I love how you've been doing this for over 30 years but still sound excited about the details and amazing work. I'm a young housewife years away from building our own dream home, but I love your videos because it's entertaining and informative. Thanks for posting.
I can't agree with some of the exterior color choices, but different strokes and all that. The workmanship looks top notch to me. I'd be proud to own that home.
Lovely home. The closets are a bit small in the secondary bedrooms considering the size of the house. The basement is fabulous. Nice light fixtures and interior decor.
Beautiful home but three things. 1) Bigger upper deck to entertain and stairs down to the lower level. 2) dual shower heads in the master shower. And 3) the kids closets are waaaaaay to small. The boy’s was almost nonexistent. Other than that really nice home. Good job. 👍🏼
Lovely home and awesome tour. What are all the tape marks on the floor. I’m used to doing those for walkthroughs but usually they’re on the walls, ceiling, floor etc.
Amazing work man. Hopefully the owners will get gutter covers living in a Forrest like that. Also, hire someone $300 to make this video and you just narrate it.
I wonder why he isn't answering anybody about the price? I mean he could at 'least' give us a base price rather than ignore the viewers.. smdh Guess we'll just have to get ideas to give to our own contractors.
There’s no such thing as a base price with a custom home like this. You have the price of the lot, and the price of all your structural materials which fluctuate depending on the time of year/ demand, what subcontractors want to charge depending on who is available, etc. And THEN you have all the finishes (cabinets, tile, can lights, window brands) that the home owner selects which can turn a 300k home into a 600k home. It’s all custom.
COME ON SIR GIVE US THE PRICE OR JUST PUT ON YOUR VIDEO FOR PEOPLE WITH OVER $350 GRAND TO PAY FOR THIS HOME LOL SUCH A BEAUTIFUL HOME ITS DEFINITELY MY DREAM HOME
Lovely bits and pieces, but so much OPEN WASTED space paired with tiny side baths and closets The laundry room is one example. You can’t put in a laundry room as big as a bedroom with all that cabinetry, then make such a luxurious master bath, then put in the other baths that you can barely stand in. That 7800 sq footage under roof - this can’t be right ... My understanding than only FINISHED footprint goes towards square footage, at least here in Illinois and Florida. I’m in location where I can’t hear sound right now, so not sure if you’ve addressed this
Why is the bathtub next to the window?....freeze your ass off in the winter.... and whose bright idea was it to put a mini computer desk in the bathroom? Should enjoy the bath not hop out every 6 seconds to check for work pings...
I would never have a home like this with children. From the Master Bed Room you have to go thru the Kitchen and Living Room to get to the Children's Bedrooms. FIRE FIRE FIRE and you will NOT BE ABLE TO GET TO THEM!!! Why is people having there Children's Bedrooms far from the Master Bedroom? People do not think SAFETY TODAY. Where I live we lost 5 Children this year so far from FIRES and the Parents could not get there Children because the bedrooms was to far apart. Thumbs Down on this one.
I love all these houses but I would just like to say it is not pronounced foyER it’s pronounced foy-yay. Us Americans totally butcher the word all the time. But saying it like Foy-Yay is the correct way.
madison richardson Incorrect, if your are going to nit pick people at least get it right... he said the correct English pronunciation as you can say foi-er OR foi-ey... you are speaking of the French pronunciation but you are wrong as well as it’s fwa-yey. I suppose you pronounce croissant with the T sound or do you really use the French “krwah-sahn”
They wasted their money on the quoins. They blend in too much with the tumbled brick wall and are barely visible. They needed to use a contrasting masonry, such as stone, but not the stone in the front porch post pedestals. That too blends in too much with the tumbled brick and most people are going to miss that it's different from the walls. It's not obvious to me why they thought they needed to duplicate so much of the first floor in the basement. What's fun about a basement is when you leave it as one big open space for play area, storage and workshop. It kind of reveals a lack of imagination to simply duplicate the floor above. I'm not a fan of the completely open living area. It's a big space but it reads as all cut up in cramped pieces (except for the oversized kitchen that seems to want to intrude everywhere and dominate the region). The lack of free walls will become a problem when the owners want a wall to put a sofa or bookcase or upright piano against, or hang a picture. Plus, of course, it's all one big echo-y space from which there is no retreat from raucous activity or a too loud TV, or smoke from a kitchen accident. And since the foyer opens directly into the rest of the space you get a cold blast throughout the space every time someone opens the front door. (Fortunately nobody's ever going to use that front door. They will all come in through the garage side.) None of the rooms with cathedral ceilings really seem to take best advantage of them and truly soar. You almost don't notice them at first, they simply recede into the darkness. The gray painted walls throughout are also quite boring. None of the spaces seem very special, except for the window seats and the kitchen with its excessive, dominating island. (That's not quite true, I forgot about the laundry room extended into a generous crafts room with its nice work light.) It's hard to say what makes a space special, but these spaces for the most part don't have it. They are uninspired and uninspiring. There is neither mystery nor grandeur nor playfulness. All in all, they obviously spent a lot of money on this house, but it turns out to be boring and rather painfully ordinary. I do like some of the details, particularly the door and baseboard moldings and most of the light fixtures. But not the can lights... can lights in houses are so wrong... especially now that there are strip led lights that are so flexible and can be used to accent anything, anybody who uses can lights should be put out of their misery for lack of imagination. The light fixture for over the dining room table is not up to the same level as the others. Too boring. I'm not a fan of the barn doors, but I do acknowledge that it does seem like an attempt to do something interesting and out of the ordinary. They could have made a less boring choice for crown moldings than the plain coves. The plain coves are probably about as expensive as a nicer molding, but almost as boring as not having any crown at all. The red oak floors are nice, not stained overly dark. The house is better outside than inside. The exterior is nice, presents a traditional appearance with an interesting amount of complexity, but not so much as to appear overly contrived. The approach reveals the facade slowly. I like the colors they chose. It's especially nice that they left so many of the trees on the property and the lawn area just kind of dissolves into the forest. As previously noted, a couple of minor details don't have enough contrast from the brick walls, but that doesn't really detract from the overall feel of the house. They would have done better to have elided those details and spent the money on a couple of nice white Ionic columns for the front porch. I would also elide the false bracing at the tops of the two eaves. It's superfluous and too rustic. Around back, it makes no sense why they missed the opportunity to have one large deck in front of both the living area and the dining area instead of two small ones. It also makes no sense why the screened porch is off the living area and the unscreened one is off the dining area. Bugs are more likely to be a bother when food is present and you're eating. It looks suspiciously like the dining area porch was an afterthought. Its support posts don't match the brick piers holding up the screened porch.
I love how you've been doing this for over 30 years but still sound excited about the details and amazing work. I'm a young housewife years away from building our own dream home, but I love your videos because it's entertaining and informative. Thanks for posting.
Hey congratulations! thank you for watching!
I can't agree with some of the exterior color choices, but different strokes and all that. The workmanship looks top notch to me. I'd be proud to own that home.
Beautiful home with a number of extra amenities that were well thought out. Sometimes the small things really make a difference!
Great houses. Great way of presenting. To the point. And GREAT hidden gem (channel). Loved it truly. Thank you very much 😊
Beautiful!...Thanks for sharing💖
Thanks for watching!😊
I definitely want more info on this house plans, and price, building in North Georgia. If possible.
Looks like another wonderful, well planned home. I like the drawers in the window seats. Good idea.
Lovely home. The closets are a bit small in the secondary bedrooms considering the size of the house. The basement is fabulous. Nice light fixtures and interior decor.
Beautiful home but three things. 1) Bigger upper deck to entertain and stairs down to the lower level. 2) dual shower heads in the master shower. And 3) the kids closets are waaaaaay to small. The boy’s was almost nonexistent. Other than that really nice home. Good job. 👍🏼
Beautiful, very well thought out. My favorite so far.
Outlet on the floor where washer and dryer is so if there a leak then there will be a fire 🔥
Love the screened in porch. Love the window seat. Great idea to put drawers under the window seat.
What would be the full cost on this model with a finished basement? For lot and house?
Gorgeous! How much as is?
It is a beautiful house, my favorite so far. Excellent work guys! Greetings from Puerto Rico
Magnificent home, and great video Mike, Thank you 😉
How long is the build time on a home of this size or slightly bigger? Thanks.
Beautiful house...
Thank you C Das, We appreciate the kind words :-)
Well Done! Beautiful Home!
I love all your homes you do a very good job. If I ever hit the lottery I would call you to build my dream home I live in Georgia
I love this house! Now can I get it made in Chicago 🤗
Beautiful
Thank you for your viewership :-)
Love your homes. Is there a reason why you don’t use shoe molding in your homes?
Who else is a sucker for shiplap?
It looks as though you base trim is help up off the floor, is that accurate?
High level home. Nice.
Yessssssss Beauitful love it
They never mentioned the price cuz too many people would be negative. My guess is $750k depending on neighborhood, could be more
Lovely home and awesome tour. What are all the tape marks on the floor. I’m used to doing those for walkthroughs but usually they’re on the walls, ceiling, floor etc.
How much did this home cost? It's beautiful! Very good work.
I would say around 450-500K USD with property
We, have land, so how much for a home like this???
Very nice
Beautiful, but I can't imagine trying to keep the outside clean with all the tress.
Beautiful home, but you really need to work on how to record lol...really hard to get a sense of the rooms.
Looks like really small closets in the kids rooms for a house that size
Your a small closet
All that beautiful wood then white trim? Huh? It moves a rich unique house into the mcmansion category.
How Much ?
J...
Mike...what’s the square footage?………second house I seen of yours......
Beautiful house but not finish make ,need a proper closet where is the closest to hong where is one to put there suit and eaving dress coats
I Love it.It is awesome home😃
French Doors instead of sliding glass door in dining room
Beautiful home but wasn't shown well☹️
Lovely house, I am in the same area. Can you tell me where you get that front door? I want to buy it for my home.
Very big and opn. Luv the bthrm floors. Lyk the aftr school backpack putaway centr 😍 overall so nice❤️💯 thanks for sharing 😊
Amazing work man. Hopefully the owners will get gutter covers living in a Forrest like that. Also, hire someone $300 to make this video and you just narrate it.
Bathrooms should be away from the kitchen, but is a beautiful home
Living in North Carolina I wish you include the price of the home. A video without knowing how much is going to cost to build is a letdown.
I wonder why he isn't answering anybody about the price? I mean he could at 'least' give us a base price rather than ignore the viewers.. smdh Guess we'll just have to get ideas to give to our own contractors.
Don't cry its ok
There’s no such thing as a base price with a custom home like this. You have the price of the lot, and the price of all your structural materials which fluctuate depending on the time of year/ demand, what subcontractors want to charge depending on who is available, etc. And THEN you have all the finishes (cabinets, tile, can lights, window brands) that the home owner selects which can turn a 300k home into a 600k home. It’s all custom.
COME ON SIR GIVE US THE PRICE OR JUST PUT ON YOUR VIDEO FOR PEOPLE WITH OVER $350 GRAND TO PAY FOR THIS HOME LOL SUCH A BEAUTIFUL HOME ITS DEFINITELY MY DREAM HOME
I misread it as "the Hitler plan" lol
Anyway
Lovely bits and pieces, but so much OPEN WASTED space paired with tiny side baths and closets
The laundry room is one example. You can’t put in a laundry room as big as a bedroom with all that cabinetry, then make such a luxurious master bath, then put in the other baths that you can barely stand in.
That 7800 sq footage under roof - this can’t be right ... My understanding than only FINISHED footprint goes towards square footage, at least here in Illinois and Florida.
I’m in location where I can’t hear sound right now, so not sure if you’ve addressed this
Why is the bathtub next to the window?....freeze your ass off in the winter.... and whose bright idea was it to put a mini computer desk in the bathroom? Should enjoy the bath not hop out every 6 seconds to check for work pings...
ALL THESE SPANISH PEOPLE...MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN
I read your title as "The Hitler plan walkthrough". I have to stop reading so much history.
Keep your hands out of the shots.
I would never have a home like this with children. From the Master Bed Room you have to go thru the Kitchen and Living Room to get to the Children's Bedrooms. FIRE FIRE FIRE and you will NOT BE ABLE TO GET TO THEM!!! Why is people having there Children's Bedrooms far from the Master Bedroom? People do not think SAFETY TODAY. Where I live we lost 5 Children this year so far from FIRES and the Parents could not get there Children because the bedrooms was to far apart. Thumbs Down on this one.
I love all these houses but I would just like to say it is not pronounced foyER it’s pronounced foy-yay. Us Americans totally butcher the word all the time. But saying it like Foy-Yay is the correct way.
Duly noted lol :-)
@@MikePalmerHomesIncDenver You're actually right, Mike. The alternative pronunciation is a bit affected actually.
madison richardson Incorrect, if your are going to nit pick people at least get it right... he said the correct English pronunciation as you can say foi-er OR foi-ey... you are speaking of the French pronunciation but you are wrong as well as it’s fwa-yey. I suppose you pronounce croissant with the T sound or do you really use the French “krwah-sahn”
Nice but the hand waving in front of the camera every few seconds was a huge distraction.
These are to long to watch
They wasted their money on the quoins. They blend in too much with the tumbled brick wall and are barely visible. They needed to use a contrasting masonry, such as stone, but not the stone in the front porch post pedestals. That too blends in too much with the tumbled brick and most people are going to miss that it's different from the walls.
It's not obvious to me why they thought they needed to duplicate so much of the first floor in the basement. What's fun about a basement is when you leave it as one big open space for play area, storage and workshop. It kind of reveals a lack of imagination to simply duplicate the floor above.
I'm not a fan of the completely open living area. It's a big space but it reads as all cut up in cramped pieces (except for the oversized kitchen that seems to want to intrude everywhere and dominate the region). The lack of free walls will become a problem when the owners want a wall to put a sofa or bookcase or upright piano against, or hang a picture. Plus, of course, it's all one big echo-y space from which there is no retreat from raucous activity or a too loud TV, or smoke from a kitchen accident. And since the foyer opens directly into the rest of the space you get a cold blast throughout the space every time someone opens the front door. (Fortunately nobody's ever going to use that front door. They will all come in through the garage side.)
None of the rooms with cathedral ceilings really seem to take best advantage of them and truly soar. You almost don't notice them at first, they simply recede into the darkness. The gray painted walls throughout are also quite boring. None of the spaces seem very special, except for the window seats and the kitchen with its excessive, dominating island. (That's not quite true, I forgot about the laundry room extended into a generous crafts room with its nice work light.) It's hard to say what makes a space special, but these spaces for the most part don't have it. They are uninspired and uninspiring. There is neither mystery nor grandeur nor playfulness. All in all, they obviously spent a lot of money on this house, but it turns out to be boring and rather painfully ordinary.
I do like some of the details, particularly the door and baseboard moldings and most of the light fixtures. But not the can lights... can lights in houses are so wrong... especially now that there are strip led lights that are so flexible and can be used to accent anything, anybody who uses can lights should be put out of their misery for lack of imagination. The light fixture for over the dining room table is not up to the same level as the others. Too boring. I'm not a fan of the barn doors, but I do acknowledge that it does seem like an attempt to do something interesting and out of the ordinary. They could have made a less boring choice for crown moldings than the plain coves. The plain coves are probably about as expensive as a nicer molding, but almost as boring as not having any crown at all. The red oak floors are nice, not stained overly dark.
The house is better outside than inside. The exterior is nice, presents a traditional appearance with an interesting amount of complexity, but not so much as to appear overly contrived. The approach reveals the facade slowly. I like the colors they chose. It's especially nice that they left so many of the trees on the property and the lawn area just kind of dissolves into the forest. As previously noted, a couple of minor details don't have enough contrast from the brick walls, but that doesn't really detract from the overall feel of the house. They would have done better to have elided those details and spent the money on a couple of nice white Ionic columns for the front porch. I would also elide the false bracing at the tops of the two eaves. It's superfluous and too rustic.
Around back, it makes no sense why they missed the opportunity to have one large deck in front of both the living area and the dining area instead of two small ones. It also makes no sense why the screened porch is off the living area and the unscreened one is off the dining area. Bugs are more likely to be a bother when food is present and you're eating. It looks suspiciously like the dining area porch was an afterthought. Its support posts don't match the brick piers holding up the screened porch.
People like you. Jeez