6 Tips for Staging Historic Homes
Putting a period home on the market requires a unique level of attention to detail. Here's how to preserve its historic appeal
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Staging a home to sell is a somewhat different animal when you are dealing with a historic or period home. While you want to make it appeal to the widest audience possible, you have to realize that most of the people interested in buying that type of home are attracted to historically decorated interiors. Most historic homes sell to a specific kind of buyer who is looking for character and architectural details that will make them fall head over heels.
Here are ways to put the focus on a historic home's distinct architecture and appeal to the most likely buyers.
Here are ways to put the focus on a historic home's distinct architecture and appeal to the most likely buyers.
1. Choose classic wall colors. If you need to paint the walls, choose a color from a period-inspired palette. Use fresher, cleaner historic options, such as Benjamin Moore's Palladian Blue, Adams Gold or Georgian Green.
I love the way the homeowner painted the undersides of the sink and bathtub in this vintage bathroom. This kind of color placement draws attention to the unique selling points of the home.
I love the way the homeowner painted the undersides of the sink and bathtub in this vintage bathroom. This kind of color placement draws attention to the unique selling points of the home.
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| 2. Clear out the clutter. Historic homeowners tend to be collectors and don't always tune in to the crowded look that can create over time. Clear away clutter and create symmetry in the furniture arrangements, and buyers won't miss your home's good bones and architectural gravitas. |
3. Emphasize the architecture. Put the focus on the architecture by toning down the patterns and ornate decor. Effective use of color keeps the attention on the fabulous architecture of this room: the coffered ceiling, the trim and the cabinetry.
4. Maintain a functional kitchen. Even a charming period kitchen needs to appeal to 21st-century buyers. Make sure your kitchen provides plenty of storage and boasts up-to-date appliances. With period charm in the mix, old house lovers will be sold after viewing a kitchen like this one.
| 5. Exaggerate space. A period home doesn't often measure up to new-home room proportions. Make the most of your square footage by mixing painted finishes with traditional dark wood finishes to expand the impression of space. |
6. Keep window treatments simple. Remove fussy window sheers and heavy draperies from the windows in your historic home — gone are the days of elaborate festoons, jabots and swags. By taking down heavy window treatments, you reveal the beauty of the window trim and make the rooms appear bigger by letting in more natural light.
Tell us: Do you have any experience with selling a historic property? What advice can you share when it comes to marketing a period home?
Ideabook updated on Aug. 13, 2012.
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Here are some pics of mine that I sold in 3 weeks without ever listing, at the end of 2011. It's a 1902 Shirtwaist. Now I'm in a 1916 Craftsman.
Love me some old homes!
We will be selling our new-ish (under 10 years old) house next year. It is a traditionally-styled cape in rural New England, in an area where almost half the homes are at least 70 years old. We already incorporated a lot of your tips into our every day decorating style - the windows are bare to expose the trim and divided lights, the walls are a palette of traditional colors with very little hanging on them, the wood floors are exposed. HGTV and such, though, would have us believe that we need to have a lot of really simple modern furniture, mass-produced artwork, and IKEA-type throw pillows. Instead, we have quite a few antiques, including some furniture which has decorative painting, and a lot of book cases (with books!) We've kept the rooms relatively spare, and the furniture is not heavy, but it could be seen as taste-specific. To me, having grown up in the region, making our new house feel like an older house (an old house with no repairs needed!) will make it more appealing. But I know that a lot of the realtors in this area are not particularly competent or knowledgeable about the market and I worry about a one-size-fits all approach influenced by HGTV.
And speaking of books... what DO people think of books? I have hundreds of them, neatly arranged in bookcases. To me it says, 'this house is for a smart, intellectually-engaged person," which *I* would find appealing when buying a house. But do they turn people off? The advice always seems to be to remove most of the books and fill bookcases with various "objets."
A bunch of paperbacks will look messy no matter what. And yes, I have so many books that my home has a library. ;^)
Still, as a lover of historic homes, I'd cringe if I saw that all the woodwork was not only painted but painted green!