’t mind talking about money.  We are asking $229,000, which is a fair price and just a hair over what we paid in 2004.  (Not to mention all the money we spent on improvements.)  It is at the upper end of our small neighborhood, which is why I won’t price it higher.  Our suburb is weird though, because this house about .5 miles away could go for $275,000.   In a farther out, less walkable suburb, this house would be a LOT cheaper.  Maybe $180,000.  A lot of what you pay for in my house is the walkability and proximity to our town square where all the shops and restaurants are.  I really think we are asking a very fair, safe price.  Only time will tell though.

Lillian asks: Is that painted wood paneling in the computer room? (is it the corner of the living room or another room?) Was it already painted over when you moved in?

The picture quality is terrible, but this is what the office looked like when we moved in.  It had the original pine paneling and wood shutters over the windows.  It was like a dark, dark cave.  I think the paint and trim improved it immensely.  While it was a pain to paint, I really like the stripes in this kind of paneling.

phpihuqyopm

Jenny asks: What color green is that in the girls’ room? It is very hard to find such a nice green that’s not too minty or mossy or olive or whatever!

Ugh. Finding good green paint was a nightmare.  I think I had at least 3 tries before I gave up and went with  this one.  That room is Benjamin Moore Guilford Green.  It was one of there sample pot choices.  My sister just painted her daughter’s nursery Ben Moore Prescott Green and it was also quite lovely.  Much better than the Disney Tinkerbell she had originally tried which burned my eyes out of their sockets when I walked in the room.

Finally, Julie asks where we are going next and LH asks why we are selling.

We have crunched the numbers over and over and have decided that if we want to buy a house to grow old in, now is the time.  Between the interest rates and the slightly lower home prices, we think we will be in a good position to buy our forever house.

We don’t have another house picked out yet.  We really only want to buy in a very, very small geographic area.   In our little suburban town, the number of houses that are a) in our price range, b) in the location we want and c) have an acceptable floorplan are very limited.  When we find the house, we want to be able to buy it without worrying about carrying two mortgages or trying to get a bridge loan.  Also, in our town, 60% of home sales happen in late Spring or Summer, so if we want to sell, we need to do it now or wait another year.

If we sell this house and don’t find our forever house, we are going to rent and ride it out.  We are relatively flexible people, so I am hoping it won’t be too stressful.

prettification

Ok, I know I have been quite the absentee blogger lately, but I have been working hard on the house.  I spent today taking the photos for my new website (we are selling for sale by owner), so I thought I may as well use them as blog fodder here too.

I am not quite comfortable putting the outside picture on this blog, so you will just have to humor me and imagine a standard Cape Cod with an addition tacked on the front.  The outside is not my house’s strongest asset, though it does sport some lovely landscaping right now.

kitchen-11

I love this kitchen.  It is one of my favorite parts of my house.  The cabinets are original and I refinished them (painted) rather than buying new because they are so flipping sturdy and well-constructed.  I also put in the subway tile backsplash myself.

(Shh, I don’t actually drink Perrier.  But I do think the bottles are pretty!)

kitchen-2

Here is a picture of the table that Mr. A infamously scratched up only 3 weeks after we bought it.  It refinished quite nicely.

dining

It took me 4.5 years to find something to put on top of that TV cabinet.  Artwork by M and L.

lr-1

The cleanest my bedroom has ever been.

bedroom-1

Before you email me, Yes, I know you can see M’s name.  I am more concerned about her name not being googleable in connection with my blog, so I am OK with it.  An no, L doesn’t have name letters.  The company I bought M’s from seems to be out of business and I can’t find others that are the same size and font.  It is annoying.

bedroom-2

Former playroom, now a guest room.  I love the color of yellow on these walls.

bedroom3a

My screened porch.  It is like a little oasis out there since I added the curtains.

porch

Oh, yeah.  This is where the magic happens.

bedroom-4