Blog Post Title One

You’ve saved up for months to get your mortgage and now you finally have the keys to your dream home in hand. It’s beautiful, but someone’s got to say it: there’s nowhere to park your bum. No chair, no sofa, white walls, no spoon, no warmth, no character, no home.

We all know the difference right? Between the house and the home? Yes, Luther, a chair is still a chair, and a chair is not a house and a house is not a home, when there's no one there to hold you tight.

Set the tone: poetic and introspective. Talk about what “home” means to you — that feeling when light hits a favourite object, or how the right textures change your mood. Maybe mention how your flat began almost empty, and the slow process of filling it with meaning rather than things.

1. The Search: Finding Treasures in the Wild

  • Talk about how you use Facebook Marketplace like a curated gallery.

  • Mention your browsing rituals (e.g. searching by material, brand, or description, not just “sofa”).

  • Include a tip on how to read between the lines of bad listings.

2. What to Buy — and What to Leave Behind

  • Write about the things worth the hunt: solid wood, linen, ceramics, vintage glass, quality lighting.

  • Then what’s rarely worth it: certain upholstery, cheap MDF, furniture with strong smells or signs of pests.

  • Give a short checklist for sanity: smell, structure, and story.

3. The Art of Combining

  • Describe how you mix modern with found.

  • Talk about your visual rhythm — why empty space matters as much as the things themselves.

  • Add a reflection: a home should feel like an edited self-portrait, not a showroom.

4. Living with What You’ve Found

  • Show how these objects change how you move, rest, and think.

  • Tie back to your lifestyle — the balance of practicality and beauty.

Closing Reflection

End softly — perhaps with an image of you lying on your favourite piece, the room quiet, the light soft. A final line like:

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Blog Post Title Two