ypg
2016-12-12 14:00:48
- #1
, as well as before building the house, we often had white doors and these were always yellowed around the handle. It may be that others always close the door by the handle, but my experience (and observation with other people) is that the door is also closed by the leaf itself, which then leads over time to exactly these discolorations, which depending on the surface can hardly be completely removed.
That's bold! Also often observed around the light switches at (great-)grandma's
You can usually clean that off.
However, to say that wood is a passing trend and then to prefer to install expensive solid wood parquet (in oak) is, in my opinion, somewhat contradictory...
I was probably the only one who meant that wood or a certain wood style is subject to changing tastes, so you must mean me, but I have not installed solid wood parquet
I do think a lot in style mixing and am very open to it. But multiple wood tones, types, and structures clash with each other. You can also see it in the posted photos: the builders mostly adapted to the floor or furniture and paid attention to that.
But you also sometimes change the furniture, after all, one follows the current taste. That is not negative, and people also need a change of scenery sometimes.
But doors are permanently installed parts of the house and should, on the one hand, subordinate themselves, and on the other hand, match each other, also to the windows.
10/15 years ago it was the highly praised beech. What is now pine or maple was then beech. Nobody wants beech anymore! Let's see what will happen with pine or maple then.
In this respect, I do it like and rather paint the walls every 2 years and sometimes change a carpet or all the furniture, which then also matches the simple elegance (white ), and I give the tip to keep the doors neutral.
Ultimately, taste is individual and everyone is entitled to their own.