Nice!!!
For the two floors I have to do some tests, but in general you need to simplify your model, I have only put essential objects that represent my home. Related to the textures, if you imported them as images from Sweet Home they should be also exported. You have to copy all files generated by the Sweet Home export function into the target home assistant folders.
This is the Javascript object that does the most of the magic and there are quite a few parameters to define the output quality and to adapt to the client capabilities (from the CPU; GPU and memory available)
Hello Max, the card works in Panel mode and should automatically fit your browser size. As I am a Javascript beginner I struggled with styles, but now the card is showing well at the center of the available space, I invite other to look into my code to detect a wrong style mqnqgement and suggest corrections. I confirm, iOS rendering is awesome and flawless
So, tell me a little bit about where you live (what part of the country, world?), describe your home (or what kind/style/size of house you live in), what kinds of house projects you are working on right now, or just what you dream about for the future!
I live in a small ranch in the Foothills of the Great Smoky Mtns. in East TN. We have lived in our home for 7 years and have re-done our kitchen with paint and counter tops. We have added wood floors in our kitchen and living room and right now we are completely re painting the inside of our home. Oh, and my husband just added planking to my fireplace. We love our home, but sometimes wish for a bit more space. Our solution has been to get rid of as much possible. Perhaps, the next big remodel would be our bathrooms, but that will be in the future.
Hi Melissa! I am in Raleigh, NC in a small ranch-style home. For many years, I was too afraid to decorate anything in the home for fear of it not looking right. Your blog has been an encouragement to me to put aside the fear and concentrate on making my house a home. Right now, we are focusing on finishing a few unfinished projects such as painting trim throughout the house and completing the renovation on our master bath.
My husband and I have lived in San Diego since 1990 working with a missions organization planting churches in the inner city. We have raised our five kids in a home provided lovingly to us by our ministry that most likely was built after WW II. This week we are adding two grand kids to our fam bringing the happiness to seven! Your blog has been such an encouragement to me through the years to develop a heart of gratitude and contentment in our home. I love to rearrange the things that we have and work creatively to make our
home open and inviting to our neighbors. Lots of happy dinners, game nights and times of prayer have gone
on here. Most recently I have loved watching my husband build furniture from pallet wood for our home as well as some of our kids spaces. I know many appreciate a rustic look but his work is quite detailed and finished looking. I enjoy the process of watching the pallet turn into something lovely! thanks Melissa for your inspiration in the lives of others!
I have only just recently found your blog and have enjoyed my visits every time :) Thank you for this opportunity to share a bit about myself and my home and to learn about the others who visit your site. Blessings!
We live in a 1700 square foot tri-level home in East Central Minnesota. I bought it new in 2002 as a spec home. I love to decorate but I am changing my style and wanting character.
Currently I want to add a plank wall and paint out my kitchen cabinets and do a small Reno to remove the peninsula for an island. I also want to change out all my tan for gray.
I live in a townhouse (row house) in Burke, VA, about 30 min west of Washington DC. We have been in our house for 22 years. My husband was in the military, and this was the first off- base housing we lived in. We had not planned on staying in this house that long, but the location is ideal, and we just love our house. We have stripped wallpaper in every room in this house, renovated bathrooms, painted, landscaped the front and back yard. We are gearing up for updating the kitchen and our basement family room. Would say that my style is eclectic. I have very definite ideas in my head about certain pieces of furniture and it might take me two years to find it. Love your style and so agree that your house should reflect you and not necessarily the latest trend in decorating. Read your blog early in the morning, you kind of start off my day.
Hey Melissa, My husband and I live in rural Ontario, on a farm with our 4 young children. Our house is a little over a hundred years old (we have a photo of it from 1901) and actually used to be attached to the farm house next door and was moved to its current location in 1917. By horses. No joke! It has a sort of cottage charm which works because we are really close to the beach. We have slowly been making it ours over the last 7 years. We recently took out a wall to make our living room larger, and are having a fireplace installed by the end of this month. I both long for, and dread the day I no longer need to baby proof my home.
Hi Melissa, my husband and I live in country New South Wales, Australia in a town called Wagga Wagga pop 75,000. In March 2012 (while on holiday in Paris) the area we live in was devastated by flood, the first since 1973. Our 100 year old weatherboard home was inundated with 1.5mtr of water. After seeking approval to demolish our existing home and rebuild, we are now the happy inhabitants of a very lovely (and what I think is a uniquely Australian) white weatherboard Queenslander style home with French doors from most rooms leading onto a wide wrap-around veranda, all built 2.7mtrs above ground level (safely out of reach of any future flood waters!) The whole process from flood to moving in took 13 months, which I think is OK considering we were dealing with the insurance company and local council planning dept. My decorating style is modern country with a French twist, all white slipcovers, zebra print accent chair, wide wooden floorboards, white and marble bathrooms, white kitchen, Belfast sink, caesarstone benchtops, pressed tin splashback and treetop views. Timeless and relaxed. Love your blog, Kind Regards Debbie
Hi,
I live 11 miles north of Boston in Massachusetts. I live in a condo in a house built in 1910. My decorating style is a mix. I like a romantic style with a little rustic thrown in. Most of my furnishings and dcor comes from flea markets, estate sales and antique shops.
My husband and I live in Danbury, CT in a raised ranch (on the outside) that I pretend is a small farmhouse on the inside. I started reading your blog when I could peek in the windows on your header. I love a white kitchen, quilts, braided rugs, cannonball beds and other cozy, vintage stuff. Having been retired for almost 20 years, we are pretty much past the DIY stage except for the small projects and improvements.
I live in a semi in Kildare,Ireland with my long suffering diy mad husband. We also have our daughter and her Yorkshire terrier living here too. We have lived here for 17 years and love it. We are constantly updating the house. Our most recent project was knocking the wall down between our clothes loving daughters room and the box room. She has two wardrobes and lots and lots of shoe shelves now. The next big project is to take up part of our decking in the back garden as it rains a lot here, it gets really slippery in the winter. We plan to gravel a section and add tubs for planting using the decking we take up,recycling at its best. Your blog inspires me to keep going and do what you love.
As a wife, mom, and homemaker, I always get excited about a great new cleaning product or tool. Most recently I received the Eureka Flash, and I LOVE it! We have a variety of floors in our home, including hardwood, tile, laminate, linoleum, and yes, even carpet, so I need products that can clean them all.
The Flash is fantastic. It has 2 strengths/speeds. The lower speed is intended for bare floors and hard surfaces. The higher speed is intended for your rugs and carpets (although I tend to use the higher speed on everything). This high strength, helps to get everything off the floor, from the tiniest crumbs and specks of dirt to those pesky cat litter rocks!
We designed and built this 2200 square foot, open floor plan home using stick frame construction, solid fir interior doors with bronze hardware, Anderson windows throughout, custom woodwork with hardwood and tile floors. With upscale fixtures and trim, 9ft ceilings, attached garage, and a subdued modern style, this 2 bedroom, single story home is both modest and sophisticated .
We designed and built this 4,400 sq. foot home. We used Insulated Concrete Forms, or ICFs for energy efficiency and fire resistance. It has a full basement, hydronic heat, solid fir interior doors with bronze hardware, Anderson windows throughout, clear vertical grain fir woodwork, and bamboo, and tile floors. The custom touches in the house capture the prairie style of the arts and crafts period.
We designed and built this multi-purpose barn using stick frame construction and rough sawn cedar siding in traditional board and batten style. The top floor serves as a photography studio, and both floors have no posts or support walls for optimum working flexibility. Because of the location of the building we were able to add a wine cellar.
Rick managed the construction of this unique building from start to finish. His boat building experience was key. With a retractable roof, this elliptical building allows the visitor to view the sky while seated. Every line in the building is a parallel from the ellipse; the teak seat and back, the bronze floor drain, and the polished black granite floor. James Turrell designed Sky Space, and used a series of fluorescent tubes that run the perimeter of the interior mixing the colors and intensity of the night sky as viewed through the elliptical space. Learn more.
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