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    Anacortes businesses must weather new restrictions to operate during COVID-19 surge – goskagit.com

    - November 19, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    No indoor dining, no theater, no workout at the gym and a return to tighter restrictions on how many people can be inside a business or church. Those are some of the statewide restrictions that took effect late Monday to try to curb the fast rise of the COVID-19 pandemic across Washington.

    Anacortes restaurants that adapted last March to Phase 1 restrictions will have to step back the advances they made, but this time the weather is getting colder and wetter.

    With indoor seating prohibited and winter weather arriving, we are put in a position to fail, Joseph Lopez said, who owns the Union Tavern.

    The tavern will maximize its outdoor space by providing heaters and awnings to shelter customers from the rain and cold and will rely heavily on to-go orders.

    It is a challenge for all businesses, especially the service industry, which seems to be the hardest hit, Lopez said. Still, we must be positive.

    ATown Bistro will have to reduce hours, owner Tim Moffitt said.

    He has invested over $4,000 in setting up a wooden gazebo for their parklet including heaters and seating, for a comfortable outdoor area.

    Hopefully we see a payoff, or at least break even, Moffitt said. Besides offering their whole menu as takeout, the bistro will have half-off bottles of wine and cocktails to go.

    Barbara Atterberry, co-owner of Bobs Chowder, heard the governors advisement Thanksgiving gatherings last week, but was totally caught off guard, by the new restrictions, she said.

    The restaurant is going back to its Phase 1 setup, with tables removed and a designated entrance, exit and waiting area. Shes also has to lay off seven staff members.

    Theyre like family; were pretty broken about that, Atterbery said, noting the added difficulty with the upcoming holidays.

    If we all band together and protect one another, we will all be through this sooner rather than later, she said.

    Meanwhile, Austin Lash of the new Paris Restaurant said they have halted last phases of construction inside the restaurant and are now focusing on building their outdoor seating, including a gazebo.

    He is currently exploring options like selling wholesale meals to groceries and utilizing delivery services, possibly even adding an in-house delivery driver.

    Were doing the best we can, Lash said.

    The new measures, which include 25% capacity restrictions inside most businesses, will remain in effect until at least Dec. 14, according to Gov. Jay Inslees order.

    In announcing the restrictions, Inslee also noted several measures to help businesses and residents ride out the economic impacts of the restrictions, among them $50 million in grants and loans for businesses, a continued moratorium on evictions, and plans to provide nutrition assistance for families.

    He also assured Washingtonians that the dollars are there to cover unemployment benefits.

    The Fidalgo Pool and Fitness Center will have to close its fitness center, but the pool will remain open with limited swimmers and social distancing measures.

    We are following the directive of the county health department to the letter, pool Executive Director Mitch Everton said. Classes will be offered online.

    John Archibald, owner of Johnny Picassos, said the new measures did not surprise him, and the shop will focus now on to-go drinks and promoting take-home pottery kits.

    Mayor Laurie Gere said the city is exploring ways to expand financial assistance to local businesses while also asking residents to do their part.

    I am asking that we all commit to purchasing once a week from a local restaurant for a takeout meal, she said.

    The rest is here:
    Anacortes businesses must weather new restrictions to operate during COVID-19 surge - goskagit.com

    The Power of Three: Home care across three generations – Citizentribune

    - November 19, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    If you have almost any kind of home repair, find a member of the Brewer family of Morristown.

    It all started with Mike Brewer, 67, who has worked in the heating and air business since 1973 with Mitchell-Hodge Electric and has run his own business, York of Morristown, for five and a half years. Then, son Chris expanded into the concrete business, followed by grandson Christian into household remodeling.

    Given their breadth of experience, one could call all three, at one time or another, to get repairs done on their house.

    Ive worked for other companies since 1973, but Ive had my own business for five and a half years, Mike said. Chris worked for in the 90s, then branched out to learn the concrete business. My grandson worked for me two or three years back, then he evidently didnt like it here, so he decided to go on into construction.

    Since COVID-19 happened this year, Brewer has been busier than ever.

    People have found that theyre stuck inside, he said. They want heat and they want air. Instead of going on vacation, people are spending their money for home improvement. That means a lot. Ive been extremely busy this summer. If you dont need heat or air, the phone doesnt ring.

    Im trying to get that business lull out of there, he said

    Hes stayed busy, Mikes wife Linda said.

    Brewer said that he has a couple of guys who helps install new units.

    Ive got three people who helps install, he said.

    In addition to working with Mitchell-Hodge Electric, Mike worked for Hodge Electric and was a plant maintenance worker at Lear Corporation for more than 22 years before retiring and opening York of Morristown.

    Im skilled in heating and air, a skilled electrician and gas piping. I have a lot of things that I can do and dont advertise unless theyre called for. The service aspect is completely different than the installing of the unit. I can make and install the ductwork. I dont ask someone to do something I wouldnt do, Mike said. If I ask them to do it, Ive done it.

    Mike learned at the feet of Luke Mitchell.

    Luke was a good man to work for and hed give you the shirt off his back. Hed give you a job to do. (For example) if you had a two-ton unit, you had two days and thats all you had.

    If you werent done in two days, hed want to know why. It didnt matter if it was an attic, crawl space or what. Back then, everything was all metal. There was no flex. All of your off lines were metal and you had to tile that in under the house, but you just had two days. There were just two of us who done it and we have it done. Now, with flex, it takes these guys three or four days, he said. I dont know why, it should be quicker, but people dont push like they used to. I dont push people.

    I believe you get a better job when you dont push people, Mike said. You want it done right and thats the main key to me. That has gotten me more work. Treating the customer right, treating them and their homes with respect instead of just going in and cutting up. You look for ways to do it as easy as possible doing the least amount of damage. I think that attitude will bring you more work and it always has.

    With a heat pump, there is a misconception that it costs more to heat than to cool.

    I stress cleaning a unit and keeping the filter changed, Mike said. Cleaning is so very important to the life of the unit. A good way to keep the unit clean is to change the air filter when one gets their electric bill. Some people get their bills in the middle of the month, but it doesnt matter as long as the filter is changed or checked monthly.

    With the modern energy efficient thermostats, temperature control has become a science.

    Some of the modern thermostats have a red light that comes on to tell people to change their filters, he said. If you go through the process of getting the light off there, then youve gone through the process of changing the filter.

    Once a year service also extends the life of a heat pump.

    I have some customers who do it in the spring, some in the fall, Mike said. It really needs to be done in the spring when the air conditioning season starts. The chemicals you use on your coils needs to wash off. You dont want to blow water into your ducts.

    York of Morristown is a member of the Better Business Bureau, York Heat Pumps are some of the best on the market, with a 10-year parts and labor warranty. York also has the Good Housekeeping Seal.

    I dont have to do the hard sell, Im already within 60 percent since I was referred by a friend, Mike said. Anytime during the day and night when a unit is down, I make a call. You cant leave somebody down. If youve sold a unit and they depend on you, you just cannot leave them down. I dont believe in that. I come when they ask me to come.

    Mike tries to put those buying units from him at the top of the list, as far as service goes, even working in customers who he services their equipment and is down.

    If youre down, Im going to do my best to get to you that day, he said. I also put priorities on age, if one is older or if they have younger children, than I try to take care of them that day.

    Chris Brewer

    I learned the business and worked in Blount County for a little while, but it wasnt for me.

    Chris got into the concrete business in 1998 and hasnt slowed down since.

    I met a man in Maryville who was needing help, Chris said. He told me that day, Im going to give you five years to get out of this, Im going to whup your butt if youre not out of this in five years. Here it is 20 years later and Im still doing it.

    Chris credits Walt Brown for helping him to learn the ins and outs of concrete.

    He did any big commercial from the Tri-Cities to Atlanta, all the way to Charlotte, North Carolina and Nashville, we did everything downtown, the convention center, Smokies Stadium, Gatlinburg Convention Center. Weve done a lot of huge projects through the years. Ive put down a couple of hundred thousand yards of concrete over these years.

    Chris does 90% of his work himself, from excavation, prep and form and finishing. He only brings in help when he has to put concrete on the ground. He has been working on his own for four years and has not had anyone to help him.

    Its getting to the point where Im going to have to get the help, Chris said. You have to have work coming in behind you so you can pay these guys. Once you take someone, not only are they helping you out, theyre family. Not only are you paying them, you are taking care of their bills, their food and their babies formula and diapers. If you dont have work coming in and keep them on the payroll, what are they going to do? Whos to say what this next years going to hold? It could blow up for me and Id have to hire 10 men.

    Chris said that it take a special breed to work concrete.

    Anymore, you cant find anyone who wants to work, Chris said. Especially, a small business like myself. Thats another reason why I dont overbook, I dont know if I can find anybody to help. Then you get these guys who dont know what theyre doing, demanding $13-$14 per hour.

    If I had the right type of finishers, Im like dad in that Im not going to ask someone to do something I wouldnt do, while I still can. I need somebody who I can point to a job and tell them to get it started, so I can go sell jobs or get with a new employee who is green like I was. I had to learn on my own, sit back and watch these guys with 15-30 years experience. Walt would pull me to the side every now and then and ask Hey, do you understand what is going on? and explain the process.

    Chris said it took years of putting concrete on the ground and researching the product to get where he is today.

    When you finish concrete, 90 percent come into a place and finish, he said. You get it ready, you buy the materials. Im a turnkey, from prepping to site prep, excavation to cleanup of the site, I do it all. When I sell a job, I try to leave my job site the way it was, if not better. Thats kind of hard to do when youre in construction, especially a dirty job like this.

    If you can appease the customers from the get-go, that extra step will take you a long way, Chris said.

    Christian Brewer, Mr. Bs Home Improvement

    Unlike Chris, Christian deals with interior improvements, in particular kitchen and bathroom remodels.

    Ive been on my own for two years, Christian said. The first time I did it was with Dad (Chris).

    Christian got into home remodeling by accident.

    I was suspended from high school, he said. He took me to work and I realized that I didnt want to do concrete!

    Christian joined the military after high school and learned his work ethic from the military.

    It seems hereditary, which is a good thing, but the military got me straightened out, Christian said. When I got back, I worked for my grandfather in 2017. Its not that I didnt enjoy it, I wanted to do something that no one else was doing. I got into construction working for a Morristown company.

    Christian started working on a subdivision in Jefferson City.

    We did a little bit of everything, we laid tile, sheetrock, framing, some roofing, he said. Thats when I realized that there are no tile guys, anywhere. They had only one and he never showed up. The guy who taught me to do tile worked for the same company. Every once in a while, theyd have to do the tile. I got tired of working for them and not getting paid what youre worth. I decided to go out on my own and got into tile work.

    Christian has done a lot of interior remodeling, including roll-in showers for veterans.

    Thats where I really got into it and word got out, he said.

    Christian critiques every job to see where he can improve.

    I do mostly tile work, but I do just about anything, as long as it doesnt involve concrete, he said. Then Ill tell them to call Chris.

    All three help each other with business contacts because, after all, they are family.

    You have a guy who can build it, a guy who can do the heating and air and a guy who can do all of the concrete work, Mike said. You have everything you need, but the plumbing, and I can do that, too, but I dont push that.

    Mike and Linda will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary in May.

    She hadnt killed me yet, but shes threatened several times, Mike said.

    Go here to read the rest:
    The Power of Three: Home care across three generations - Citizentribune

    Holiday Home Makeover with Mr. Christmas is coming to Netflix tonight – Netflix Life

    - November 19, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    HOLIDAY HOME MAKEOVER WITH MR. CHRISTMAS - The Sosoo Familys decorated home from Episode 1 of HOLIDAY HOME MAKEOVER WITH MR. CHRISTMAS. CR. Courtesy of Netflix/NETFLIX 2020

    Its time to get out the tinsel and Christmas lights becauseHoliday Home Makeover with Mr. Christmas is coming to Netflix late-night tonight!

    This series is a must-see if you look forward to decorating your house for the holidays every year. As reported by House Beautiful,Holiday Home Makeover with Mr. Christmas centers on the talents ofinterior decorator Benjamin Bradley, also known as Mr. Christmas.

    Each episode of the series will follow Bradley as he gifts different families with a decorating extravaganza. Using his expertise as founder ofE & Co. Home Interiors and his love of the Christmas season, Benjamin Bradley is committed to spreading cheer. This series sounds like the perfect way to get excited for the holidays.

    According to IMDb, the first season of the holiday home makeover series will have four episodes.Bradley and a crew will only have two days to meet a family and redo their house! Since I have definitely not started my Christmas decorating, this show sounds like it will be great for inspiration!

    As previously told by Courier & Press,Holiday Home Makeover with Mr. Christmas was filmed last year. Each family featured on the show is hoping to have a special holiday. One family wants to have a memorable holiday before their daughter leaves for college, while another hopes to blendChristmas with Hanukkah in a dual celebration!

    You can watch the trailer forHoliday Home Makeover with Mr. Christmas below. Netflix has put out some great holiday content this year, including Dash & Lily and Holidate!

    Read more:
    Holiday Home Makeover with Mr. Christmas is coming to Netflix tonight - Netflix Life

    We needed this: Austin puts up Christmas lights early in 2020 – austin360

    - November 19, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Its not even Thanksgiving yet, but its beginning to look a lot like Christmas in Austin. With temperatures in the 80s and the calendar barely halfway through November, some Austinites might have noted a very merry trend: an uptick in early holiday decorations.

    Call it a coping mechanism, a nostalgic yearning for carefree childhood or a rush to show 2020 the door, but something is jolly in the capital of Texas. Calendar-checking Grinches who dictate that holiday decor shouldnt be displayed until after Thanksgiving will call it a fa-la-la faux pas. But not everyone buys into that thinking.

    "Its total B.S. Decorate whenever you want," said Maddy Braat, a participant in Austins fabled 37th Street neighborhood light display.

    While 37th Street residents have canceled this years display to protect the neighborhood's immunocompromised and elder residents from thousands of shoulder-to-shoulder revelers "Stay at your home, not ours," a digital flyer reads if there were an authority on the dos and donts of Austin holiday decor decorum, Braat and her neighbors might be it. Barring a few years in the mid-2000s, their weird, kaleidoscopic, DIY decoration extravaganzas have been a source of light and delight for Austinites going back to at least the 1980s.

    Braat and neighbor Robert Foster are part of the core group responsible for 37th Street decoration planning these days, which can begin as early as August. Like Braat, Foster shrugs off antiquated rules about when its appropriate to do something that makes you happy.

    "Its very literally some light at the darkest time of the year," Foster said. "It brings a little joy to the city when the suns going down at 6 p.m."

    Silent night on election night

    After anxiously poring over live election results as the polls closed on Nov. 3, Rebecca Rogers decided she had had enough. She took a break from the 24/7 news cycle and broke out the tree.

    "I turned off the news, turned on Christmas Vacation, and we put up our tree. I wanted to change the vibe, and it was the best," Rogers said. "Theres something to be said for anything that can bring any sort of joy and goodwill. Were all kind of clinging to that. Every layer of life feels a little uncertain right now."

    As for running afoul of those unwritten holiday decor rules, Rogers showed some Yuletide self-control. "We restrained ourselves to one tree for now," she said with a laugh, noting that a few other trees would be up before the turkey hits the table later in the month.

    RELATED: Up to some good: South Austin Harry Potter display benefits local nonprofits

    Rogers isnt alone in her embrace of holiday light lawlessness. Around East Austin, some homes had lights on display as early as March and July. She hopes others will continue to step up their holiday decorating game this season, as they did over Halloween. With two young children, its not just something to do; its a break from the monotony of pandemic life.

    "We spent the last month walking around looking at all the spiderwebs and Halloween decorations, because there were so many this year," she said. "We live for it. Its hard to drop into the Trail of Lights and Mozarts, so Im so happy our neighborhood can fill in that space."

    Quarantined at home for Christmas

    When Cristy Holmes husband was forced to quarantine after testing positive for COVID-19, she decided early November was a perfect time to deck the halls at her home in the Wooten neighborhood.

    "I needed something to do with the kids. There was this sudden feeling that we couldnt go anywhere for 14 days, so lets just put up the tree," she said. "Our house is pretty minimalist besides kids toys everywhere but now everything is so pretty and happy."

    Holmes and her two young children filled a weekend decorating the tree, baking holiday goodies and listening to Christmas music. Since then, her kids have moved on to making presents and cards and watching holiday movies.

    "Youre trying to find any bit of joy you can right now and make it as big as possible especially for the kids," Holmes said. "We cant do all the traditional things we might normally do. Were not having a big Christmas. We arent going on vacation. But the things we can do, were just trying to make super fun."

    As word got out that Holmes had put the familys tree up, friends and parents at her daughters school began to reach out, seemingly waiting to see if they could get the go-ahead to take the plunge themselves.

    "Because of coronavirus, people are just going for it. And why the heck not? I have friends who say it messes with Thanksgiving, but we have turkeys out next to our Christmas tree," she said. "I dont feel like were taking away from Thanksgiving; were just adding to the season."

    Skeletons, candy canes and Lisa Frank

    Ginger Snaps is a burlesque and aerial performer who lives in Windsor Park with her boyfriend, dogs and a skeleton named Steve. (Steve is a year-round bit of yard decor who currently is in the backyard dressed as a lifeguard for the hot tub. "He cant really blow the whistle, but hes got one," she said.)

    Needless to say, she is no stranger to decorating, but she typically holds until after Thanksgiving to do her holiday decorating. But when everything is out the window quite literally when many are only experiencing social interaction outside so go these rules.

    "None of these are actual steadfast rules. Decorate once Halloween is done. Its fair game," she said. "I came close to leaving some skeletons up and decorating them. But then I was afraid some small children might think it was a dead Santa or something."

    As her business has been slow due to the pandemics effect on live entertainment, Ginger Snaps said she decided to decorate early both as a creative outlet and a way to give a bit of joy back to the community.

    Her approach to decorating is big, bold, and colorful. "I grew up in the 90s and am a product of the Lisa Frank generation, so I come from the school of more color is better. I try to get in as much color as possible," she said.

    RELATED: Shop Second Street, Tarrytown for Austins holiday window displays

    Around her neighborhood, Ginger Snaps reported seeing more Halloween decorations than usual, but she hasnt noticed more holiday decor just yet.

    "Im waiting to see if I'm going to be so obnoxious that my neighbors will dislike me, or (if) I will encourage them," she said. "Its a great way to interject a little fun into every day. Its cheerful to look out your window. And I know the neighborhood kids really love it. Over Halloween, I would find free-range children in the yard playing with skeletons. Now I made a fence with candy canes, just to keep them from tripping on the cords."

    While the experience for many over the past year has been especially isolating, she said small things like decorations have brought the block together.

    "I feel more connected with the community here now. Everyone is more talkative," she said. "I tend to be shy around people I dont know, but we see the same people stopping by and we start talking."

    Yule rules out the window

    In some neighborhoods, as the gap between holiday decorations has gone the way of Frosty the Snowman on a sunny day, its not uncommon to spy some Halloween decorations on display next to wintertime standards. In Hyde Park, hairstylist and interior decorator Ryan Van Horn-Zakotnik said hes seen a front yard with zombies lingering next to sparkly holiday lights dangling from eaves.

    Like many, Van Horn-Zakotnik has long stuck to the traditional "decorations go up after Thanksgiving" rule, but he decided to put up decorations two weeks earlier this year and is expanding his decor repertoire to include some menorahs.

    "I say do it if it makes you happy," he said. "We have COVID fatigue, and were bored. We all need a little extra sparkle."

    Van Horn-Zakotnik has already made multiple runs to stockpile garlands and other decor, but theres one holiday line hes not willing to cross just yet. "I havent started Christmas music yet," he said. "I put my foot down there."

    A feel-good expenditure

    Its not just Austin homes that are getting in on the act earlier than ever. The Austin Trail of Lights has expanded its run, starting almost two weeks earlier than normal this year its a drive-thru and opens on Nov. 27. Meanwhile, Mozarts Coffee Roasters long-running Lake Austin light-and-sound show began on Nov. 11.

    But these arent the only operations seeing an earlier-than-usual spike in holiday spirit. Craig Robinson owns Can You Hang, a decoration installation company that serves Central Austin and the area toward Lakeway. He received his first call of the year on Oct. 3, and his phone hasnt stopped ringing since.

    "Were seeing probably double the call volume we were seeing at this time last year," he said. "People arent going to Cancun for Christmas; theyre staying home, and they really want to do it up."

    RELATED: Watch Austin A Charlie Brown Christmas concert for free next month

    Robinson said the increased drive to decorate in tough times doesnt come as too much of a surprise, given what hes seen in his 16 years in business. During the financial crisis of 2007 and 2008, he prepared himself for business to dry up, only to see it flourish and grow year over year.

    "Its a feel-good expenditure," he said. "People are looking to create some joy in the muck for something positive to end the year. I think everyone is over 2020."

    Cheer is contagious, and it sure beats yard signs

    For 2021, Foster and Braat hope to bring the 37th Street lights back and bigger than ever. In the meantime, theyre serving as ambassadors and advisers on Austin-style holiday decorating. Theyre encouraging other streets to rise up and create their own hyper-local bubbles of holiday decoration and go bigger and weirder than before.

    Besides the spectacle of pretty shiny things that are pleasant to look at, Foster believes coming together around something as simple as decorating can have a massive impact on the atmosphere of a neighborhood.

    37th Street "is one of those streets where you can just walk into a neighbors house and grab a cup of sugar. You get to know your neighbors well," he said. "Its very Mister Rogers Neighborhood-feeling at times."

    For others looking to take up the merrymaking mantle, Foster said 37th Streets approach involves gauging interest via flyers and organizing a meeting for all interested residents both of which can be done without having to meet face to face. They then figure out how homes might work together on larger, lot-spanning elements and share tools like ladders, jigsaws and multimeters to make it easier for neighbors to execute plans without spending a fortune at the hardware store.

    Most who are in on the early decorating game agree theres a social pressure around decorating whether its keeping the lights in the attic until after Thanksgiving Day or the domino effect created when one house decorates. Holiday cheer (at least the type expressed through outward displays) is contagious, it seems.

    Robinson said social pressure actually drives much of Can You Hangs decoration installation business. "People think, I dont want to look like a Scrooge if everyone else is doing it," he said.

    Ginger Snaps said shes noticed how one house going all out can create a playful competition that leads to more lights. "Its like this silent battle," she said. "We just finished the silent battle of political signs, so I feel like we can roll it over to a silent battle of lights."

    Living room escapism

    Whether youre bah humbug-ing these harbingers of the holiday season or welcoming them with wide eyes, if nothing else, it gives us a topic for a good-spirited, low-stakes debate the sort of discussion about as weighty as whether we should brush our teeth before or after breakfast. (After, you monsters.)

    But whatever side you fall on, Election Day tree-putter-upper Rogers makes a compelling case against wagging fingers at those who jump the gun on the holidays this year.

    "We shouldnt be shaming anyone for decorating or turning on Christmas music in October especially this year. Were tired. Its been a slog, and I think I kind of hate my house the more I sit in it," Rogers said. "Celebrate how you want to celebrate and when you want to celebrate. Zero regrets. Just do it. It was a total game-changer for our brains a little escapism in the living room."

    Read the original post:
    We needed this: Austin puts up Christmas lights early in 2020 - austin360

    Delhiwale: The tea house of the poets – Hindustan Times

    - November 19, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Old Delhis tea stalls make very milky and sweet chai. The venerable Modern Tea Stall with its not-so-modern wooden chairs and chipped china is different. Its tea is dark and kadak (strong). Founded in 1967, this atmospheric destination on Haveli Azam Khan street was lying shuttered since the coronavirus-triggered lockdown in March. It reopened a month ago.

    Before the pandemic changed the texture of everyday routines, some of the areas distinguished verse writers would gather in the tea house every evening (see photo) to chat about the latest trends in contemporary Urdu poetryas well as gossip about the private life of the poets. Indeed, the daily soires of these faithful attendees were a most convenient gateway for an outsider to experience the Walled Citys vibrant hyperlocal literary scene. The eminences included poet and publisher Munir Hamdam of Turkman Gate Mohalla, (late) poet Rauf Raza of Chitli Qabar who made his living as an interior decorator, journalist Javed Mushiri of Ballimaran, poet Javed Niyazi of Kucha Rohilla Khan who runs a rubber business and poet Iqbal Firdausi of Baradari who manages a small factory of musical instruments such as drum sets and harmonium parts.

    These days the tea house remains silent. Just like the grave man at the counter, who has an eerily quiet temperament. Dressed in white kurta, pyjama and topi, Muhammed Khaleel sits on a throne-like chair placed at the entrance, occasionally jotting on his notepad. This is hisaab (balance sheets), not shayiri (poetry), he clarifies.

    Open by 7am, the tea house offers relaxing distractions. Those with a fascination for old objects might be mildly enchanted by an aged wall-clock. Or perhaps by the once-white tiles on the walls whose current shade resembles the yellowing pages of old musty hardbounds. Faded posters of famous Sufi shrines too draw attention. The tea house would stay open until about midnight with the aforementioned poets as its last customers. Thats how it used to be in the Before Corona, or BC, era. These days the poets dont show up, and the place shuts by 8pm latest.

    Link:
    Delhiwale: The tea house of the poets - Hindustan Times

    Maharashtra police interrogate Republic TV CFO in connection with 2018 suicide case only 2 days after Arnab Goswami was released from Taloja jail -…

    - November 19, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Continuing their witch-hunt against Republic Media Network, the Raigad Police on Friday questioned Republic TVs Chief Financial Officer (CFO) S Sundaram in connection to the 2018 suicide case of interior decorator Anvay Naik, only two days after editor-in-chief Arnab Goswami was released from Taloja jail.

    According to the reports, the Raigad Police had earlier summoned S Sundaram for questioning him in the 2018 suicide case. The summons to Republic TV CFO comes two days after Republic TV editor-in-chief Arnab Goswami was granted interim bail in the same case by the Supreme Court.

    Reportedly, Raigad police had summoned Sundaram after Arnab Goswami had allegedly said that making payments on behalf of the company was the job of the CFO. Accordingly, the police officials have issued summons to him and asked him to appear before them on Friday.

    The officer said they will scrutinise the financial records of the accused. A few more persons will be issued summons in the coming days, the officer said, adding that they will also audit more financial records before filing a charge-sheet in the matter.

    On Wednesday, a Supreme Court bench comprising of Justice Chandrachud and Justice Indu Malhotra hearing the petition said that Bombay High Court made an error in rejecting the application for grant of interim bail on technical grounds. Granting the bail to Arnab Goswami, the apex court alsodirectedthe Raigad police to ensure the compliance of the order of release of Arnab Goswami forthwith.

    The Supreme Court also asked Arnab Goswami and two other accused to execute a personal bond for an amount of Rs 50,000 for release on interim bail.

    Justice Chandrachud, hearing the plea had made scathing observations saying, If we dont interfere in this case today we will walk on path of destruction. If left to me I wont watch the channel and you may differ in ideology butConstitutional courts will have to protect such freedoms.

    Arnab wasarrestedlast week by the Mumbai Police after it had reopened 2018 abatement of the suicide case of an architect, Anvay Naik. On the 4th of November, 15-20 policemen armed with assault weapons and led by encounter cop Sachin Vaze had stormed into the house of Arnab Goswami and dragged him out. The 2018 case has been unilaterally opened against after it was closed in 2019 at the behest of the Home Minister of Maharashtra, Anil Deshmukh.

    Continued here:
    Maharashtra police interrogate Republic TV CFO in connection with 2018 suicide case only 2 days after Arnab Goswami was released from Taloja jail -...

    Dramas that will help you forget about your ex – Somag News

    - November 19, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Dramas that will help you get over your ex, forget about broken hearts with these series that will distract you with their stories.

    Love is one of the most complicated things in life, Korean entertainment has often been inspired by this feeling to create various plots that make us cry and fall in love with the characters. The pain of a broken heart is something we all experience at some point in our life, these stories will help you overcome that love break.

    If you need to cry or be distracted by stories that help you believe in love again and show that there are many things to be happy about, these Korean dramas are for you. With genres like science fiction, comedy, medicine, romance and even poems, these plots will make you forget about your excrush.

    There are characters who must go through some adversities to fulfill their dreams or to overcome past pain, also who fight against everything to be happy with the people they love. Even if you have lost a love, remember that it is a new opportunity to meet someone new, who values you and reciprocates you, our hearts can love another person despite being broken by the wrong boy.

    Build your marathon and enjoy these Korean dramas.

    You can also see doramas inspired by the fall-winter season.

    Year 2014Starring: Jo In Sung and Gong Hyo JinWhere to watch: Netflix, Viki

    First psychiatric drama that tells the life of a girl who is an intern in a university hospital, whose life changes when she meets a famous writer who suffers from obsessive compulsive neurosis disorder. The plot aims to portray the reality of people suffering from a mental illness.

    Year: 2017Starring: Lee Jun Ho and Won Jin AhWhere to watch: Viki

    Romance drama that intertwines the lives of two people who met through an accident, years later, they meet again, but they will have to deal with the wounds of their past before giving way to their feelings.

    Year: 2018Starring: Lee Yoo Bi, Lee Joon Hyuk, and Jang Dong YoonWhere to see: Dramas Releases

    Romance medical drama that narrates the life of a group of hospital workers who deal with the situations of daily life, but in each episode a poem is revealed that will make you feel warm when you see the story and will make you forget the ugly of love relationships.

    Year: 2017Starring: Yoon Si Yoon Kim Min JaeWhere to watch: Viki

    Youth romance drama that tells the life of two boys, one of them is a famous idol who suddenly disappears, the other is a young aspiring public servant. Your path will cross and it could change your life.

    Year: 2018Starring: Bona and Ha Suk JinWhere to watch: Viki

    Comedy drama that tells the life of a boy who learns to deal with the chaos of life, if you go through a love break this drama is for you, because the protagonist is like an interior decorator, nothing better than a renovation to leave behind the pain. In the plot, you will meet a girl who works in a real estate agency.

    Year: 2016Starring: Lee Jong Suk andWhere to watch: Viki

    Science fiction drama that tells the life of a girl who is a doctor, is the daughter of the author of W, a very famous webtoon, whose main character is Kang Chul, but whose destiny is about to end. However, she manages to travel to the alternate world and saves him, both will have to find out what is happening.

    Year: 2015Starring: Lee Dong Wook and Jung Ryu WonWhere to watch: Viki

    Romance drama that narrates the life of a group of inmates in a hospital and the workers of a radio station, who learn to enjoy life and be happy despite adversity, each of them suffers from some deficiency. Even if broken hearts hurt, there are better things to fight for.

    Continue reading here:
    Dramas that will help you forget about your ex - Somag News

    14 Times Beautiful Tiles Appear in the AD Archive – Architectural Digest

    - November 19, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The Molyneux-Designed Garret That Merited Its Own Feature

    Since the Revolution, when the building was confiscated and sold off in pieces, it has been mistreated legendary designer Juan Pablo Molyneux said to Architectural Digest in September 2007 of his 17th-century Marais-set manse. My contribution has been to restore that missing respect. The story of that effort got an importantand romanticnew chapter when Molyneux decided to restore its habitable attic into a surprise for his wife, Pilar.

    Ultimately, he drew inspiration for the Delft tilecovered space from the Menshikov Palace in St. Petersburg, Russia. When I brought Pilar to visit the Menshikov for the first time, the experience was moving for both of us, he said. I wanted her to understand the happinessthe revelation of beautythat I had there as a boy of 19. My travels have always been a source of inspiration, and I filed away my first impression of those marvelous rooms with an intuition that one day I would have the opportunity to design something in the same style. And he certainly did. But because of his unique approach to curating the space, it pays homage to its model. Yet its totally Parisian.

    The title of the article that first featured this image was Sleeping Beauty.

    A Los Angeles Bathroom That Thinks All Pink

    We had to replace the existing tile because the plumbing had damaged everything, Clara Yust told Architectural Digest of her home bathroom in February 2005. But it was dark brown, and I didnt like it anyway. The pink tiles seen here, which cover every surface of the room, were carved from rosa portogallo salmone marble. Throughout the rest of the Los Angeles home, which was first built in 1920 and had long been coveted by Yust, original details remain. The pendant light fixture is made of Murano glass.

    Home is where the tiled hearth is.

    A Sunny Room With a Tiled Fireplace

    A yellow and purple-blue color paletteand one that features tiles to bootmight conjure a mental image of a cheerful kitchen. But here, in a home featured in the August 1995 issue of Architectural Digest, such a scheme was used to add great panache to a special living room. The furniture seen here, as well as the large cast-iron vase, are by Jay Griffith. A Carolyn Ferris graphite portrait of William S. Burroughs, made in the same year that this interior was featured, perches above the asymmetrical fireplace.

    To access the full AD archive, subscribe to AD PRO.

    View post:
    14 Times Beautiful Tiles Appear in the AD Archive - Architectural Digest

    Iconic Victorian in Tremont asks $750,000: House of the Week – cleveland.com

    - November 19, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    CLEVELAND, Ohio -- If youve ever been to Taste of Tremont, the Tremont Farmers Market, or frequented the nearby restaurants and bars, youre undoubtedly familiar with the red-brick Victorian on the southeast corner of Lincoln Park.

    Built in 1870, the home has been carefully restored and thoughtfully renovated over the years, most recently by the current owner, Stephen Harrison.

    This home is one of those treasures that just loves you back, says Harrison, the curator of decorative art and design at the Cleveland Museum of Art.

    On the market for the first time since 2009, 1103 Starkweather Ave. has 3-bedrooms and 3.5 bathrooms in 2,578-sq. ft. The asking price is $750,000.

    The house transports you back in time with its many original decorative elements such as 12-foot ceilings, huge plaster moldings, arched pocket doors in original finish, wooden floors throughout, carved wooden doors, and a curving staircase with original banister, Howard Hannas Chris Davidson writes in his listing.

    He says Harrison worked with architect David Ellison and interior decorator Thomas Lee Randleman on an extensive redesign. Changes include converting a small bedroom upstairs into a gracious bath and laundry room to complete the master suite, which now also boasts a cedar closet. They also enlarged the side porch to be a more versatile space for dining and relaxing. Built-in bookshelves were added to the library.

    The result was an outstanding residential preservation award from the Cleveland Restoration Society in 2014.

    Practical improvements have brought the home to todays standards, too. They include a new roof and high-capacity hot-water heater in 2018, HVAC systems in 2005 (upstairs) and 2010 (downstairs), and updated electrical throughout in 2000.

    This is Tremonts most iconic and recognizable home, Davidson says.

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    See the full listing here

    Address: 1103 Starkweather Ave.

    City: Cleveland

    Price: $750,000

    Size: 2,578 square feet

    Lot: 5,872 square feet

    Year built: 1870

    No. bedrooms: 3

    No. bathrooms: 3 full, 1 half

    School district: Cleveland Municipal School District

    Real estate agent and contact info: Chris Davidson, Howard Hanna

    e: chrisdavidson@howardhanna.com

    p: 440-263-2669

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    The 3-bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, 2,578-sq. ft. home at 1103 Starkweather Ave. in Tremont was built in 1870. (Photo: Bill Berris)

    For more information on 1103 Starkweather Ave., contact Chris Davidson, Howard Hanna at chrisdavidson@howardhanna.com or 440-263-2669.

    Renovated 1910 colonial revival in Cleveland Heights asks $675K

    Mid-century modern in Bentleyville asks $899K

    1929 Shaker Heights mansion will take you back in time for $2.75M

    Classic 1930s stone colonial in Shaker Heights asks $1M

    1870 Victorian in Chagrin Falls historic district asks $1.795M

    Waterfront home in Rocky River offers amazing views, lake access

    Grand Victorian in Ohio City was built by Clevelands mayor in 1872

    Modern brownstone on former site of historic church asks $725,000

    Kirtland Hills home is truly presidential with Oval Office replica

    One of the last remaining great lakefront estates in Euclid asks $1.2M

    Originally posted here:
    Iconic Victorian in Tremont asks $750,000: House of the Week - cleveland.com

    Hollywood Regency Is That Glamorous Style Youve Been Trying to Pinpoint – Yahoo Entertainment

    - November 19, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Youve noticed it for years now: that style that mixes leopard print with glitzy chandeliers, mirrored finishes with curved velvet couches. Its simultaneously Old World Hollywood and yet still of-the-moment, but you just havent been able to put your finger on what it is, exactly. Well, were here to tell you that youve been drooling over Hollywood Regency, a style most commonly associated with interior design, furniture, and landscape architecture that comes out of the 1930s Golden Age of Hollywood.

    Indeed, the origins of the style can be traced to the silver screens themselves, as actors and actresses grew accustomed to the shiny materials and traditionally-inspired furniture they found on set that created the lavish scenes of their wealthy characters. Set designs emphasized pieces that showed well on camera because of their dramatic surfaces, attention to detail, contrasting of patterns and textiles, and creation of light and dark that could be captured in black and white. Soon, designers of the stars found themselves recreating the opulence of the screen in real life for their clients.

    Among those at the forefront of Hollywood Regency were interior designers like Dorothy Draper, who rose to prominence in the 1920s and 1930s after decorating some of the major hotels and apartment buildings in New York City, Chicago, and San Francisco. Her signature style focused on dramatic color schemes often with shiny black ceilings or black-and-white patterned flooring along with a profusion of mirrors, floral textiles, and green woodwork.

    Other designers who had a serious impact on the style were William Billy Haines, a former actor-turned-decorator to the stars, and Paul R. Williams, a noted African American architect whose client roster included the likes of Frank Sinatra, Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, Barbara Stanwyck, and more. While Haines, working with his life partner James Jimmie Haines, consistently created designs that fit the high-profile lives of their clients like Joan Crawford, Williams worked in a range of styles and project types. But for his high-end clientele, Williams often produced grand homes that combined the traditional elements of Classical design but slimmed them down, simplifying the ornament to give them a sleek, modern edge.

    Story continues

    And this combination of traditional and modern continued, borrowing elements and characteristics from several different periods (including the English Regency, which lent part of its name to the new style), but incorporating unexpected color combinations, new materials, geometric patterns, and lots of eye-catching, glamorous textiles and finishes. Think of the glamour of Art Deco materials and simplified lines, but with the eclecticism of an antiques dealer and the maximalism of a movie star.

    Like any trend, though, as time went on, the style evolved, too. As historically-inspired styles waned in the 1950s and 1960s and gave way to the International Style and midcentury modernism, Hollywood Regency stayed strong, but took on more modern forms, incorporating more contemporary color palettes and patterns including jewel tones and geometric motifs. It also embraced newer materials like lucite in combination with old classics like shiny brass or glossy lacquer, all while keeping true to its origins rooted in old school glamour and glitz.

    Thinking about incorporating Hollywood Regency into your own home? Take a look at some celebrity homes that continue to seek out this now-classic California style for their own spaces, and see if you can find any inspiration for yourself.

    Launch Gallery: Hollywood Regency Is That Glamorous Style You've Been Trying To Pinpoint

    More from Variety

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    Hollywood Regency Is That Glamorous Style Youve Been Trying to Pinpoint - Yahoo Entertainment

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