
Your style is Mid-Century Mod
Open, airy, organic spaces, all about form and function. Sophisticated and sleek yet approachable, alluring. My home is Mid-Century Modern.
Whether cozy, sleek or luxurious, hotel baths are the perfect getaway. Now you can transform your bathroom into just such an escape. At Inn-spired Bathrooms, you'll tour six hotel-inspired baths, garner simple ideas for getting the look you want and learn the cleaning secrets of hotel housekeepers.
How do hotels keep those bathrooms so clean? One quick answer is that hotels clean bathrooms every day, even if the same guest is occupying the room night after night. While you may not want to clean your entire bathroom every day, doing small things — such as wiping down the counters, faucet and sink, and spot-cleaning the mirror — can give your bathroom a daily perk-up. The rest is all in the weekly routine.
To get the dirt on the routine, we asked two experts: Jenny Botero, resident manager of the 697-room Crystal Gateway Marriott in Arlington, Va., and Erika Jacso, director of style for the W New York Union Square, in New York City, which boasts 270 rooms. They gave us 10 simple steps for keeping your bath sparkling.
Step 1: Vacuum and dust On the rare occasion that the W Union Square receives a complaint, "it usually has to do with finding hairs on the tile or floor in the bathroom," Erika says. Her team's goal is to make sure that never happens. They work from top to bottom, dusting light fixtures and shelves with micro-fiber cloths before vacuuming floors and crevices.
Step 2: Heat up surfaces Heating tile and the tub just 10 degrees above the normal air temperature "doubles the effectiveness" of alkaline cleansers, Jenny says. Her staff fills the bottom of the tub with a couple inches of the "hottest water they can draw from the tap" and lets it sit for a few minutes. Erika's staff also throws hot water over the tiles, shower and tub.
Step 3: Spray Drain the tub, then spray an antibacterial cleaner on tile walls, tub, counters, sink, toilet and floor. Work from top to bottom, starting at the top of shower walls, and spraying down to the tub and inside the toilet bowl.
Step 4: Spread Use a sponge or cloth to spread the cleanser around evenly on tile surfaces.
Step 5: Sit Disinfectants need contact time in order to work. Erika's team lets the cleanser sit for five to seven minutes inside the toilet bowl and on surfaces.
Step 6: Scrub Use a scrub brush or nonscratch abrasive pad to scrub every square inch of the tub and tiles. Both housekeeping experts swear by Mr. Clean Magic Eraser, especially for hard-to-remove gray rings inside the tub.
Step 7: Rinse This is the most important step, in Jenny's opinion. The chemicals in cleansers are designed to attract soil and particles, she points out. If you don't rinse after spraying your cleanser, dirt is going to stick to it and build up and "be even more troublesome."
Step 8: Dry Use clean, dry cotton cloths or rags to thoroughly dry all surfaces. Jenny recommends using color-coded cloths for cleaning — blue for glass and mirrored surfaces, yellow for the toilet, and pink for tub and sinks. That way, you never make the mistake of wiping off the sink with a cloth that was used to dry the toilet.
Step 9: Glass and mirrors Spray the mirror and other glass with a glass cleanser and wipe dry.
Step 10: Floors Exit out of the bathroom by rinsing, wiping and drying the floor.
Feng shui is the Eastern practice of analyzing where things go to create the most healthful and beneficial energy flow. Using colors in your home based on how you respond to their energy is a crucial component of the process. If you have a living room full of hot, fiery colors that sometimes leave you feeling burned out, bring the heat down with simple accessories such as blue silk pillows, blue blown glass and candles that are pumpkin-colored rather than red. Sometimes a room just needs some relief from the energy associated with its predominant colors.
That said, while a room with too much fire energy may be frenetic and not relaxing, a room with too much blue may be too cold and uninviting. To help you make sense of it all, here's a primer on the five elements of Feng shui and the associated colors that elicit specific energies in your home:
Blue and black, associated with water energy, support inner work, helping us to concentrate, contemplate, mediate and handle creative endeavors. Blue can slow the heart and breathing rates and lower blood pressure. It can be used to increase coolness, to calm and to create privacy.
Green is associated with wood energy, the energy of growth, decisiveness and action. It can motivate internal change.
Red is associated with fire, which supports life energy. The color of blood, it can increase heart rate, respiration and blood pressure. It also can promote activity and alleviate depression. It's clearly the color of passion and love.
http://www.hgtv.com/landscaping/container-checklist/index.html
Follow these do's and don'ts in container gardening.
Master gardener Paul James offers tips for creating successful container gardens:
Don't forget to cover the drainage hole.
Water should be able to drain freely from the drain hole, which is why James doesn't suggest to cover it with stones or little pieces of broken clay pots. However, as important as it is for water to get out, you also don't want certain critters to get in. Sowbugs, or pillbugs, aren't especially troublesome but can do a number on strawberries and other plants. Earwigs can devastate plants. That's why he prefers to cover the drainage holes of pots with a piece of pantyhose (figure A) or window screen before filling them with potting mix.
Pack the potting mix when filling containers.
Potting mix tends to be fairly light, so if you don't pack it down as you add it to the pot, it will settle the first time you water. This can cause the rootballs of newly planted plants to become exposed and therefore susceptible to drying out.
Once you've filled your container about a third of the way full with potting mix, press it firmly with your hands (figure B). Then add another third and firm it again, and so on until ready to plant.
Tease the roots.
It's extremely important to loosen or tease the roots of plants (figure C) before sticking them in a pot, especially those that are rootbound. The process may look a bit extreme, but it's actually beneficial.
If you don't tease the roots, they'll just continue to grow in a circle rather than reach out into the surrounding potting mix. When that happens, the plants won't be able to absorb the surrounding water and nutrients, and they'll wilt and lack vigor.
Provide enough headroom.
When filling a container with potting mix, avoid adding the mix all the way up to the rim of the container. Without sufficient headroom at the top of the pot, water will run off rather than soak into the pot. Instead, leave at least an inch of headroom below the rim of the pot (figure D) so thirsty plants will have an opportunity to drink the water.
Water newly potted plants right away--then water again.
The initial watering will likely run out of the drainage hole quickly because of all the pore spaces in the potting mix. However, the mix will settle within a few minutes, at which time it's a good idea to water again slowly, allowing the mix to soak up all the moisture.
Mulch
Container-grown plants benefit from a light layer of mulch. This is especially true for those that are grown in terra-cotta pots, which tend to lose moisture fairly quickly due to the porous nature of the clay.
When mulching plants in containers, the trick is to match the mulch to the plant. This hydrangea (figure E) prefers steady moisture and acidic soil, so a one-inch layer of sphagnum moss is ideal. The moss will keep the soil moist between waterings and slowly acidify the soil as well.
At the other extreme, the cacti and succulents in this trough (figure F) prefer dry soil and a nearly-neutral, slightly-alkaline soil. In this case, a mulch of pea gravel is perfect because it lets the moisture evaporate and keeps the pH within the ideal range. What's more, the lightly-colored gravel reflects the sun, thereby giving these plants the warm environment in which they thrive.
Similarly, you can use a light layer of sand to mulch cacti and succulents. Sand mulch can also help control the gnats that sometimes seem to pop out of nowhere.
Also in the house, decorative, polished stones (figure G) can give containerized houseplants a little something extra. Or you might consider bark mulch made specifically for houseplants.
There's always shredded bark mulch (figure H). It works nicely on container plants and enhances their overall look.
For plants that are prone to slug attack, consider crushed pecan shells (figure I) because slugs don't like to move across their jagged edges. For something a bit more exotic, try crushed cocoa shells. They also deter slugs and look great. What's more, they smell just like chocolate.
Yet another great mulch worthy of consideration is moss. Whether it's sphagnum, Spanish (figure J), or sheet moss, these mosses are all available for purchase in bags.
And finally, try this new mulching material--a bag full of terra-cotta balls. Placed around the base of a container plant, especially one in which the base of the plant is highly visible, these balls add a unique decorative touch to a container (figure K).