Estate Agents In York

Friday, May 3, 2019

Let’s move to Oswestry, Shropshire: chocolate-box pretty with skeletons in its past

It has seen battles aplenty and the scars are there, if you care to look

What’s going for it? With its red-brick Georgian townhouses, porticoed coaching inns, award-winning bookshop and black-and-white half-timbered cottages, Oswestry looks harmless, as pretty as a picture, as if it had peeled itself off the lid of a box of fudge fancies. Don’t be fooled. We are in border country here, and any border country hides a sizable cupboard of skeletons in its past. Oswestry has seen battles aplenty, horrifying dismemberments (don’t even think of Googling the tale of poor Oswald of Northumbria’s arm), pillaging, and regular burnings to the ground. It’s a wonder there’s anything left of the place and its people. The scars are there, if you care to look, deeply incised in the landscape beneath the undergrowth, like the mammoth iron-age fort of Old Oswestry, looming at the city limits (and home to Guinevere – yes, that Guinevere), and Offa’s Dyke, a few minutes further. This is a place that has been fought over for millennia. It’s happy in its slumber these days. Don’t mention the wars. Let sleeping dogs lie.

The case against It’s a trek away from anywhere (but a lovely trek), and there’s no train station in town (though there is one nearby, at Gobowen). It suffers, like so many places, from a spot of town-centre blues, although there are plans afoot for revitalisation. Culture-wise, it could do with some rocket fuel; the less easily entertained and those with metropolitan habits should look elsewhere.

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Explore these five beautiful overseas homes

Take a look at our favourite listings abroad right now.

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Thursday, May 2, 2019

Houses out of the ordinary – in pictures

If you like quirkiness or interesting period structures, here are some homes from the Scottish Borders to Bath

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How to add water to your garden Nottingham Estate Agents

There’s nothing more soothing and relaxing than the presence and sound of gently running water in the garden.  Whether it’s a tranquil reflective pool or a fountain, water can add a wonderful sense of serenity to any outdoor space, providing lovely movement and sound. But there are other benefits to being around water, too.  Recent research points […]

The post How to add water to your garden appeared first on OnTheMarket.com blog.



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‘Butterflies’ Parking and other Don’ts

What kind of car do you have?  Is your driveway garnished by a gleaming Mercedes or understated Audi?  Perhaps you figured your estate agent’s car was more appealing to show off your home, so he left his BMW on show for the photographs.  Or maybe your muddy Mini was already parked and no one suggested you move it.

Over the years, I’ve seen property photographs with skips, broken down cars and driveways with weeds so high it’s impossible to park a car.  I’ve also seen ‘Butterflies’-type parking (remember Butterflies, with the four car shuffle?) where removing a car is more difficult than the Krypton Factor.

On the other hand, I’ve come across very modest dwellings with a Ferrari or Lamborghini parked outside.  I once knew an agent in Cheshire who always insisted on having his silver Mercedes C-Class in every front shot.  His window display looked like an Autotrader feature.  Having a fully-branded agent car plonked on the driveway is also quite common in the agency’s quest for brand awareness.

So what should adorn your driveway for your main image?  The answer is very simple: nothing.  Any car you park will lead a buyer to make an assumption, or draw a conclusion, and that may not be a positive one.  The agent’s car will do you no favours either; if you are lucky enough for the sun to shine when the front photograph is taken, and the result is a lovely image of your home, the agent’s car is only going to spoil the shot.  It also means you can’t use it if you decide to move agents.

Keep your driveway empty, clean, free of weeds and looking smart, and your front shot will look the better for it.

If you’d like my help to sell your home more effectively, please answer a few short questions here and if I think I can help you, I’ll be in touch

What to read next: In the bleak midwinter; staging your home for a winter sale

What to do next:  Sign up to my Selling Secrets http://www.home-truths.co.uk/selling-secrets

The post ‘Butterflies’ Parking and other Don’ts appeared first on Home Truths.



from Home Truths http://bit.ly/2ZRZsjL
via IFTTT

‘Butterflies’ Parking and other Don’ts

What kind of car do you have?  Is your driveway garnished by a gleaming Mercedes or understated Audi?  Perhaps you figured your estate agent’s car was more appealing to show off your home, so he left his BMW on show for the photographs.  Or maybe your muddy Mini was already parked and no one suggested you move it.

Over the years, I’ve seen property photographs with skips, broken down cars and driveways with weeds so high it’s impossible to park a car.  I’ve also seen ‘Butterflies’-type parking (remember Butterflies, with the four car shuffle?) where removing a car is more difficult than the Krypton Factor.

On the other hand, I’ve come across very modest dwellings with a Ferrari or Lamborghini parked outside.  I once knew an agent in Cheshire who always insisted on having his silver Mercedes C-Class in every front shot.  His window display looked like an Autotrader feature.  Having a fully-branded agent car plonked on the driveway is also quite common in the agency’s quest for brand awareness.

So what should adorn your driveway for your main image?  The answer is very simple: nothing.  Any car you park will lead a buyer to make an assumption, or draw a conclusion, and that may not be a positive one.  The agent’s car will do you no favours either; if you are lucky enough for the sun to shine when the front photograph is taken, and the result is a lovely image of your home, the agent’s car is only going to spoil the shot.  It also means you can’t use it if you decide to move agents.

Keep your driveway empty, clean, free of weeds and looking smart, and your front shot will look the better for it.

If you’d like my help to sell your home more effectively, please answer a few short questions here and if I think I can help you, I’ll be in touch

What to read next: In the bleak midwinter; staging your home for a winter sale

What to do next:  Sign up to my Selling Secrets http://www.home-truths.co.uk/selling-secrets

The post ‘Butterflies’ Parking and other Don’ts appeared first on Home Truths.



from Home Truths http://bit.ly/2ZRZsjL
via IFTTT

‘Butterflies’ Parking and other Don’ts

What kind of car do you have?  Is your driveway garnished by a gleaming Mercedes or understated Audi?  Perhaps you figured your estate agent’s car was more appealing to show off your home, so he left his BMW on show for the photographs.  Or maybe your muddy Mini was already parked and no one suggested you move it.

Over the years, I’ve seen property photographs with skips, broken down cars and driveways with weeds so high it’s impossible to park a car.  I’ve also seen ‘Butterflies’-type parking (remember Butterflies, with the four car shuffle?) where removing a car is more difficult than the Krypton Factor.

On the other hand, I’ve come across very modest dwellings with a Ferrari or Lamborghini parked outside.  I once knew an agent in Cheshire who always insisted on having his silver Mercedes C-Class in every front shot.  His window display looked like an Autotrader feature.  Having a fully-branded agent car plonked on the driveway is also quite common in the agency’s quest for brand awareness.

So what should adorn your driveway for your main image?  The answer is very simple: nothing.  Any car you park will lead a buyer to make an assumption, or draw a conclusion, and that may not be a positive one.  The agent’s car will do you no favours either; if you are lucky enough for the sun to shine when the front photograph is taken, and the result is a lovely image of your home, the agent’s car is only going to spoil the shot.  It also means you can’t use it if you decide to move agents.

Keep your driveway empty, clean, free of weeds and looking smart, and your front shot will look the better for it.

If you’d like my help to sell your home more effectively, please answer a few short questions here and if I think I can help you, I’ll be in touch

What to read next: In the bleak midwinter; staging your home for a winter sale

What to do next:  Sign up to my Selling Secrets http://www.home-truths.co.uk/selling-secrets

The post ‘Butterflies’ Parking and other Don’ts appeared first on Home Truths.



from Home Truths http://bit.ly/2ZRZsjL
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