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Unique opportunity shines in Shrewsbury! Within in walking distance to the new Lakeway Commons featuring shopping, services and restaurants. This home sits at the end of Moulton Ave with no through traffic. You have maximum potential and flexibility with this house deeded as a single family but lived in as a two family for decades. Six bedrooms, two full bathrooms and two levels of living in each unit. Unit A features an updated kitchen with a contemporary layout, spacious bedrooms and a giant family room. Unit B has a standard layout with a large master bedroom, lower level family room and plenty of storage. Both units enjoy a quiet side street in Shrewsbury! Two heating systems, shared electric, shared town water and sewer. What is your vision for this unique property? Easy conversion back to a single family or change the status to a two family. Now listed for just $329,999!
View the full listing HERE!
By: Leanne Potts
Meet you under the skylight, on the white sofa, with a cream cheese brownie.
Fall and winter start cozy — who hasn’t used the colder temperatures as an excuse to binge-watch Netflix while swaddled in a couch blanket?
But come January, staying indoors can feel less like a treat and more like you’re living in a cave.
Here’s how to make your house lighter, brighter, and cheerier.
#1 Take the Screens Off Your Windows:
You’ll get 30% more sunlight shining indoors without screens on your windows.
Here’s the best part: Sunlight warms your room and saves you money on your heating bill. It’s solar power — for you!
Be sure to store your screens in your garage or basement where they won’t get damaged. In the spring you’ll want to put them back on so you can keep that 30% of the sun out and run your cooling system less.
#2 Hang Outdoor String Lights Indoors:
They don’t give off a lot of light, but they’re cheerful as heck.
Drape them around a window or a mantel, or hang a string of LED glimmer lights in a tall potted plant. They’ll add a layer of soft light to your room and remind you of fireflies, flip-flops, and patio parties.
#3 Steal a Little Swedish Chic:
Scandinavians excel at making a home light and airy because they’ve got places where the sun doesn’t rise at all from November to January.
And you thought you had it bad.
To adapt to weeks and weeks of polar night, Swedes keep interiors pale to reflect and amplify light.
Think white walls, light woods for furniture and floors, and light upholstery. To get the look without getting rid of your dark furniture and floors, put white or light gray slipcovers on your sofa and chairs, and put down light-colored rugs.
The fastest way to bring a little Sweden into your room is to paint it. Try creamy white, pale blue, or dove gray.
#4 Change Your Bulbs:
Replace those incandescent bulbs and their yellowy light with LEDs, which produce a brighter, whiter light.
But get your bright right:
•The higher the K rating on the bulb, the cooler and whiter its light.
•For cool, white light, opt for a bulb rated 3,500K to 4,100K.
•For blue-white light that’s closest to natural daylight, use a bulb between 5,000K and 6,500K.
Unless you live in Sweden (see above) you may want to leave the uber-high K bulbs for grow rooms and seasonal affective disorder therapy clinics — because they’re as bright as real sunlight on a hot summer day at noon. You’ll need sunglasses to read.
#5 Hang Mirrors:
Make the most of that weak winter light by bouncing it around the room with mirrors.
If you don’t want the distraction of seeing your reflection all the time, use a large, convex one — also known as a fish-eye mirror. It will amplify light better than a flat one. Another option: Hang a gallery wall of small mirrors.
#6 Replace Heavy Curtains With Blinds or Roman Shades:
Fabric curtains, while quite insulating, block light and make a room feel smaller and more cramped, especially if they’re a dark color or have a large print.
Try Roman shades or a simple valance paired with blinds to let in the maximum amount of natural light.
#7 Trim Branches and Bushes That Block Light:
If you look out your windows and see the tops of your bushes, grab your pruning shears and get whacking.
You don’t want anything blocking that precious natural light. Same for tree limbs that may be arching down and blocking windows. Cut them off.
#8 Clean Your Windows:
Dirty windows block a lot of natural light.
Admit it, yours are kind of cruddy because who remembers to block out an afternoon to clean the windows?
So get it on your list. Clean the glass inside at least once a month and the glass outside once a year. Your serotonin level will thank you.
#9 Swap Your Solid Front Door for One With Glass Inserts:
A solid front door can make your house look and feel as dark as a dungeon.
Get rid of it and install a half-light or full-light door that lets the natural light stream in. For even more natural light, add glass sidelights and a glass transom.
The median cost of a new door is $2,000 for steel and $2,500 for fiberglass, before any extras, but a new door will add curb appeal.
Curb appeal equals higher resale value. And coming home in the evening to the warm glow of light radiating out the glass panels in your front door is an instant mood lifter.
#10 Add a Skylight:
It’s the ultimate way to bring more natural light into your house. A window only catches sun for a couple of hours a day, but a skylight lets in the sun all day.
An indoor view of the sky makes deepest January more tolerable. And feeling the warmth of the sun on your skin, light streaming from above, is liberating. A skylight, installed, can cost as much as $3,000. A cheaper alternative is a tubular skylight, which costs around $1,000.
If you’re really good with tools, you can install a tubular skylight yourself. Don’t even think about installing a full-blown skylight yourself.
#11 Add Plants:
Putting pots of plants around your room will remind you that spring and green will return.
Match plants to the amount of light you have, because dead and dying plants are depressing. Tropicals that thrive in indirect light are usually the best choice. If you have a sunny window you’ve got more plant options.
Bonus points for adding a plant that blooms in the winter, like a kaffir lily or anthurium.
#12 Celebrate National Cream Cheese Brownie Day:
February 10 is National Cream Cheese Brownie Day. Really. Since February is when winter is feeling longer than a seminar on insurance underwriting, this is exactly when you need to make cream cheese brownies.
Chocolate won’t make the sun shine longer or your house brighter, but it will make you feel better because … endorphins. Besides, you spent a ton of money on that marble-topped kitchen island and those double ovens, so get baking.

Just listed! 117 Chapin Road in Holden! This 4 bed, 2.5 bath colonial is listed for $625k by The Aho Realty Group.

Just listed! 1845 Main Street in Holden! This 3 bed, 2.5 bath colonial is listed for $369,900 by Keller Williams.

Are you looking for something out of the ordinary? Unique? Filled with character and ready for your interior design dreams? This colonial in the sought after Ravenwood Neighborhood in Hopkinton is looking for you to make it shine again! Excellent floor plan with over 3400 square feet, 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, hardwoods throughout and finished lower level. Open kitchen with granite counters, stainless steel appliances, pantry, island and wet bar. Soaring cathedral ceiling family room with skylights, fireplace, mud room entrance and sliders out to the wrap around deck overlooking the large private fenced back yard. Formal dining and living rooms and main level laundry room. Spacious Master bedrooms with tray ceiling, walk in closet and private bath with Jacuzzi tub and double sink vanity. Lower level walk out with finished space! Gas heat, central a/c, garage and LOCATION LOCATION LOCATION!!! Open house on Saturday 12/30 from 11am-1pm!
View the full listing HERE!

Unique opportunity shines in Shrewsbury! Within in walking distance to the new Lakeway Commons featuring shopping, services and restaurants. This home sits at the end of Moulton Ave with no through traffic. You have maximum potential and flexibility with this house deeded as a single family but lived in as a two family for decades. Six bedrooms, two full bathrooms and two levels of living in each unit. Unit A features an updated kitchen with a contemporary layout, spacious bedrooms and a giant family room. Unit B has a standard layout with a large master bedroom, lower level family room and plenty of storage. Both units enjoy a quiet side street in Shrewsbury! Two heating systems, shared electric, shared town water and sewer. What is your vision for this unique property? Easy conversion back to a single family or change the status to a two family. Now listed for just $339,999!
View the full listing HERE!
By: Jamie Wiebe
Even if you think they’ve already started to freeze.
New homeowners may have heard that winterization is important, but in the hubbub of your first year living in a home you own (finally!), it can be easy to overlook the need to prepare for the cold weather ahead. After all, it’s just not something renters deal with; prepping pipes for winter is often the landlord’s job.
Ideally, you should winterize your pipes in the fall, before winter seriously sets in. But if you’ve forgotten and all of a sudden you’re in the middle of a deep freeze, there’s still time to prevent disaster.
Here are some easy techniques to save your pipes from bursting:
#1 Turn On Your Faucets:
If the temperatures have dropped into freezing and intend to stay there, turning on your faucets — both indoors and out — can keep water moving through your system and slow down the freezing process. There’s no need to waste gallons of water: Aim for about five drips per minute.
#2 Open Cabinet Doors:
During cold weather, open any cabinet doors covering plumbing in the kitchen and bathroom. This allows the home’s warm air to better circulate, which can help prevent the exposed piping from freezing. While this won’t help much with pipes hidden in walls, ceilings, or under the home, it can keep water moving and limit the dangerous effects of freezing weather.
#3 Wrap Your Pipes:
If your pipes are already on their merry way towards freezing, wrapping them with warm towels might do the trick. You can cover them with the towels first and then pour boiling water on top, or use already-wet towels — if your hands can stand the heat (use gloves for this). This should help loosen the ice inside and get your system running again.
#4 Pull Out Your Hairdryer:
A hairdryer (or heat gun) can be a godsend when your pipes are freezing. If hot rags aren’t doing the trick, try blowing hot air directly on the pipes. Important note: You don’t want to use a blow torch or anything that produces direct flames, which can damage your pipes and turn a frozen pipe into an even worse disaster. You’re trying to melt the ice — not your pipes.
#5 Shut Off The Water if Pipes Are Frozen:
Have your pipes already frozen? Turn off the water immediately. (Hopefully you know where the master shut-off is, but if not, now’s the time to find it!)
Make sure to close off any external water sources, like garden hose hookups. This will prevent more water from filling the system, adding more ice to the pile, and eventually bursting your pipes — the worst-case scenario. This also will help when the water thaws; the last thing you want after finally fixing your frozen pipes is for water to flood the system — and thus, your home.

Are you looking for something out of the ordinary? Unique? Filled with character and ready for your interior design dreams? This colonial in the sought after Ravenwood Neighborhood in Hopkinton is looking for you to make it shine again! Excellent floor plan with over 3400 square feet, 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, hardwoods throughout and finished lower level. Open kitchen with granite counters, stainless steel appliances, pantry, island and wet bar. Soaring cathedral ceiling family room with skylights, fireplace, mud room entrance and sliders out to the wrap around deck overlooking the large private fenced back yard. Formal dining and living rooms and main level laundry room. Spacious Master bedrooms with tray ceiling, walk in closet and private bath with Jacuzzi tub and double sink vanity. Lower level walk out with finished space! Gas heat, central a/c, garage and LOCATION LOCATION LOCATION!!! Open house on Saturday 12/30 from 11am-1pm!

Just listed! 10 Eastern Point, Unit 10 in Shrewsbury! This 2 bed, 2.5 bath townhouse is listed for $495k by Andrew J. Abu.

Just listed! 10 Oriole Circle in Shrewsbury! This 3 bed, 2.5 bath ranch is listed for $459,900 by EntryOnly.com.