the short corner for me Spender.. I'd be sitting on the big white thrown looking above the door frame thinking... why the hell is that pattern not matching and has a load of leafs clumped together lol.
I think that you may be right; but here’s what I did not reveal in the video; it’s a long story please try to bear with me… The vanity determined where the seams would fall; the vanity has a space that was very difficult to get to and so I had to start the steam so that I could get my hand behind that vanity etc. that made the last sheet or the second to last sheet an inch and a half away from the corner; mind you, so I overlap the second to last right before the Caudle on the line doorway and I left because it was impossible for me to double cut it with the wood trim in the way and the door, it was getting very late can you for a solution that the ability to hind the last sheet with the first tee because I wanted to kill corner, but I was not able to; it was extremely hot, looking in the corner because flowers thing with orange etc. was very ugly in my opinion
The wallpaper is, I think you would agree, excessively busy, and, when you took a look at it in the last five seconds of the video, it really does not add to the crazy busyness of the whole thing
Good video. Me personally, I never tell a customer about losing pattern in the corner in advance. I don't want them to feel like what they're paying good money for something that will have a flaw that they can't do anything about. It's just disappointing to the customer. I want the customer to be excited about their new wallpaper. Because most customers will not notice. If they do notice then I'm ready to explain why there was NO other possible way. But as a rule, I don't like the teach customers how to look at wallpaper like an installer.
The way you said it the first time made sense as long as someone is actively visualizing your description. If they're passive, they won't get it.
the short corner for me Spender.. I'd be sitting on the big white thrown looking above the door frame thinking... why the hell is that pattern not matching and has a load of leafs clumped together lol.
I think that you may be right; but here’s what I did not reveal in the video; it’s a long story please try to bear with me… The vanity determined where the seams would fall; the vanity has a space that was very difficult to get to and so I had to start the steam so that I could get my hand behind that vanity etc. that made the last sheet or the second to last sheet an inch and a half away from the corner; mind you, so I overlap the second to last right before the Caudle on the line doorway and I left because it was impossible for me to double cut it with the wood trim in the way and the door, it was getting very late can you for a solution that the ability to hind the last sheet with the first tee because I wanted to kill corner, but I was not able to; it was extremely hot, looking in the corner because flowers thing with orange etc. was very ugly in my opinion
The wallpaper is, I think you would agree, excessively busy, and, when you took a look at it in the last five seconds of the video, it really does not add to the crazy busyness of the whole thing
Good video. Me personally, I never tell a customer about losing pattern in the corner in advance. I don't want them to feel like what they're paying good money for something that will have a flaw that they can't do anything about. It's just disappointing to the customer. I want the customer to be excited about their new wallpaper. Because most customers will not notice. If they do notice then I'm ready to explain why there was NO other possible way. But as a rule, I don't like the teach customers how to look at wallpaper like an installer.
Me too! In this video I explained: CUSTOMERS CAUGHT ME DOING IT!!!!!! I feel the same way.