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• #4427
In lamp shade chat - my mum just gave us the most amazing 1920s art deco pink marbled glass 'cloud' shade. It had belonged to a great grand parent, and i have vague memories of it hanging in a living room as a kid...
...any commendations here for light fittings with chandelier hooks?
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• #4428
@JB @kboy @chrisbmx116 thanks all.
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• #4429
https://lampspares.co.uk/ are good
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• #4430
Another outdoor lamp option... https://www.scp.co.uk/products/lisilux-wall-lamp-with-opal-glass-globe
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• #4431
got a photo? sounds intriguing!
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• #4432
bingo! thank you
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• #4433
Not sure if just musing or asking a question but I like the Skagerrak cutter hallway furniture.
I think what you’re describing is quite a common issue where spaces just become dumping grounds or oversized corridors and sounds like you’re coming up with a solution which will work for you and make the spaces more defined/usable.
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• #4434
Now I want to get a nice shoe-storage bench and some coat racks for the stuff that's in current use so we can start actually using the space as it was intended.
Just been looking for this kind of thing. The usual suspects were mostly hopeless for it but there is some nice stuff on Etsy, i.e. this and this.
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• #4435
we have this for shoe storage, in entrance to our front room.
https://www.wayfair.co.uk/storage-organisation/pdp/17-stories-16-pair-shoe-storage-bench-u001758828.html
The top does become a magnet for "stuff" (mail, kids pictures, random things that you can't figure out where else they should go) but it's also where i've got my place/dish for pocket dump, so is where keys, wallet, lip balm live on the regular.
I'd advise to get a stool or bench beside shoe storage as you'll want to sit down to put on/take off shoes, right then and there.Despite having lots of misgivings about it, I have grown to like/love it..
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• #4436
those are lovely, and the bench/shoe storage merge is really nice, only issue I can see would be, whether there is actually enough space for shoes in there?
Maybe I own more shoes than you, but I think you'd run our of useable shoe space pretty quickly in those, as you migrate not just the everyday shoes there, but also the "want to wear, but never get a chance to wear them" there as well.. -
• #4437
Yeah. I ordered something similar but £200 to test the concept out. Will put some coat hooks in to the wall behind it and some shelves above those with storage boxes for shoe-a-geddon.
With two young kids the priority for us was having a bench so they can sit and take their shoes off before traipsing mud all over the hallway. I also wanted it off the floor on legs so cleaning under it was easy.
Myself I just wear my Redwings these days. Not sure why I'd need more shoes! The rest just languish in the cupboard.
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• #4438
I ordered something similar but £200 to test the concept out
Looking for something like that around the same price point, got a link to what you went for?
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• #4440
Those look a bit shallow. Even my size 7 shoes have soles of 30cm+. Have found that to be the case with a surprising amount of stuff that says it is for shoes.
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• #4441
I wonder if you could mount those slim ikea top kitchen cabinets to a wall and put a seat on the top?
Sort of like soul's TV Stand™
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• #4442
All its got to do for us is take four pairs of shoes, two of them will be tiny tiny kids shoes. As a family we are lacking on heft and flipper feet.
Or they can all go on shelves above the coat pegs.
Or we'll just keep chucking them on the floor. For us the bench bit is the key, and our hallway isn't spacious so narrow(er) is probably better.
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• #4443
Got any plans?
Sounds like you need to spend a bit of money relocating the radiators in the living room to allow you to place furniture in places where it works for you. If the woodburner is in the hearth, install new wiring to the chimney breast to take your TV. Then you can use the alcoves for storage/shelves/posters/a desk.
Might even be wise to brick up the lower ground floor entrance so you can use it as a utility room/storage, provided you have a safe fire escape route from the basement (you probably will unless all the windows are barred and you have no garden and its open plan upstairs...)
If possible, build fitted storage into your new upper ground floor entrance hall to hold all your big winter coats/kids school stuff etc.
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• #4444
Cheers all. Nah, no plans yet. I’ve sketched it out a few times tho. Will have another go later.
As for hallway stuff, I like this: https://www.johnlewis.com/john-lewis-partners-restoration-shoe-rack-and-bench-grey/p3302377
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• #4445
Radiator replacement/relocation is def on the long-list of stuff for this house. We're budget constrained at the moment though and all the short term projects are dull functional things.
I love this house but can't help but feel that the space could be far better used, both in terms of rationalising usage. I'd love to see what a good architect and a fat budget could do to it. One day...
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• #4446
I've got one, it's a lovely lovely thing.
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• #4447
Oh nice. I am thinking the green too, is that the OG colour ? Found a high quality Chinese knock off but with shipping and fees it’s knocking over 4 bills so I reckon I’ll just get the real one.
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• #4448
i mean i totally want a snoopy too, one day
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• #4449
group buy knock off chinese rep imo
- cozey
- cozey
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• #4450
these ones say shipping to UK is free - not sure how accurate that is
In hallway related ponderings, we're attempting to change the way we use our house by re-fettling the hallway.
It's a Victorian terrace with steps from the street down to a basement kitchen/living room and steps up to a hallway and upstairs living room and office. We've been here 5 years and in that time i've really struggled with the layout of the basement kitchen/living room which is where we spend 90% of non-working daylight hours.
I always thought the problem was the shape of the space, because of chimney breasts, the stairs and giant ugly modern radiators the only bit of uncluttered wall space where you might put a sofa is right by the drafty front door. As a result we end up only using half the room with a small two seat sofa wedged in the bay and an armchair awkwardly in no-mans land nearby. It's a shame as the basement is where the woodburner, and telly are so it's theoretically the cosiest spot.
It recently occured to me that another major problem with the space is that as the basement door opens directly into the room, it ends up being used a hallway/corridor, between the door and the cupboard under the stairs in the kitchen where all the coats and shoes and key (and a blackhole of bags, clothes, kids craft projects, batteries and random crap) live. All this disfunction while the perfectly nice upstairs hallway sits empty and unused, except for a light scattering of bikes and books.
So the solution we have hit upon is to clear the upstairs hallway, put in a bench with shoe storage underneath and some luggage racks/coat hooks above and start using that as the way in and out of the house. The idea is that if we can make that work then we might porch-off the tradesman's entrance downstairs and start to use the whole width of the room.
I've fitted coat hooks and shoe racks and shelving for stuff that's not in current use at the rear of the hallway behind the stairs. Now I want to get a nice shoe-storage bench and some coat racks for the stuff that's in current use so we can start actually using the space as it was intended.
The problem at the moment is that we're only halfway through the transition and half the stuff you need when you leave the house is still downstair so you end up running up and down the stairs and cursing that you don't know where your keys or scarf are.