Berkeley Interior Painting

Top 10 Home Interior Maintenance Tips for Summer

It’s summertime, and this list, which we originally wrote in 2021, is still a great resource, so we are sharing it with you again! In addition, our friends at Porch.com offered us their summertime maintenance tips article, and we thought it was worth sharing bonus tips from that blog with our community as well! Their list includes outdoor maintenance tips, which we’ve addressed in a different blog post, here. We’ve updated this article with Porch’s additional suggestions, at bottom.

  1. Clean your home’s lesser-considered interior spots. The corners and crevices need some love! Wipe down baseboards, clean out closets and empty cabinets. Base- boards are often overlooked when it comes to cleaning. So are kitchen cabinets and your linen closet. It can be tough to muster up the energy to get on your hands and knees and clean below, but it is something you want to do at least once a year to keep dust and dirt from building up.
  2. Declutter. Take this opportunity to get rid of extra stuff you don’t need. Find your local Buy Nothing Page on Facebook and give away your old treasures! (Some say that the angels love to visit a freshly cleaned home).
  3. Do a test of your smoke and carbon monoxide detectors. Replace batteries or units if needed.
  4. Get your cooling system ready. For our clients who live on the sunny side of the Caldecott tunnel: Consider getting your air conditioner serviced. This one is especially important for summer home maintenance since you don’t want to be stuck without air conditioning when the temperature starts climbing! For the rest of us, we can consider installing window AC units. If you are pulling out the ones you used last year, make sure to clean off the filters before starting them up again. And check the instructions. Some manufacturers recommend cleaning the filters every two weeks during heavy use.
  5. Clean and adjust your ceiling fans. Dust ceiling fan blades and check that fans are working properly and reverse the direction if needed. During the summer months, your ceiling fan blades should be set to spin counterclockwise. When your ceiling fan spins quickly in this direction, it pushes air down and creates a cool breeze. This helps keep a room’s temperature consistent throughout the day and reduces the need for an air conditioner to run constantly.
  6. Get your chimney cleaned. Yes, you might not use your fireplace again until fall or winter, but that’s exactly why this is the perfect time to call a chimney cleaning service. They won’t be as busy!
  7. Deodorize the garbage disposal. When’s the last time you tackled your garbage disposal? Exactly. Flushing with dish soap and hot water can do the trick. For persistent odors: with the unit turned off, pour in 1⁄2 cup baking soda and then 1⁄2 cup vinegar; when the fizzing stops, flush with hot water. And/or for a fun citrus-y refresh anytime, pulverize a lemon, one half at a time in the disposal with the water running.
  8. Keep the outdoors outside. If folks are going to be running in and out of the house with dirty or sandy feet this summer, consider having a basin of water by the door for everyone to wash off their feet before coming inside. A super-absorbent floor mat inside the door, or a towel for drying on a hook nearby, might also be a good idea.
  9. Wipe down windows and screens. An indoor/outdoor tip: homeowners generally clean our interior windows throughout the year, and summer is a good time to do that as well as to wash the exterior windows. You may also want to remove and wipe down or replace dirty screens, for the most sparkling effects.
  10. BONUS indoor/outdoor energy-saving tip: Consider an outdoor clothesline. Take advantage of the warm weather and put up an outdoor clothesline, so you’re not using your dryer as much.

Sources: insurancehub.com; budgetdumpster.com

Baseboards image from Arana’s portfolio. T

Summer 2023 ~ MORE MAINTENANCE TIPS:
Preparing Your Home: The Ultimate Summer Maintenance Checklist — from Porch.com

By Maria Jose Meneses

Click here to read the full article

The warm and dry days of summer provide an excellent opportunity to do necessary maintenance around the home and property. With so much to be done in just a few months, the “to-do” list can get pretty long. But don’t worry! In this article, you’ll learn how to make the most of the summer months to maintain your home and property, including some preventative measures you can take to stop unnecessary costs and accidents before they start.

Summer maintenance for the exterior

design by LMB Interiors; build by McCutcheon Construction; landscaping by Arca Design Group; wood stain by Arana

When it comes to summer maintenance, the outside of the home is an excellent place to start. Being out in the open has a way of making maintenance projects seem more manageable and less stressful. Perhaps it’s the Vitamin D you get from being out in the sun or the fresh air — either way, spending time outside is its own reward.

  • Inspect and clean the gutters and downspouts
  • Check and repair the roof for damage
  • Clean and maintain the outdoor HVAC unit
  • Inspect and repair damage in the driveway and walkways
  • Indoor summer maintenance

After you’ve taken care of the outdoor maintenance for your home, it’s time to give a thought or two to indoor maintenance. You may think that this refers to what is often called “spring cleaning,” but that is not necessarily so. While there is an element of cleaning involved, the indoor maintenance of your home is mostly about prevention:

  • Service and clean the A/C
  • Inspect and maintain window and door seals
  • Clean and inspect ceiling fans and light fixtures
  • Summer maintenance for landscaping and outdoor spaces

Working in the yard and garden is a source of peace and joy for many people. Fortunately for those people, much of what is involved in maintaining the landscaping and outdoor spaces revolves around looking after the greenery:

  • Trim trees and shrubs away from the house
  • Fertilize and water the lawn
  • Inspect and repair damage to the deck or patio — and if you have patio decking or fencing that needs refinishing, painting, staining, or waterproofing, contact Arana!
  • Clean and maintain outdoor furniture and accessories
  • Inspect your property for pest issues and treat/address invasion points or nests

Safety checks

  • Test and replace smoke detector batteries
  • Check and test outdoor lighting
  • Ensure adequate outdoor lighting
  • Inspect and replace worn or damaged electrical cords
  • Review and update security systems
  • Ensure proper ventilation in the attic and basement
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Shamanic Space Clearing

By Laura Martin Bovard and Kelley Kessler

In life, we choose what we make sacred. How we live, the way we arrange our things, the beauty we invite in, all of this impacts us. As an Interior Designer, I (Laura) see my role as creating spaces that support people in being their best selves, and continuing to expand into the next self they are becoming. There are many tools we can avail ourselves of in creating and adorning space. Furnishings, fixtures, fabrics, colors, textures, shapes, objects, works of art; these are the implements of my industry.

Systems we might be more familiar with, like Feng Shui and professional organizing, bring attention to spiritual, energetic, and spatial components, and how these impact each other and our lives. A methodology that is less commonly called on, though growing in popular consciousness, is Shamanic Space Clearing.

Shamanic work can be accessed on behalf of individuals, the environments we inhabit, and our communities. One of my dearest friends is Kelley Kessler, a professional Shaman. I have been engaging her to do Shamanic work for myself and my family for years, and more recently, for my clients.

Kelley says:

How it works: Using ancient Shamanic techniques in contemporary times, I (Kelley) commune with the space and with Spirit and my celestial helpers; I receive information clairvoyantly, intuitively, and with all of my senses; and I work in unison with this guidance to remove and transmute energies from my clients’ living or work spaces to restore vitality, ease, grace, flow, and promote growth in their lives or businesses.

After this work is completed, clients often report feeling more grounded, bright, renewed, and magnetic; that they are experiencing more harmonious energies, growth, flow, and synchronicities.

Whether working with clients in person or remotely, I open sacred space and commune with the Energies and with Spirit to receive what is needed. I ask for information on my client’s highest behalf and in relation to their space. I rattle and sage the home, office, or building within this sacred space (either in person, or remotely within the vision of the space) and I shamanically journey — meaning, I go into a mild trance state — to the Spirit world or ‘non-physical reality.’ Then, I ask for healing and clearing of the space, for removal of what is not in the highest good. I ask that whatever is needed for the highest purpose for all that live and/or work or visit there, to be brought through.

When a client is moving from one home/business to another, many desire to do a clearing in each of those spaces, the new and the old. Unknowingly, and sometimes knowingly, we leave pieces of our Self or soul in a space we have left. Instead, ideally, we want to bring all of our vitality with us; and we want to be intentional about leaving concluded experiences behind us. To complete the healing, I co-create blessings for each new home or business with my clients, so that they may manifest all of their hearts’ desires for themselves and their communities.

NOTE: Spiritual/Shamanic healings are not intended to replace licensed medical, mental health, and/or psychological care.

About the author

Kelley Kessler, www.kelleykessler.com, is a Divine Channel, Shamanic Practitioner, and LCSW; contact her for a complimentary initial consultation.

Laura Martin Bovard is an interior designer and the principal of LMB Interiors. Learn more at www.lmbinteriors.com.

Photo (at top) caption and credit: Soothing meditation corner in a primary bedroom, Interior Paint by Arana Craftsman Painters; Interior Design and paint color selection by LMB Interiors. Photo by Eric Rorer