
24 August 2014 | 12 replies
I'm a software engineer by trade, and asking a question on those forums is... well... rough.Anyways, my name's Kavi, I actually don't live in Boston, and my favorite color is blue.

10 September 2014 | 25 replies
You could roll on a solid color stain pretty quickly every couple of years to keep it from rotting and keep it looking nice.

10 September 2014 | 1 reply
We used a cool color scheme throughout this house.

14 September 2014 | 14 replies
I just threw on some colors.

26 January 2015 | 16 replies
Yes, I realize that sometimes a different color would do better, but you wouldn't believe how much easier your life will be when you know exactly what color is in and going into each house.

29 September 2014 | 0 replies
I can build an addition for about 120k that contains two "units" of 2bd/2.5ba each with lots of premium features (9.5' ceilings, acid-stained colorful concrete floors, radiant heating throughout, central air, LED lights, granite countertops, subway tile backsplash, carrara marble porcelain look-alike bathrooms, etc.)

25 June 2014 | 23 replies
I've read that the color yellow works well?

6 January 2016 | 49 replies
Point is you CAN start and get the ball rolling...here's some idea..Lady i pay who put out signs(i don't do this method anymore) $175-300 for like 50-75 signs she supplied them, wrote them, put them out and took pictures of every one.200-400 letters, stamps are like 50 cents, so that's what, $200Paper, envelopes(i like the colored ones)Bought my daughter some "Frozen" toys to help me put on stamps...$15That's it dude...i mean you can do SEO website stuff too, or pay one of the guys on BP who have postcard services to do it for you, as it gets old QUICK.I now pay a lady from oDesk $4/hr to do my research for my list and mail merge list to Word, so all i gotta do is print, sign, stuff and mail.if you do those #$@&** yellow letters by hand you will hate life.

1 January 2015 | 7 replies
A book could be written as to the structures as you have many options, they can buy and finance and you contract, you buy and sell turn key, you can get the seller involved, do the work for them and flip the contract to an end buyer, partner with the owner and sell turn key, arrangements are endless.To structure it, you'll need to consider the buyer's position and ability to buy, they will be getting the end loan.Really boils down to financing, who gets the construction financing, does title need to pass to do the work, where do you put your profit, again, the end buyer's ability to finance.You'd be selling from plans and specs, yes, you need a good down payment if the buyer is picking appliance, colors, materials as what they may select may not be as marketable if the fall out of the deal, you're stuck with pink bedrooms, green carpet, crappy ceiling fans and hickory cabinets.

15 November 2014 | 9 replies
A Color Copy of which has been uploaded to Step 10 of this Transaction.