B and Q not getting much mention and based on our experience of them fitting our bathroom, I'm not surprised!
Thanking you kindly. Very informative. The Quooker at first sight sounds like a terrible indulgence, but both myself and partner currently spend the vast majority of our working lives at home, and we both drink loads of tea each day: she gets through about five litres. It will, in short, get battered, and will save us no end of time waiting around for a kettle to boil.
My wife thought a Quooker was a terrible indulgence but now agree it's the best. That amount of tea drinking will definitely make one very worthwhile. Given the cost of electricity it also make financial sense, as you don't keep heating kettles of water, only to have them cool down and then heated up again. The Quooker tank is highly insulated and costs a tiny amount to keep at constant boiling.
Also if you are investing in a new Kitchen its nice to have one or two indulgences.
Bit like a new car, always nice to have a new toy or two.
My mate has a kitchen company matching Howdens and all the other builder kitchens although far superior quality units. Ideally you want the carcass to match the door colour gives a much more expensive feel. Add a stone work top for the perfect finish.
We're about half way through having our kitchen extended, and are approaching the stage where we're going to buy units, appliances, etc, and grateful for feedback from others who have done something similar of late -- what worked, what didn't, what do you regret not getting?
There's also a more specific question. We're weighing up whether to get a Quooker, or the cheaper, unbranded alternative that Howdens do. Does anyone who live in B&H, or surrounding area with similarly hard water, have experience of using these? It's the hard water that's prompting second thoughts, especially if it means it requires regular servicing.
Our indulgence was a cooler for the booze!
My view is it costs time and money to collect the materials in the first place 20% seems fair to me.
My view is it costs time and money to collect the materials in the first place 20% seems fair to me.
It’s a bit like going to a restaurant and complaining that you can make this cheaper at home.
Well exactly, if a potential client moans they can get the job done cheaper I’m always confused to why they are arguing the point with meIt’s a bit like going to a restaurant and complaining that you can make this cheaper at home.
It’s a bit like going to a restaurant and complaining that you can make this cheaper at home.
I have just finished designing a kitchen for our new apartment. We decided to go for steel and chose this company https://www.popstahl.de/en/startseite-english/ The do installations in the UK.
Choosing the appliances was a bit overwhelming especially the tap and the oven. In the end we literally just chose the median priced appliances. Taps and ovens have moved on a lot since I last bought one
We're about half way through having our kitchen extended, and are approaching the stage where we're going to buy units, appliances, etc, and grateful for feedback from others who have done something similar of late -- what worked, what didn't, what do you regret not getting?
There's also a more specific question. We're weighing up whether to get a Quooker, or the cheaper, unbranded alternative that Howdens do. Does anyone who live in B&H, or surrounding area with similarly hard water, have experience of using these? It's the hard water that's prompting second thoughts, especially if it means it requires regular servicing.
It’s a bit like going to a restaurant and complaining that you can make this cheaper at home.
Which is why, when eating out, I prefer to dine in places that have complex dishes on the menu. I don’t have the skills to make what is put in front of me at all, so the price differential is entirely moot.
Just like some aspects of DIY - for example, my plastering looks like a child did it - get a pro in. They’ll do it far better than I would in 10% of the time I would take.