Page 3 - Blog
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- February 08, 2026
Your entrance creates the first physical impression of your home, and that initial moment influences how visitors - and you yourself - perceive the entire property. This isn't merely aesthetic preference or subjective opinion. The psychology of how we process environments means entryway design genuinely affects emotional responses, perceived home value, and even how welcome people feel entering your space.
If you're planning entryway improvements or wondering why your entrance feels unwelcoming despite looking presentable, understanding the psychological mechanisms at play helps you make changes that create the response you actually want rather than hoping generic improvements will somehow transform how the space feels.
First Impressions Form Within Seconds
The Immediate Judgement
When someone approaches your door - whether a first-time visitor, potential buyer viewing your property, or even you yourself returning home - their brain processes and judges the environment within three to seven
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- February 05, 2026
If you're planning to sell eventually - or even if you're not but want to protect your investment - certain interior design choices add tangible value whilst others merely reflect personal taste without moving the financial needle. Understanding the difference helps you make decisions that serve both your current enjoyment and future resale prospects.
This isn't about designing purely for hypothetical future buyers at the expense of living in a home you actually like. It's about recognising which improvements deliver financial return and which are purely personal investments, allowing you to allocate budget strategically between the two.
Focus on Kitchens and Bathrooms First
Where Buyers Notice Most
If you're working with limited budget for improvements, kitchens and bathrooms deliver the strongest return. These rooms heavily influence buyer decisions and valuations, whilst bedrooms and living areas matter less to ultimate property value despite being where you spend most time.
Quality
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- February 03, 2026
Major renovations get all the attention - knocking down walls, new kitchens, complete bathroom refits - but some of the most effective improvements to how your home looks and feels come from smaller changes that don't require contractors, significant budgets, or weeks of disruption. Never underestimate small upgrades that elevate your interiors without breaking the bank!
And these aren't minor tweaks that barely register. They're strategic updates that shift how spaces feel, how cohesive your interiors look, and how considered your home appears. The impact is disproportionate to the effort and cost involved, which makes them particularly valuable when you want meaningful improvement without major investment.
Upgrading Door Hardware Throughout
Why It Transforms Spaces
Door handles are touched dozens of times daily but rarely noticed until you upgrade them. Replacing outdated or builder-grade hardware with quality handles in a cohesive finish creates immediate visual improvement and better
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- February 01, 2026
Door handles have moved beyond purely functional hardware into design elements that define interior aesthetics as much as furniture, lighting, or wall colours. What was once an afterthought - something chosen quickly at the end of a renovation or new build - now receives genuine consideration from homeowners and designers who understand its impact on overall interior character.
The trends shaping door hardware in 2026 reflect broader shifts in interior design - a move towards sustainability, appreciation for tactile quality, blending of traditional and contemporary elements, and emphasis on personalisation rather than following prescribed style rules. Understanding what's current helps you make choices that feel contemporary without being so trend-focused they'll look dated in three years.
Matte Black Continues Its Dominance
Enduring Appeal
Matte black hardware remains the dominant trend, and unlike some design movements that peak and fade quickly, this one shows no signs of declining.
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- January 18, 2026
Door locks serve one fundamental purpose: - preventing unauthorised entry - but the mechanisms that achieve this vary considerably. Different lock types offer different security levels, suit different door types, and provide varying balances between convenience and protection. Understanding what's available helps you choose locks appropriate for your security needs rather than just accepting whatever came with your doors.
The right lock depends on where you're using it, what you're protecting, and what level of security you need. Front doors require different locks than internal bedroom doors. Rental properties have different needs than owner-occupied homes. High-crime areas justify different security investments than quiet rural locations.
Here's what's available and where each type works best.
Cylinder Rim Locks (Night Latches)
How They Work
Cylinder rim locks, commonly called night latches or Yale locks (after the most recognised brand), mount on the inside surface of the door rather
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- January 15, 2026
Brass door handles command premium prices for good reason - solid brass is durable, develops attractive patina over time, and maintains its structural integrity for decades. But not every brass-coloured handle is actually solid brass. Brass-plated zinc alloy, brass-finished steel, and even painted finishes that mimic brass appearance are common, often sold at prices that make buyers believe they're getting solid brass when they're not.
If you're investing in what you think is solid brass hardware, knowing how to verify what you're actually buying protects you from overpaying for inferior materials. Whether you're assessing handles before purchase or evaluating antique hardware you've inherited or found, several tests reveal whether you're dealing with genuine solid brass or something else entirely.
The Magnet Test
How It Works
Solid brass is non-magnetic. If you hold a magnet to a solid brass handle, it won't stick. This happens because brass is an alloy of copper and zinc, neither of which
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- January 11, 2026
Walking into a door hardware supplier or browsing online for door handles quickly reveals that the industry uses terminology most people don't encounter in everyday conversation. Backsets, roses, escutcheons, spindles, PZ measurements - terms that mean nothing until you need to know them, at which point not understanding them creates confusion and potential ordering mistakes.
This isn't deliberate obscurity. These terms describe specific components and measurements that matter when you're selecting, ordering, or installing door hardware. Understanding the basic vocabulary makes the process significantly easier and helps you communicate clearly with suppliers or installers about what you actually need.
Handle Components and Types
Lever Handles
Lever handles are the most common type of door handle in modern homes - a horizontal lever you push down to operate the latch. They're easier to use than knobs, requiring less grip strength and dexterity, which makes them better for accessibility.
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- January 08, 2026
Door handle height affects both functionality and accessibility more than most people realise. Install handles too high and shorter household members or those with mobility issues struggle to reach them comfortably. Too low and taller people find themselves bending awkwardly. Get it wrong and you're stuck with poorly positioned hardware that's either impractical to relocate or requires living with the inconvenience.
Fortunately, there are established standards for handle height that balance accessibility, ergonomics, and building regulations. Understanding these guidelines ensures your door handles sit at heights that work for the widest range of users whilst meeting regulatory requirements where applicable.
UK Building Regulations Standards
Approved Document M Requirements
In the UK, Approved Document M (Access to and Use of Buildings) specifies handle heights for accessibility. For new builds and certain renovations, door handles and controls must be positioned between 900mm and 1000mm
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- January 05, 2026
One of the biggest mistakes to avoid in selecting door handles is getting the wrong size. We don’t blame you, though - door handle sizing seems straightforward until you're actually trying to choose hardware and discover there are multiple measurements to consider, terminology you're unfamiliar with, and compatibility issues you didn't anticipate. The wrong size doesn't just look odd - it can make doors difficult to operate, require modifications to your door, or simply not fit the existing holes and mechanisms.
Getting sizes right the first time means understanding what measurements matter, how they're expressed, and what's standard versus what requires custom preparation. It prevents the frustration of ordering handles that arrive and don't fit, or look disproportionate once installed.
Key Measurements Explained
Backset Measurement
Backset is the distance from the edge of the door to the centre of the handle spindle hole - essentially how far the handle sits from the door edge. This is
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- January 02, 2026
When you're choosing door handles, it's tempting to think aesthetics are the main consideration - finding hardware that matches your interior style and looks good on your doors. And whilst appearance certainly matters, there's a more fundamental distinction that affects performance, durability, and safety: whether the handle is designed for internal or external use.
Internal and external door handles aren't interchangeable. They're built differently, use different materials and finishes, meet different security requirements, and perform different functions. Using internal handles on external doors creates problems - premature deterioration, security vulnerabilities, and handles that simply don't stand up to weather exposure and security demands.
Understanding what makes them different helps you choose appropriate hardware rather than discovering you've made the wrong choice after installation.
Construction and Material Durability
Internal Door Handle Materials
Internal handles prioritise




