The picture above is our secret to our success - that intangible, inarticulable shadow of soul.
Gloriousness.
I had this really great clever title for this blog post, and then I forgot what it was. So I will stick with the old and trusted "Another Sold so Suck It Great Recession (to borrow liberally from Kathy Griffith.)
This little house with a big personality reminds of say Sammy Davis Jr or Frank Sinatra or even Prince for that matter. Good things come in small packages (that's what she said, not). Daniel was just about ready to lay down his life's savings on some run down little cottage when he came across our homes and decided, you know, that a home's character is not just it's faults and inconveniences, like the old house crowd loves to crow about. The character of a home comes from its essence, its soul, - and that has nothing to do with age. It has to do with taste, and talent.
All 780 +/- sq ft of this micro-cottage is pimped out pretty good, with a white washed plank ceiling, salvaged barn siding with peeling paint framing the entrance, spiral staircase, and light to natural floor stain and some muted paints give this cottage an airy expansive feel.
Brought to you by WAL (wide angle lens, duh, and it's the last time I'm going to take the time explain it the abbreviation).
This staircase (below) reminds me of a lap dance in Vegas at the International Builders Show in 2009.
And the big full basement with on-demand hot water heater, propaned-fired furnace and the well water tank.
And here's the porch at Farm 12, a house not built in the factory, not developed by a team of high paid marketers, not designed in a board room, and definitely not set in unchangeable stone once it leaves the factory.
NY Times 4th article about New World Homes, a company that has a decent idea but has only sold a couple homes after what I would guess is adding up to a couple of million dollars of branding and 3 yrs of effort and visibility in what seems like every single print magazine on the newsstands ever-
What I respect most about this effort of the Times to further clobber their readers over their heads with an idea that just can't get going was the fact that at least this time they just went ahead and posted the phone number and website address - finally admitting that for some reason they are fully and unabashedly participating in a marketing campaign. At least the covers are off the fat hairy guy. And you got to hand it to New World Homes - they hired the NY Times to help launch a business (sadly though, the public has the last say on whether it's viable or not, not the brain trust from Brown U.).
In the end, it's not the name of the house, not the branding of the house, not the marketing of the house - in this marketplace there is only type of house that is selling, - and honestly, it's not even a house, - rather, it's a Home, and it will sell if it inspires. Nothing more, nothing less.
Hey, Chuck. Daniel here. Thanks for the cool write-up on my new pad (remember: it's not bragging if you have the goods to back it up!) and, of course, for the pad itself. I'm lovin' it. Really a dream-come-true... -D
ReplyDeleteThanks Dan - much appreciated. It was a real pleasure working with you.
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