And the people who can help you make something look less hideous on a budget...cost money. Design can be 7-11% of your budget
Come on......colors.....cheap materials.....there are choices.
And the people who can help you make something look less hideous on a budget...cost money. Design can be 7-11% of your budget
They don't care what they look like because they are built to house poor people......let's call a spade a spade.
You vam easily double, triple, the cost of your siding with these choices. There are premium colors for even the same material. I wanted my vinyl siding to be tuxedo black and for the same material and shape I added 20% to its cost. Maybe for the material the blue was cheaper?They don't care what they look like because they are built to house poor people......let's call a spade a spade.
It's not an accident that affordable housing often has cheaper materials and a less inspired design. It's part of the VE
*Sigh*
Expensive to have matching colors? I suggest that future architects of low-cost housing in Portland fancy feet over to MECA and ask a second year art student what colors to use. They learn this in the first year.
Correction, complimenting colors. That's what I meant. Blues and browns are not complimentary unless used on groomsmen tuxedos at a tacky wedding. That fits just fine (especially light blue with any shade of brown).Maybe "matching" wasn't the intent. And sometimes you can't eve. Get the same color in different materials. The black tuxedo siding I chose didn't even have super corners in that same shade, and I wasn't going to do white corners, that's for sure. So we had to get a printable vinyl and try and color match it. At first it being off initially didn't look great but now that's its been baking in the sun a few months it looks great
My point is, making things match can also add effort and cost. And sometimes it's easier to contrast or compliment if you
A.) Can't get the color you want because of supply chain
B.) It would be costly to get it
C.) It doesn't exist in that material
Correction, complimenting colors. That's what I meant. Blues and browns are not complimentary unless used on groomsmen tuxedos at a tacky wedding. That fits just fine (especially light blue with any shade of brown).
Nope. Those all work quite well, especially the top 2Exactly. Not complimentary.
Nope. Those all work quite well, especially the top 2
I'm sure Matt would appreciate the plug with this snazzy pic
Aaaahhhh ..... first world problems .... I've spent 45 years in the design industry. So many of the remarks on this thread about good design costing more ring hollow.Maybe "matching" wasn't the intent. And sometimes you can't eve. Get the same color in different materials. The black tuxedo siding I chose didn't even have super corners in that same shade, and I wasn't going to do white corners, that's for sure. So we had to get a printable vinyl and try and color match it. At first it being off initially didn't look great but now that's its been baking in the sun a few months it looks great
My point is, making things match can also add effort and cost. And sometimes it's easier to contrast or compliment if you
A.) Can't get the color you want because of supply chain
B.) It would be costly to get it
C.) It doesn't exist in that material
Aaaahhhh ..... first world problems .... I've spent 45 years in the design industry. So many of the remarks on this thread about good design costing more ring hollow.