I went to the Davoluce Lighting Elsternwick store but they didn't have them in stock, also they were going to charge $59 each, so in the end I ordered them online $41.95 each plus $15 delivery fee - still cheaper than the other stores!
It was a quick delivery, but when I got them 1 of them has scratches, and the other has a tiny chip. I was annoyed as I thought I would need to go to the Elsternwick store to change it, but I rang today and all I need to do is take some pictures and they will send it to me. Easy!Still need to buy 36 lights. Overwhelmed and not sure the style I want. Nothing strikes me. I don't want it too modern or too old fashioned.
Places I've been
- Custom lighting outlet store
- Mattblatt - Limited range, more of a furniture store.
- Ikea
- Bunnings
- Light up Springvale - probably the most cost effective
- Australian lighting
- Maroondah lighting - expensive.
The trials and tribulations of building my first house(s) ... and second.
Saturday, October 29, 2011
Extra costs
They say you need to have 10% extra for contingencies.
So far things that have come up
- Fences ~$2013. Still unresolved. According to Dan when they were excavating, the fence posts were rotten and hence the fence fell over. Neighbour is apparently being a bit difficult - not sure how, but George left a voicemail needing to speak to me about it. Not quite sure how truthful Dan is, sometimes I feel he tells me "white" lies. The times I've spoken to Andrew he seems reasonable, so I'll try and surmise the courage to go and speak to him. Not quite sure how to do it. Everyone thinks there's little chance that he'll pay half, and I tend to agree - Do you mind paying for half the fence that fell down because it was my fault?! No harm trying. Even if it's for half the cost of the remaining fence that's still standing.
- Council pit ~$1000. Apparently council weren't happy with using the existing pit and wanted a new one installed. On top of that cost, the builder's 20% variation. I'm not quite happy with this extra cost. I realise now I should have clarified it better in the contract rather than leave it so wishy washy. When I asked George about it, he said variations would cost between 0-20%. An example he gave is if more concrete was needed he would just give me the invoice, with the variation. So I'm wondering if the same should apply to the council pit. But obviously I don't have anything to stand on if he says 20%.
Lesson learnt: Clarify in writing specifically what the different percentage variations will apply to.
- Keyed locks. Spoke to Dan and apparently all the locks - internal and external are keyed the same. I know Mum won't be happy with that. As they have been ordered, he says they may be a charge to change it. I'll leave Mum to deal with it, as I can't be bothered. She wants 5 different keys.
So far things that have come up
- Fences ~$2013. Still unresolved. According to Dan when they were excavating, the fence posts were rotten and hence the fence fell over. Neighbour is apparently being a bit difficult - not sure how, but George left a voicemail needing to speak to me about it. Not quite sure how truthful Dan is, sometimes I feel he tells me "white" lies. The times I've spoken to Andrew he seems reasonable, so I'll try and surmise the courage to go and speak to him. Not quite sure how to do it. Everyone thinks there's little chance that he'll pay half, and I tend to agree - Do you mind paying for half the fence that fell down because it was my fault?! No harm trying. Even if it's for half the cost of the remaining fence that's still standing.
- Council pit ~$1000. Apparently council weren't happy with using the existing pit and wanted a new one installed. On top of that cost, the builder's 20% variation. I'm not quite happy with this extra cost. I realise now I should have clarified it better in the contract rather than leave it so wishy washy. When I asked George about it, he said variations would cost between 0-20%. An example he gave is if more concrete was needed he would just give me the invoice, with the variation. So I'm wondering if the same should apply to the council pit. But obviously I don't have anything to stand on if he says 20%.
Lesson learnt: Clarify in writing specifically what the different percentage variations will apply to.
- Keyed locks. Spoke to Dan and apparently all the locks - internal and external are keyed the same. I know Mum won't be happy with that. As they have been ordered, he says they may be a charge to change it. I'll leave Mum to deal with it, as I can't be bothered. She wants 5 different keys.
Monday, October 17, 2011
Still framing
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Fence issue
Today I received an email from my builder about the fence. The contractors had removed the fence, WITHOUT asking my neighbour, and now I am being charged for the replacement. Not happy. In fact I wasn't even told about the problem, but just received an email saying this is the letter that we have sent to your neighbour!
So I dropped by the house after work to see if it could be salvaged. I was pleasantly surprised to see that they had already started building the frames for DW2. Also the building of the garage brick wall.
Here's the offending missing fence.
Not sure how I'm going to settle it. Guess I'll wait for the quotes.
Lesson learnt: include the replacement of fences in the contract.
So I dropped by the house after work to see if it could be salvaged. I was pleasantly surprised to see that they had already started building the frames for DW2. Also the building of the garage brick wall.
Here's the offending missing fence.
Not sure how I'm going to settle it. Guess I'll wait for the quotes.
Lesson learnt: include the replacement of fences in the contract.
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
Monday, October 3, 2011
Pendant lights
Next challenge is looking for my light fittings by the end of this month. I counted and I need to get 39 light fittings. Most important ones are the pendant lights. If I can't find the fittings I'll have to just leave it as battens and look for fittings later.
On Saturday went to Maroondah Lighting, Croydon. Spent a tiring 2 hours there trying to do a walk through of the lights that I need. Came up with a list of possible lights. Found a really nice glass pendant, but then realised that it might be too small. I've seen some pendant lights that look a bit odd and I think now it's because the scale was wrong.
On Sunday went to Beacon Lighting, Oakleigh. Found the same lights that were at Maroondah Lighting but a fair bit cheaper. Also found a pendant light that I think will go nicely above my island bench. Kameo 1 pendant light (see below). Quite different from what I thought I would go with. Not glass, and bigger than I pictured. Bought 3 at 10% off for $63.95 each.
Then went to Home of Lights, Nunawading. Found the same light for $59.95 - ripped off!
Afterwards stopped by and was surprised to see a guy working on the slab - it was a nice day. The rain had delayed them so he must have been making up time in preparation to laying it on Monday. Was able to finally step inside the site. Got a close up look - it's small! Hope that there is no issue with the steel as it was left out in the pouring rain and got wet. Don't want it to rust in the concrete...
Puddles left in the footings of DW1 porch
At night looked online and found that the same pendant lights sold for $41.95! From Davoluce Lighting in Elsternwick. At least I can return my lights from Beacon Lighting.
Lesson learnt: go in stores to find lights that you like, then go online to source the cheapest light fittings
On Saturday went to Maroondah Lighting, Croydon. Spent a tiring 2 hours there trying to do a walk through of the lights that I need. Came up with a list of possible lights. Found a really nice glass pendant, but then realised that it might be too small. I've seen some pendant lights that look a bit odd and I think now it's because the scale was wrong.
On Sunday went to Beacon Lighting, Oakleigh. Found the same lights that were at Maroondah Lighting but a fair bit cheaper. Also found a pendant light that I think will go nicely above my island bench. Kameo 1 pendant light (see below). Quite different from what I thought I would go with. Not glass, and bigger than I pictured. Bought 3 at 10% off for $63.95 each.
Then went to Home of Lights, Nunawading. Found the same light for $59.95 - ripped off!
Afterwards stopped by and was surprised to see a guy working on the slab - it was a nice day. The rain had delayed them so he must have been making up time in preparation to laying it on Monday. Was able to finally step inside the site. Got a close up look - it's small! Hope that there is no issue with the steel as it was left out in the pouring rain and got wet. Don't want it to rust in the concrete...
Puddles left in the footings of DW1 porch
At night looked online and found that the same pendant lights sold for $41.95! From Davoluce Lighting in Elsternwick. At least I can return my lights from Beacon Lighting.
Lesson learnt: go in stores to find lights that you like, then go online to source the cheapest light fittings
Carpet selection
Like all decisions, the carpet took a while to decide. I couldn't make it at the Selection appointment as I had not researched the carpet beforehand and didn't feel comfortable deciding on the spot.
I went to Blest Carpet Court, Ringwood, before I went on holidays to get a general idea, and then again on the weekend to decide.
Things to consider:
- wool vs nylon (solution dyed)
- dark vs light.
- underlay
Wool - a natural substance, worse for allergies as it sheds more
Nylon - colour goes all the way through, less likely to fade, easy to clean (can even use bleach), will melt in fire
Dark - hides stains/dark hair better, but can make a room look smaller and be prone to lint.
Light - brightens a room, shows marks easier.
Underlay - makes a big difference as to how the carpet feels underfoot. The thicker it is, the softer the carpet feels and longer the carpet durability. It can be made of foam or rubber. Bridgestone, makers of tyres, also make underlay from black (thinnest) to gold to blue (thickest)
I decided to go with solution dyed nylon as there seemed to be more pros, and for the same quality of wool it was cheaper.
For DW1 I decided to go with Profound Beauty 82/8211 $165 per broadloom metre. I chose a dark colour as this house may be rented out. It also wasn't one colour all the way through, so hopefully won't show up lint as much. Lastly, it was cheaper.
To give me an idea of how it looked I brought along my floor tile and used the shop's Sydney Blue Gum floating floorboard. The pieces of paper are the paint colour samples Whisper White.
For DW2 I chose Manor House Candlelight $179 per broadloom metre. 32 ounce light colour. They had the same colour in the middle range Sycamore Lane Satin Canopy $210, 49 ounce but in the end I decided that as they have the same extra heavy duty residential use and are likely to last the same length of time to go with the cheaper carpet, and with good underlay should still be comfortable. The price includes gold underlay but because they have been dealing with my builder for a long time, they upgrade the underlay to blue for free - bonus!
Both carpets were under my $190 allowance so the extra money will be spent on lights - or other things I know will crop up on the way.
I just found this website AFTER I went through the carpet process!
http://www.choice.com.au/reviews-and-tests/household/living-and-bedroom/flooring/carpet-buying-guide.aspx
NOTE: broadloom metre = 1 x 3.66 m - how carpet is sold.
I went to Blest Carpet Court, Ringwood, before I went on holidays to get a general idea, and then again on the weekend to decide.
Things to consider:
- wool vs nylon (solution dyed)
- dark vs light.
- underlay
Wool - a natural substance, worse for allergies as it sheds more
Nylon - colour goes all the way through, less likely to fade, easy to clean (can even use bleach), will melt in fire
Dark - hides stains/dark hair better, but can make a room look smaller and be prone to lint.
Light - brightens a room, shows marks easier.
Underlay - makes a big difference as to how the carpet feels underfoot. The thicker it is, the softer the carpet feels and longer the carpet durability. It can be made of foam or rubber. Bridgestone, makers of tyres, also make underlay from black (thinnest) to gold to blue (thickest)
I decided to go with solution dyed nylon as there seemed to be more pros, and for the same quality of wool it was cheaper.
For DW1 I decided to go with Profound Beauty 82/8211 $165 per broadloom metre. I chose a dark colour as this house may be rented out. It also wasn't one colour all the way through, so hopefully won't show up lint as much. Lastly, it was cheaper.
To give me an idea of how it looked I brought along my floor tile and used the shop's Sydney Blue Gum floating floorboard. The pieces of paper are the paint colour samples Whisper White.
For DW2 I chose Manor House Candlelight $179 per broadloom metre. 32 ounce light colour. They had the same colour in the middle range Sycamore Lane Satin Canopy $210, 49 ounce but in the end I decided that as they have the same extra heavy duty residential use and are likely to last the same length of time to go with the cheaper carpet, and with good underlay should still be comfortable. The price includes gold underlay but because they have been dealing with my builder for a long time, they upgrade the underlay to blue for free - bonus!
Both carpets were under my $190 allowance so the extra money will be spent on lights - or other things I know will crop up on the way.
I just found this website AFTER I went through the carpet process!
http://www.choice.com.au/reviews-and-tests/household/living-and-bedroom/flooring/carpet-buying-guide.aspx
NOTE: broadloom metre = 1 x 3.66 m - how carpet is sold.
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