Interested In Staging

Dear Edith: I am interested in advice for staging my home. There are a few good shows on cable and I'm sure brokerage agents (the better ones) are well versed in this area but I wonder if there are any "home staging" experts in our area I could call on. I will let you know if I come across any. If you hear of any, could you e-mail me? Or, print it in your column? We never miss it. -- S.L.F.

Answer: I can't recommend any specific names, but I'm happy to give you my best advice.

First, polish your home to a fare-thee-well. Think of it as the sort of doll-up you'd give a car. Remove personal items like diplomas and religious material. You are no longer trying to express yourself. Instead, you want to make it easy for buyers to picture themselves in the house.

Take away two-thirds of the things that live on your kitchen counter. Remove half the stuff in your front-hall closet. Hide clutter.

Park across the street and analyze the first impression your house makes. Add a few colorful plants by the front steps and trim bushes. Keep the garage door shut and trash cans out of sight. Make sure all your windows sparkle. Check that your doorbell and porch light work.

Paint is the investment with the best payback. If nothing else, sometimes a bit of black paint on your front threshold freshens the entrance. Shampoo wall-to-wall carpet.

If you invite neighborhood agents to view the house, encourage them to tell you frankly what they think needs attention.

After all that, you can start to consider professional staging.

Regaining Virginity

Dear Edith: My wife and I sold our home 22 months ago. The house was completely in her name. If we buy today, and we're both on the loan, or it's just in my name, is there a way that together we're eligible to receive the $8,000 tax break from the government? -- R. L.

Answer: Sorry, but in order to regain your virginity as first-time buyers, neither spouse must have owned a house within the preceding three years. It wouldn't matter whose name was on the title or the mortgage of the new house.

Shower Or Tub

Dear Edith: I am re-doing my kids' bathroom and would like to put in a shower instead of the bath/shower combo. My kids are older and never take a bath. I am concerned about the re-sale but we have a bathtub in the master if people wanted one. What do you think? -- Via e-mail

Answer: My guess is that as long as the house has one tub, you're OK. It won't hurt to double-check this -- just over the phone -- with a couple of neighborhood real estate brokers. They'll be familiar with local buyers' expectations in your price range.

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