Sentences with phrase «house feel bigger»

This gave the flat a new lease of life from the outside and the harmonising colours are then continued throughout the flat to to make the small house feel bigger, uplifted and streamlined.
The most important element of design that you should look at is finding ways to make your house feel bigger.

Not exact matches

There's no sense in feeling like a failure just because you think you should have a better job, a bigger house, or a nicer car.
When I got married, one of my parents» biggest wishes was for Mr. FAF and me to own a house asap so that they can feel relieved about their daughter's future haha.
I actually work in the White House, you no, no big deal, just saving Libya today, maybe saving the economy tomorrow, we'll see how I feel.
We assume they had the «perfect day out» or the «immaculate house» with no scribbles or finger marks on the wall; a moment sigh and looking at your own life, with all the little impurities can feel bigger when compared with others.
And reducing the workload is a big deal in a 3 - kid house because, seriously, does anyone else feel like as soon as they finish cleaning up the kitchen it's already time to start prepping the next meal?
I typically make a big pot of soup late Sunday mornings, which makes the house smell wonderful and feel cozy.
Once the kids are happily settled in their college dorms, many of those married couples will head home to a house that feels unusually big and quiet, maybe even lonely.
I feel like Mother Ginger's house was much bigger this time — it looked really nice, really colorful.
So far I have freaked out about doubling the amount of children in our house, where the babies are going to sleep, cloth diapering, starting completely over with baby clothes instead of trying to sort through what would be usable, nursing two babies at the same time, buying a bigger house, how I'm going to drive four kids around (thank God we just replaced my husband's car in January with a full size SUV with a usable third row), traveling with four kids, what happens if my husband has to start traveling for work, getting the big kids to and from school with two babies in tow, how the big kids are going to feel once there are two new babies in the house, how I»M going to feel with two more babies in the house, and so on and so forth.
At our house, I find that I carry less around in my diaper bag (aka my biggest handbag) with our third than I did with our first, we feel that we've hit our toy quota, and we seem to be in a constant (never ending?)
If you've always wanted to build a gingerbread house but felt like it was too big a project, try this simpler version, which uses graham crackers.
Even little kids will be able to feel as if they're included in the process and it will feel more like a team effort to prepare the house for baby's big arrival.
Convenience - as your baby gets bigger and you feel motivate, inspired, empowered, ok fine...... obligated to clean the house.
She writes, ``... by the time children get big enough to venture out on their own — to the grocery store, to a friend's house down the street — their parents feel strange about letting them go, believing the world to be a dangerous place.»
Once the kids are happily settled in their college dorms, many of those married couples will head home to a house that feels unusually big and quiet, perhaps lonely, loveless and sexless.
A house building firm tells the BBC that the economic recovery is not being felt in mid-Wales despite figures showing the economy is bigger than it was before the financial crash.
I feel equally passionate over the town's other houses of worship, especially the Presbyterian churches in Southold and Mattituck; big, bold Ostrabrama; Our Lady of Good Counsel, which looks more like an Anglican church in the Cotswolds than anything Roman Catholic.
When Kevin and I decided to build our own house, we wanted it to be healthy, with no mold (as I was getting migraines in our apartment in Sausalito, and we found it was because there was mold in the walls); we wanted no energy bills (we were and are on a budget); we wanted low water bills (that budget thing again); and we didn't have a lot of money, so we couldn't build a big house but still wanted it to feel spacious.
A young child struggling with the transition of welcoming a new baby into the house isn't being deliberately naughty; they are struggling with big feelings of grief and simply don't have the verbal ability to put these feelings into words, so they are translated in their behavior.
If you have a big house or feel that changing your light bulbs every night and morning is a big hassle for you, you can leave the lights alone and get blue light blocking glasses.
Hello my name is nancy I just had a baby 3 months ago I need to lose all my baby weight bits its been hard for me what can I do here at my house to lose this big donut I have in my stomach???? I wish to lose 60pounds so I can feel great by my anniversary in march 28 help plz!!!!!!!
I feel you, we were recently couch hunting for this stupid weird shaped room in our house but everything was way too big.
So everyone has those days... lately I have been having them more than not those days we just feel as big as a house and nothing looks good one us.
We have a house full of furniture we like, so we won't be getting and new big pieces, but adding new little details is such an easy way to make a room (or in this case, a whole apartment) feel totally fresh and new!
: / But the house is suddenly feeling bigger and brighter and more clean!
I'm a big believer that what you wear reflects on how you feel, even though I may wake up not wanting to leave the house this type of outfit makes me feel good and confident ready to take on the day.
Nuri Bilge Ceylan's big, slow, meaty drama feels like a Russian novel and stars Haluk Bilginer as Mr. Aydin, a gentleman hotelier who sees himself as the benevolent feudal lord of a remote, idyllic village whose ancient cave houses attract a steady stream of tourists.
Ignoring my own distaste for play - by - play as well as that I felt no less worked - over by Two Family House than by the typical example of the underdog sub-genre, why wasn't the film acquired by a bigger distributor at Sundance?
At the beginning, when Belle (Emma Watson) walks out of her house and wanders through the village singing «Belle,» that lovely lyrical meet - the - day ode that mingles optimism with a yearning for something more, the shots and beats are all in place, the spirit is there, you can see within 15 seconds that Emma Watson has the perfect perky soulfulness to bring your dream of Belle to life — and still, the number feels like something out of one of those overly bustling big - screen musicals from the late»60s that helped to bury the studio system.
At a time when most folks like to stay in their houses and stream things, there's no understating how great it feels to get out and share big - screen experiences with enthusiastic audiences.»
While — like (I guess) many Rohmer fans — I tend to find myself most at home in his beach houses and Parisian apartment blocks, I was drawn to this presentation of his lesser - known historical films for two reasons: one was the pure joy of being able to enjoy his greatest work, Perceval, on the big screen; the other was the opportunity to finally be introduced to his feature - length television play Catherine de Heilbronn, a production that, in its grey set design and even starker minimalism, in many ways felt like the former film's shadowy companion piece.
An overly schematic screenplay is the biggest of Duchovny's problems: House of D feels much more written than lived.
The tranquility of Flower and the Grindhouse feel of The House of the Dead: Overkill round out the big games of the week.
A retired engineer who sees grief as just another problem to solve, he's launched himself into the productive busywork of his golden years, buying a new pair of jeans and trying to sell the house that suddenly feels five times too big.
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She had left me the key to her house, but in the process left me feeling like I now held the key to understanding how I could be part of a bigger world: through relationships.
And it the book sucked, I'm not going to feel better about having wasted my time and money reading it just because it came from a big publishing house.
There's stories online of authors being published by a traditional big house publisher who feel their covers didn't represent their book well, but had no say in the matter.
It will be interesting to see what the other big publishing houses decide to do, I have a feeling your going to see the companies who do nt push for equivalent ebook to physical book pricing will have higher sales and in the end make more money off of ebooks AND «dead tree» books as well thanks to word of mouth from ebook readers.
Without the imprimatur of a big publishing house, you might end up believing the negative responses and feeling the bite of the attacks.
Certainly authors feel perplexed about this problem, and even the concept of partial rights — as in a major seller granting only print rights to a big house while retaining e-rights (Andre, Howey, etc.)-- even that is in question as the industry takes a breath and asks itself how quickly precedent might become standard procedure.
I developed this approach after buying a number of very popular books at high prices from the big publishing houses and feeling it was like The Emperor's New Clothes — the books were horrible by standards of literature, but had impossibly great reviews.
I wonder if the big publishing houses read forums and blogs and comments like I do; I wonder if they have any idea what their customers are feeling or how they think.
Throw in the fact that editors in most big houses are squandering their money on whatever social justice fad there is, and the end result is a huge number of readers who feel either ripped off by high prices, unsatisfied by the available content, or both.
We aren't swayed by big names or publishing houses, we simply want to feel passionate about the books we review and provide the highest level of support to the authors we connect with.
Indie self - publishers who feel shut out should consider the cost of entry that big publishing houses pay — and consider the risk you ask them to take on your first novel.
I wonder why the bigger publishing houses feel they have to charge so much for eBooks?
It's probably my biggest expense after housing, and I feel like I don't really get my money's worth on this one.
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