Real Estate and *stuff *

Real Estate and *stuff *

A real person helping real people with real estate

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Video of Master Bath at 1565 Main Street in Holden – Open Thursday 1/12 at 5pm

January 6, 2012

The upgrades in this contemporary in Holden will take your breath away!  A complete redesign has been done on this house to offer it’s next owner maximum luxury and flexibility.  With a first floor master, in-law apartment, fireplace, media room, wet bar and four bedrooms total with 3 full baths – this contemporary will rival any colonial in the area.

Completely redone from the studs forward and never lived in – this is a brand new house!  We’re open this coming Thursday, January 12th, 5pm to 6:30 – come take a look!

Here is the shower for the Master Bath.  It features 10 water heads, body dryer, steam sauna, custom travertine, recessed custom glass front cabinet and is on the first floor.  This is just one small example of the upgrades in this house!

Special Open House Event! Want to learn how to get an upgraded house mortgage?

January 2, 2012

I love doing open houses that are more than just an “open house” and this is one of them!  Come join myself and Dan Woznicki from Wells Fargo at 1565 Main Street in Holden on January 12th for a Special Open House Event!

This house has been completely rehabbed from the studs forward into an amazing contemporary home that has so many extras it’s hard to list them all.  Old World Construction completely the transformation and it’s now for sale as a brand new house!  Dan Woznicki is a Certified Renovation Specialist from Wells Fargo and he can tell you how to pack these upgrades into your mortgage.

1565 Main Street has some of these upgrades in its resume:

– Solid Maple Cabinets

-Brazilian Cherry Hardwoods

-Fireplace

-Granite

-Etched Glass Shower Doors

-Custom travertine tile

-Media Room

-Wet Bar

-10 Shower Heads with MP3 player in the Master Bath

Not only does it have every upgrade a buyer could want (and quite a few we haven’t dreamed of yet) but it’s a very versatile and functional house.  You can have single level living with the Master Bedroom and Master Bath on the first floor, complete in-law in the lower level with walk-out, lot can be commercial zoned for an in-home business or just enjoy it as a single family with it’s four bedrooms and 3 full baths.

 

Stop in on January 12th between 5pm and 6:30pm at 1565 Main Street in Holden and see for yourself!

 

The Costs of Renting Out Your House

December 18, 2011

You have a single-family house you’d like to rent out. Perhaps you’re temporarily relocating for work, or maybe you inherited your childhood home from your parents, and you’re not quite ready to part with it yet.  This has become a very popular option for many home owners but there is risk involved.

Renting can be a profitable choice, but it requires an investment of time, money, and organization to make it work. Here’s how to determine whether renting out your house is worth the cost.

Calculate your monthly expenses

You want to charge at least enough to cover your monthly outlay. So the first step is to use our free downloadable worksheet to calculate your costs. Start with regular expenses like mortgage, maintenance, and homeowners association dues.

You may also need to upgrade your insurance coverage. Your agent can advise you about adding landlord insurance, a special type of policy that covers rental properties. As a rule, landlord insurance costs about 25% more than standard homeowners insurance.

If you’re renting the house furnished, make sure you’re covered for the personal possessions you leave behind. Jane Cline, the insurance commissioner of West Virginia, tells owners to prepare a detailed inventoryof household items. If you’re renting the house unfurnished, figure in the costs of moving and storing your items.

Check out prospective tenants

As a practical matter, you’ll have to formally check out your prospective renters. MrLandlord.com, an information and service site for landlords, suggests a variety of background checks: credit reports, eviction reports, and criminal background reports. None of these is expensive, but you must get your prospects’ permission.

MrLandlord.com charges $8.95 for an eviction report. A combined credit and eviction report is $14.95. If you want to be especially careful, a countywide criminal report costs $29.95.

Account for maintenance and upgrades

Even with the most scrupulous checks, you can’t be completely sure renters will take good care of your home. Eva Rosenberg, an enrolled agent in Northridge, Calif., advises that if you’re not within easy driving distance of your rental property, you’ll need to arrange for someone else to keep an eye on the place, even if it’s just to make sure the lawn is mowed. If the tenants are neglecting upkeep, you’ll want to know about it sooner rather than later, since it could be a warning sign of trouble down the line.

Of course, even if the renters are conscientious, problems can crop up: boilers will fail; roofs may leak; washing machine hoses can burst. If household systems or appliances need repair or replacement, you’re better off spending the money up front, before the fix becomes an expensive emergency.

You may also want to invest in some of the “extras” that Sue Peters, a broker in Wellfleet, Mass., recommends adding to attract a tenant willing to pay a higher fee. She suggests spending money on air conditioning, expanded-channel cable TV, and a Wi-Fi network.

Don’t want the headaches? Hire a property manager

You can save yourself a lot of time and effort if you engage a management company to oversee the property and take care of the details. Some firms charge a percentage of the rental fee, others a flat monthly fee, based on the extent of services. Joe Aimone of GoRenter in Phoenix, Ariz., says his firm offers a variety of services, starting at as little as $50 a month, including general maintenance, rent collection, and—if necessary—eviction.

A management company can help you figure out how much to charge, find and vet tenants, and prepare a lease. It will also pay the real estate taxes on your behalf and present you with an annual 1099 form. Many management companies maintain 24-hour emergency lines and a roster of approved service people, so they can take care of plumbing or electrical problems and bill you later. A property manager will also see that driveways and sidewalks are shoveled, so you don’t find yourself with an unpleasant claim against your liability insurance.

Expect to pay a management company 8% to 10% of the annual gross rent, on average, with a $50 to $85 monthly minimum.

Keep scrupulous records

Whether or not you use a management company, you’ll have to keep extensive business records. DeDe Jones, CFP, CPA, in Lakewood, Colo., advises owners to save receipts for any expenses and to file them carefully.

The IRS treats maintenance expenditures, like a new hot-water heater, differently from capital improvements, such as a new deck or patio, so you’ll want to consult a tax professional. Meanwhile, keep the two types of receipts separate to make tax prep easier. You’ll have to file Schedule E on Form 1040, which can also serve as a template for the kinds of records you’ll need.

Finally, because of the complex tax and liability issues involved, many financial experts suggest forming a corporation when you become a landlord. An attorney can advise you about whether incorporating makes sense in your situation.

Ready Made…Reel-to-Reel coffee table

December 14, 2011

I love this site!  A friend of mine recently posted the coffee can light fixture on my facebook page.  It was such a neat idea and I am really into making the “old” new again that I had to check out the rest of the site.  This is one of the Ready Made projects that they have posted – a Reel-To-Reel Coffee Table.  Now…I know my parents HAD a reel to reel player…I wonder if they still do!

When the family’s analog eight-track tape deck died, our son begged us to keep the corpse, hoping that one day techies of the future might resurrect it. Meanwhile, we needed a coffee table and thought the piece might be a suitable base. And it was.

Skill Level:  Moderate

Active Time:  More than a weekend

Cost:  $$$

Materials

  • Square steel tubing (for the legs)
  • Outdated gear with a sturdy chassis
  • 8 10-24 hex-head cap screws with lock washer and nut
  • Paint or clear Krylon (optional)
  • Glass or Plexiglas table top
  • 4 rubber cane tips
  • 4 hard rubber casters
  • 8 square nuts

Tools

  • Square steel tubing (for the legs)
  • Outdated gear with a sturdy chassis
  • 8 10-24 hex-head cap screws with lock washer and nut
  • Paint or clear Krylon (optional)
  • Glass or Plexiglas table top
  • 4 rubber cane tips
  • 4 hard rubber casters
  • 8 square nuts

 

1

Using the hacksaw, we cut the legs from ¾” square steel tubing, and filed the edges smooth and even.

 

 

2

It was necessary to temporarily remove the back panel of the deck so we could get in there to attach the legs. Then we drilled through-holes in the tubing and in the chassis and secured them with hex-head cap screws (because they look cool). We connected it all together with a lock washer and nut on the other end.

 

3

Some might say that the legs look rusted. We prefer to call it a “carefully acquired patina,” but in any case, a coat of clear Krylon would prevent any tarnishing.

 

4

Since you can’t put the glass (or Plexi) right on the legs, we started experimenting and discovered that rubber cane tips fit nicely over the leg tops. They also had the perfect tackiness to keep the glass in place.

 

5

Did I mention the deck is heavy? Hard rubber casters with a threaded shaft make it easier (i.e., possible) to move. We affixed them to the legs with two standard square nuts per caster. Perfectionists will want to drill and tap the legs and attach a set screw to one (or both) of the nuts, but that struck us as overkill. Our eight-track table has survived three moves, and like vinyl, it’s just sitting pretty, waiting for the revival.

Angel plays fetch! Unusual for husky but she is trying hard to get adopted!

December 11, 2011

Angel is available for adoption through the Patriot Siberian Husky Rescue. She is a young dog – around a year old – with a ton of energy! She loves to play and will even fetch! She is very easy going and gets along well with both people and dogs. She is currently staying in Clinton but needs a forever home where she can LOTS OF EXERCISE! She probably needs some obedience training but she is house trained. Angel has one blue eye and one brown eye.

For more information or to fill out an adoption for – visit pshr.org

As part of my business, I donate to a rescue or shelter of my client’s choice after closing. Make this Angel’s day!

New Refinance Program Targets ‘Underwater’ Owners Current on Payments

November 30, 2011

This seems like big news!  I was just reading this article from Orlando which is a very hard hit area of the country.

“Starting Thursday, home owners with “underwater” mortgages can apply for a new Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac refinance program geared for pretty much everyone who owes more on a home than it’s worth.

Matt Hamilton has dutifully paid the loan on his Maitland house and a Longwood rental condo, but until now he could not refinance them to obtain more affordable interest rates because the properties are financially underwater.

Starting Thursday, Hamilton and many of the other quarter-million Orlando-area residents with “underwater” mortgages can apply for a new Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac refinance program geared for pretty much everyone who owes more on a home than it’s worth — including landlords and second-home owners.

“It’s been difficult because I’m so far in the hole that no one wants to refinance me,” said Hamilton, a product developer for Longwood-based Onlinelabels.com. “But if you look at my payment history, I am a safe risk.”

The federal government’s previous foreclosure-prevention efforts, such as the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), lowered the interest rates on mortgages of home owners at risk of foreclosure because they had lost income. But the new Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP) is seen as a possible game changer even for home owners who are underwater but who have stayed employed and continue making their payments.

Home owners who have missed mortgage payments in the past six months need not apply. And not all the details — such as loan limits — have been disclosed yet. But this is one of the first refinance programs that doesn’t require an appraisal to determine the value of the house.

“It’s a reward for the responsible borrower who swallowed a bitter pill but still kept moving,” said Travis BeMent, mortgage-loan originator for Home Loans Today of Orlando. “There’re a lot of people out there ready to pounce on this.”

The HARP application process begins Thursday, just as new reports show that more than half of the mortgaged homes in Metro Orlando are saturated with more debt than they are worth. In all, 254,146 mortgaged homes in the four-county metro area are in that situation, according to a report released Tuesday by the mortgage-research company Corelogic.

Even though Orlando has a greater share of underwater homes than Florida overall or the nation as a whole, the percentage of “negative-equity” houses in the metro area actually decreased slightly during the third quarter: 51.6% of the mortgaged homes in Orange, Seminole, Osceola, and Lake counties were worth less than their loans in the July-through-September period, down from 53.1% in the second quarter.

About 44% of the mortgaged houses in Florida, and 22% of those in the nation, were underwater in the third quarter, according to Tuesday’s report.

Many of those mortgages were sold to home owners who purchased at the peak of the market in 2006-07, when sales prices were double what they are today and when interest rates ranged from 5.7% to 6.5%, according to the Orlando Regional REALTOR® Association. Today, interest rates on a 30-year mortgage are less than 4%.

One cautionary note about HARP: Interest rates could change by the time a qualified property owner’s refinancing application is processed, BeMent said. Fannie and Freddie are not expected to have the ability to process the new loans until as late as next March.

But HARP, he noted, also offers a break to home  owners who want to refinance for 15 or 20 years instead of 30 years. To qualify, an owner must have a mortgage backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac and will likely need a credit score of at least 620.

Orlando lawyer Jeremy Sloane hasn’t missed any payments on a rental home he owns in east Orange County’s Avalon community, but he still loses money on the property every month because the mortgage he took out in 2006 far exceeds the rent he collects, now that prices have collapsed. He said he has already talked to FBC Mortgage about the new federal refinancing program.

“At the end of the day, I don’t think it’s anyone’s responsibility but myself to make the payments, but the frustrating part was that other people have been able to get out of their situation and not take a loss,” Sloane said. “This program will hopefully make it a lot more palatable renting out that house and not taking a loss.”

By Mary Shanklin, The Orlando Sentinel, Fla.”
I have also found this article on SmartMoney (http://www.smartmoney.com/spend/real-estate/sizing-up-harp-20-1322685479452/) that has a great, quick write-up of the refinancing limitations.  The guidelines prevent anyone who has been behind in their payments over the past six months from applying and you have to have a credit score of at least 620.  If you are looking for other options, they do exist.  This page will give you a full list of options for distressed homeowners – avoid foreclosure.  If you would like some help reviewing these options, a private meeting is available to you.

And now for something completely different…a brief history of the business card

November 28, 2011

A History of Business Cards

The business card is often something placed at the back end of your wallet or in your pocket. Deemed as a small inconsequential piece of paper that is part of day to day meetings with people, the card is seldom considered more than its face value. However, these cards have a long history and an evolution many of us don’t appreciate.

17th Century Europe

Business cards began in the 17th century in Europe, where they were used to announce the impending arrival of prosperous or aristocratic people to their local town or even their home. They were shaped and sized in a similar way to a playing card and became a staple of the elite by the middle of the century. In time the cards became engrave with gold and exciting typefaces and by the 19th century the cards were a must have by anyone, who was anyone in the middle class circles of the day. Houses even had card trays, ornate in construction, made so those visiting your house could leave their card in.

history of business cards

Goldsmith and engraver trade card

history of business cards

Florist trading card

history of business cards

Playing Card Manufacturer trade card

history of business cards

Dentist Trade card

19th Century

By the 18th and the 19th centuries these ‘social cards’ were taken from each lady upon her first visit to a house. People were offered the card tray upon the opening of the door to the door and had to place their card in it as a matter of etiquette. This card was then delivered to the lady of the household, who would examine it – in many ways it created the first impression of the person.

history of business cards

Grieg, Edvard (1843-1907) Norwegian composer

history of business cards

Gorki, Maxim (1868-1936) Russian Novelist and Short Story writer

history of business cards

Freud Visiting Card (1856-1939) Austrian Neurologist

When the other person waited for those they came to see in the hall, it would have been unheard of for them to look at the other cards. Cards with folded corners had been presented in person, cards folded in the middle indicated the call was meant for all family members. There was also often lettering on the card P/F for a congratulatory visit, P/C for a condolence call.

Unlike in polite society – these cards were also used in the UK for trade purposes. These cards were handed out before or after work was done and included maps to get in contact with the person. Originally produced with wood presses, they would have been created with lithography after its creation in 1830.

Formality

The effects of the industrial revolution created a lessening of formality in the world. Exchanging of contact information became essential and the visiting card and trade card were merged and handed out on less formal occasions. The upper class still suffered an aversion towards their use on informal occasions, however they became widespread in the USA. Their widespread use often created up turned noses when an US business man presented one at an upper class home in the UK.

Modern Day

Time has eroded much of the etiquette regarding business cards, however rules do persist. Cards should not be handed out by the left hand, should never be written on and should always be translated to the language of the specific country they are being handed out in on the rear of the card. They should never be carried loose and presented in the best condition.

These days cards should have the name of the card holder, their title, the company, their location, and relevant contact information such as address, email, telephone and anything else you feel the need to add. Cards are usually printed in black ink on white paper, though this varies by country.

Following this logical etiquette means you and your cards won’t have any issues and just think how much more hassle you’d have had handing them out 300 years ago.

A History of Business Cards

October 26th, 2011 by in Graphic design, Inspiration

What Would MacGyver Do? In an Emergency, Reach for the Duct Tape

November 21, 2011

Get yourself out of a home repair jam with this common household item famously used by our favorite handy hero: MacGyver.

We’ve all had them: the clogged drain, the ripped vacuum hose, the unsightly hole in the wall. Home repair emergencies like these are the last thing you need when you’re running out the door, running after the kids, or fielding other household chores. Channel your inner MacGyver by taking advantage of one common household item the classic action hero made famous: a roll of duct tape.

What MacGyver did:
Used duct tape to seal a hole in a hot air balloon, allowing him to escape his pursuers.

What you can do:

  • Fix a slow-running toilet. Clear the clogged flush passage with wire, then empty the water tank and seal the passage hole with duct tape. Fill the tank with a quart of vinegar and leave overnight.
  • Weatherproof windows. Use strips of duct tape to make windows air tight until you can fix or replace them.
  • Make a temporary roof shingle. Wrap strips of duct tape across a ¼ inch thick piece of plywood cut to size.
  • Tie off loose wires. Wrap small, thin strips of duct tape around exposed ends.
  • Patch holes and tears in duct work, dryer vents, and a torn vacuum hose to temporarily seal leaks.

Who doesn’t love a good MacGyver episode??

Chase Has followed Through With Large Short Sale Cash Incentive

November 16, 2011

Crawford Realty team has recently negotiated a $35,000 payment to their short sale client at closing.  In addition the seller also received another $3000 as a HAFA incentive for a total check to the seller at closing of $38,000.

Chase Bank is sending homeowners a solicitation letter offering up to $35,000 to do a short sale.  We listed the house, received an offer almost immediately, and closed the sales transaction in 80 days from listing to close.

Once an offer was obtained, the Crawford Realty Team submitted a short sale package to Chase, and worked co operatively with the buyer’s attorney and the seller’s attorney to get all incentives available.   After several weeks of negotiating Chase not only offered all incentives, paid back taxes, title v, smokes, seller settlement fees, Real Estate Broker commission, and waived the entire deficiency balance.

Chase is not the only lender offering incentives to the homeowner delinquent on their mortgage.  For more information about other incentives available, contact one of the Short Sale Partners of the Crawford Realty Team.  Click here for a confidential, private link to find out what your short sale options are:  avoid foreclosure.

Your foreclosure purchase opportunity! UNDER $70k! Open Sunday 1pm to 2:30pm

November 12, 2011

Here it is!  The “diamond in the rough” you have been looking for!  3 bedrooms, nearly an acre of flat land, Title V in hand and all for under $70,000!!!!  Stop in 18 Burncoat Street in Leicester on Sunday 1pm to 2:30pm to start planning the renovations!