Home Staging

Home Staging Toronto – Toronto Home Staging Blog

How to decorate with purple and plum

Posted by StagingWorks on December 22nd, 2011

The article below by Marta Gold was published in The Victoria Times Colonist on December 10, 2011.

This colour calls for discretion

Colour is a great way to brighten your home and add a spark of interest without undertaking a major renovation. But what colour?

At first blush, decorating with purple seems a daring move, best made by those with wild, animal-print rugs or exotic tapestries hanging on their walls.

But purple, in its varying shades and mixed with other colours, can be in turn conservative, contemporary and, yes, bold.

Rest assured, in any and all of its forms from lavender to eggplant, purple is popping up everywhere.

“Definitely this fall, the colour purple is really strong,” says Alana Schilf, owner of Inspired Home Interiors, where purple is visible in the barest hint of a not-quite-clear acrylic ghost chair, or the bolder shade of a boxy, upholstered chair.

The store even has a plum-coloured sectional sofa on order for its showroom, but that’s about as daring as most people will go with bigger pieces of furniture, says Schilf.

“Mostly we see it in smaller pieces and accessories like toss cushions,” she says.

Som Sourachit, owner of Posh at Home, says purple accents are a great way to add colour to a room. “We love colour here. We push for the daring,” she adds.

“I’ve noticed that a lot more people are more daring with colours right now, which is great. We need a dash of colour in our life.”

True colour thrill-seekers are mixing purple and pink, she says. Another great combination is purple and yellow.

White, too, fits easily into the mix. Add it and light grey to purple for a more contemporary feel, Sourachit says.

Schilf likes the combination of purple with black, or, unexpectedly, with brownygold shades.

“If you look toward nature, mountains are grey, but there’s also gold and other colours in the stone,” she says.

Using more natural tones mixed with greyish purples is a good way to prevent purple from becoming too garish, she adds.

Sourachit also likes to soften purple with a neutral. “If you have a stronger purple or a brighter purple, definitely grey will tone it down,” she advises. Those with more conservative tastes could try a grey sofa, add a purple throw and use an area rug in shades of grey and purple. “That doesn’t yell out purple too much, and then when you change it, all you have to do is change the throw and possibly change the area rug, too.”

Brighter purples should be reserved for accents such as bits of a rug, drapes or cushions, she adds. For example, the lighter purple drapes shown above, from Posh, along with splashes of purple and yellow in the throw cushions, brighten an otherwise neutral decor and are easy to switch with changing tastes.


Independent of market conditions, home staging is a highly effective marketing tool used to maximize the selling price of Toronto area homes and condos.

StagingWorks is the premier Toronto home staging company. We provide a complete range of professional services which include vacant home staging, occupied home staging and condo staging. We have staging packages to accommodate most budgets and serve Toronto, GTA and surrounding areas.

Please visit our home staging portfolio for more samples of our staging projects. Give us some some details on your home and when you’re planning to sell, and get a free home staging estimate. Or, call us for a free estimate at (647) 409-2091 or anne@StagingWorks.ca.

StagingWorks has been voted Toronto’s top home stager by Toronto Life.

Best of the City Toronto Home Staging

Home Staging Toronto - Facebook

Please take 60 second to complete our poll on the left side of the screen.


Popularity: 18% [?]

Avoid top five home buying errors, Ontario Realtors advise

Posted by StagingWorks on December 22nd, 2011

The following article from OREA was published in Canada NewsWire on December 13, 2011.

As housing market increases homebuyers need to be informed about costly oversights

According to a recent RBC report, the number of homes for sale in Ontario is on the rise and affordability province-wide is stable. The rush to buy with more available homes on the market could mean more mistakes made by consumers.

A panel of experts from the Ontario Real Estate Association (OREA) board of directors advises against making hasty or uninformed choices by avoiding five common errors:

1. Not knowing what you can afford
Barbara Sukkau, president of OREA and a Realtor based in St. Catharines, says that mistakes made in a competitive environment can be costly and restrict lifestyle choices.

“Many people don’t know that there’s an easy way to calculate how much house they can afford to determine, regardless of competing bids, what lifestyle they want to maintain within the market,” says Sukkau. “In addition to the cost of the home, potential buyers should consider the land transfer tax, closing costs, moving costs and leave room for any unforeseen extras.”

In fact, Realtors often use a calculation called the Gross Debt Service Ratio. Sukkau explains how to calculate what you can afford at http://bit.ly/OREAaffordabilty.

2. Not preparing your finances, or getting pre-approved
“Many sellers will require a potential buyer to get pre-approved. When there are competing bids on the house of your dreams, pre-approval could give you the edge,” says Patricia Verge, OREA board member working out of Ottawa.

“Pre-approval can take up to a few days after you provide your bank with things like verification of income and down payment,” Verge adds.

If a buyer meets the lender’s requirements, then written confirmation of pre-approval will be provided. According to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, this pre-approval is time sensitive and is not a guarantee of receiving a mortgage loan.

Verge also cautions buyers against using their pre-approval as a final budget. “Potential buyers should balance their debt load and other financial commitments with what the bank is willing to lend,” she says.

3. Not knowing your must-haves
Tom Lebour, OREA board member working out of Mississauga, notes that his clients aren’t always sure about what they’re looking for.

“Clients often fail to consider what amenities are in the neighbourhood they’re looking to buy in, especially when relocating from the city to the suburbs. How ‘walkable’ is a neighbourhood to places like grocery stores, schools and banks? This feature is important to many homebuyers, but they can fail to think about it in the excitement about the number of bathrooms a house has. Create a list by thinking about a day in your life and the various things important to you and your family.”

4. Not getting a home inspection
“I always advise buyers to have their own home inspection done, even if the seller offers the results of a previous inspection and even if others are keen to put in an offer,” says Phil Dorner, OREA board member working out of Belle River.

“Ensure that you have a qualified and bonded home inspector perform a full inspection as part of your offer. An investment of a few hundred dollars could save you thousands down the road.”

5. Getting emotions involved in negotiations
Buyers and sellers will often let their emotions get the best of them, says Mike Douglas, OREA board member from Barrie.

“Emotions can get in the way of negotiations because sellers inadvertently assign real value to their memories, which don’t hold financial value for the buyer. We do our best to help our clients keep their emotions out of the equation,” Douglas says.


Independent of market conditions, home staging is a highly effective marketing tool used to maximize the selling price of Toronto area homes and condos.

StagingWorks is the premier Toronto home staging company. We provide a complete range of professional services which include vacant home staging, occupied home staging and condo staging. We have staging packages to accommodate most budgets and serve Toronto, GTA and surrounding areas.

Please visit our home staging portfolio for more samples of our staging projects. Give us some some details on your home and when you’re planning to sell, and get a free home staging estimate. Or, call us for a free estimate at (647) 409-2091 or anne@StagingWorks.ca.

StagingWorks has been voted Toronto’s top home stager by Toronto Life.

Best of the City Toronto Home Staging

Home Staging Toronto - Facebook

Please take 60 second to complete our poll on the left side of the screen.


Popularity: 19% [?]

Ty Pennington offers tips on personalizing your space

Posted by StagingWorks on February 14th, 2010

Ty Pennington

StagingWorks provides a full selection of professional home staging services for Toronto and GTA sellers.  Visit our home staging portfolio for sample of our work.

Not planning on moving, StagingWorks provides a full range of interior styling services for home owners looking to update of upgrade their current space.

Ty Pennington of “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition” will be a celebrity guest presenter at the National Home Show on February 19th.  Below is a recent article from the Toronto Star.

February 12, 2010 (Toronto Star Article – Ryan Starr)

Ty Pennington reckons he could beat Mike Holmes in an arm wrestle.

Pennington might be a tad smaller than the formidable host of Holmes on Homes – whose big guns are recognizable to avid HGTV viewers – but the peppy front-man of Extreme Makeover: Home Edition insists muscles aren’t everything.

“What a lot of people don’t understand about the strength of an arm is that it’s not in the muscle, it’s in the tendons,” Pennington jokes over the phone from California. “I’m scrawny, but I’ve got a lot of strength in my tendons. So yeah, I could possibly win.”

Pennington will be in Toronto next week. Unfortunately, he won’t be here to go arm to arm with Canada’s beefy home improvement icon.

Instead he’ll be a celebrity guest presenter at the National Home Show, Feb. 19-28 at the Direct Energy Centre at Exhibition Place.

The event will feature more than 700 home and garden specialists offering handy advice and solutions for whatever projects homeowners might be planning for this year.

Pennington, who is slated to appear Friday, Feb. 19 (at 2 p.m. and at 6 p.m.), will cover a variety of topics during his presentation, helping attendees to map out their very own home makeovers.

Among other things, he’ll talk about how to personalize a room by using your own story as a source of inspiration.

“It’s becoming the kind of world where you walk into a home and it looks like the same furniture that the person two doors down bought from the same place,” Pennington says.

“It’s really important to personalize your home, whether it’s colours or textures that define your personality, or artwork that’s made out of pieces of instruments, which says that you play music, for example.

“So when you walk in, you can immediately feel the people who live there.”

Pennington will also discuss photography and how it can help add unique touches to a space.

“The camera has really become my favourite tool,” he says. “It’s everything to me. I use it to shoot nature: trees, flowers; things that give me inspiration to design.

“It’s about human nature, too,” he adds. “You can capture a moment and a person’s expression and you can bring that into a home and it adds life.”

In keeping with the spirit of the times, Pennington will talk about how to incorporate green elements into a home’s design.

“I think all home-product manufacturers are starting to realize that sustainability is a huge thing,” he says. “Bamboo flooring, concrete countertops, recycled stones – there are so many things out there now you can put into your home that aren’t damaging to the planet.”

The home has become a far more important place during the economic downturn, Pennington notes.

“(The recession) has definitely changed the way people look at their homes. Instead of just trying to fix up kitchens and bathrooms to turn around and sell, now it’s more about how do we make this work for us as a family?

“It’s all about personalizing; going for the ultimate game room because you’re going to be entertaining more at home. Or converting rooms – formal dining rooms are turning into offices or into spare bedrooms because you’re bringing in extra family members.”

Can anybody tackle a do-it-yourself project?

“I think everyone has the ability to do cosmetic redesigns: colour, texture or things that go on the walls,” Pennington says.

“But when it comes to the major stuff like plumbing and electrical, it’s best to leave those jobs to the professionals. You might learn a lot in the process (if you DIY), but chances are you end up paying twice because you have to fix the damage you did.”

Extreme Makeover: Home Edition, the popular ABC reality television series in which Pennington and his crew renovate homes for families in need, is currently in its seventh season.

Pennington admits playing host can be emotionally and physically draining, given the amount of travel involved in taping two shows in different locations at the same time.

“Being able to pull this thing off is pretty remarkable,” he says. “I think you have to be cut out for it, and you have to enjoy the gypsy life, because you’re on the road 300 days of the year.

“You sort of have to give up your home life to make sure that other people have a home life. I mean, I don’t even have a dog.”

The gratification outweighs the hardships in the end, though.

“The best part is knowing that the work you do has changed someone’s life; that it really does make a difference,” he says. “So it’s worth putting your life on hold for a bit.”

Pennington has been to Toronto once before, to tape the short-lived television series Wild Card.

“I was only there for a day and a half,” he says. “It’s so awesome – I’m excited about going back. It’s like going to Europe.”

This last comment draws a poorly contained snicker from his interviewer.

“You’re laughing,” Pennington says, “but there are some aspects of it that are very … well, it’s different from the States. It’s cool.”

For more show information, visit www.nationalhomeshow.com.

Popularity: 82% [?]

Following through on New Year’s resolutions for your home

Posted by StagingWorks on January 22nd, 2010

Some of us are still working on our resolutions for 2010.  Below is a good article on how to follow through on your home resolutions.

If you’re planning on updating the look of your current home or condo, StagingWorks has a complete range of interior styling services to accommodate most budgets.

If you’re planning on selling this year, ensure your home shows to its full potential.  StagingWorks offers a complete range of professional home staging services.

How to Follow Through on Home Resolutions

Toronto Star article (Melissa Rayworth)

It’s the season for resolutions, and for many people that means vowing to get their home in the best shape possible.

Whether it’s clearing out clutter, catching up on small repairs, bringing fresh style to a favourite room or organizing closets, many of us have home on the brain as the new year begins.

For interior designers, “the phone rings in January, after the holidays,” says Betsy Burnham, founder and principal designer at Burnham Design and Instant Space in Los Angeles. “People take stock and make resolutions. People get motivated, which is great.”

But how can you make sure those resolutions stick, and turn into real results?

Burnham and fellow interior designers Taniya Nayak, host of HGTV’s Destination Design, premiering in March, and Brian Patrick Flynn of TBS’ Movie and a Makeover offer strategies:

Think It Through


You may be feeling inspired to jump into projects right away, but these designers recommend taking time to think and plan.

Burnham suggests spending a weekend leafing through design magazines. Tear out photos of things you love, creating a stack of tearsheets that show what you really want your space to look like. “Any of your rooms can look like any of those rooms,” Burnham says, if you take the time to determine what you like and how to make it happen on your budget.

Flynn recommends searching your home for small spaces that aren’t being used well. Take a look at alcoves and corners of rooms, then brainstorm new uses for them. Nayak suggests photographing each room, then looking at the images as if the home belongs to someone else. You’ll view familiar spaces differently, with fresh eyes, she says.

Next, make a list of the jobs you really want to get to this year and determine the first steps you need to take for each. Schedule those first steps and gather any necessary tools or supplies. “You need to mentally prepare. Tell yourself, “OK, Saturday’s the day,’” and then don’t make any other plans,” Nayak says. “The more things you do to prepare, the more invested you are in making it happen.”

Not everything must be done in the first months of the year, say Burnham, but it’s important to set things in motion. “Think about timing,” she says. “Are your kids going to camp this summer, and would that be a great time to have a bit of upset around your house?”

In planning, Burnham says, “Be realistic. Try saying, ‘I’m gonna make sense out of my hall closet today,’ instead of saying, ‘I’m going to do all my closets today.’  If I say, ‘I’m going to redo this bathroom, that may not happen. But if I say, ‘I’m going to start by measuring, then I’m going to interview contractors,’ that gets done.”

Small Changes That Bring Fresh Style


If your resolution is to bring new style to your space, says Flynn, there are small changes you can make that will instantly freshen any room.

Start, he says, by pulling out unframed pieces of art or things that need new frames: “Yes, framing can be expensive and you may think, ‘Why am I putting money into something I already own?’ But right now, you’re not using it,” he says. “Take it to be framed, then when you get it back, next thing you know you’re finishing rooms because you’re so excited about the art.”

Try swapping the art in one room with art in another. Experiment with mixing styles. You can always move things back if you don’t love the new combinations.

“Redo your surfaces,” says Burnham. “Take everything off your coffee table, all the pretties, then rearrange. Move books, boxes, collections to new spots.” Also, she says, go through frames to update family pictures. Flynn also recommends adding trays and baskets to organize and coordinate loose items.

Another quick infusion of fresh style for the new year: Nayak suggests spray-painting old furniture and frames in new colours. Her current favourite: Paint ornate frames and traditional wooden pieces in fresh white lacquer. It can be done in one day with little expense.

Staying On Task


To keep on schedule, commit to deadlines: Plan a home decor swap or holiday decoration swap with friends, Nayak says. If you have plans to trade stuff on a given date, you’re going to actually go through your home and weed out what you don’t want anymore. It’s also environmentally friendly and affordable.

Another great motivator: Plan a party. “My living room doesn’t get touched until I have a party planned. Then, something gets done,” says Burnham. “You’re probably not going to do it if you guys are hanging around in your pyjamas. But if people are coming over … It just works like that.”

Figure out the obstacles to doing what you want and find ways around them. Dreading decluttering and reorganizing your kitchen? Merge your desire to get healthy or lose weight with the desire to de-clutter and organize your kitchen. Use one resolution to help you stick to the other, says Nayak.

Outside Assistance


Spending money on help from a contractor or handyman may seem like a splurge, but an expert may be able to accomplish in a single day projects that would take you weeks. And a professional may be necessary to get the look you want.

Finally, keep expectations realistic. Burnham thinks of an ideal project in terms of a “triangle: good, fast, cheap. I tell clients, pick two. You cannot have all three.”

Your resolutions won’t all get accomplished perfectly in an instant, but if you stick with them and figure out what’s most important, you’ll see results.

Popularity: 49% [?]

Home Staging Toronto

Home Staging Blog

Toronto Home Staging