If that works for you, consider putting the back of the chest of drawers against a different wall (perhaps on the longest wall so that when you turn left as you enter the room you are looking directly at the front of the chest of drawers). Consider putting the mirrors on the wall between the room door and the closet door. DO, however, at least consider adding either a bed side table with a lamp (or two) and/or a floor lamp, with this option in mind. DO keep the ceiling fan with light, especially if that room is in the top floor, as it appears to be, because heat rises making that fan useful and a much better choice than having to find a place to put a portable fan. Old English also has different shades of liquid scratch cover if needed. Better to get some Old English lemon oil and rub down every inch of every piece if the finish is in any way imperfect. It also looks good in the room with wood trim. Also, everyone I've known that has eventually regrets it when it needs repainting - and it eventually will - then stripping off old, stained, peeling, flecked/chipped paint is one of the most awful chores. Please DON'T paint the wood furniture which has a good solid classic look to it. Because you have room for a sidewalk, you could replace create a much more solid and firmly set walkway with bricks or paving stones that outline your driveway. (or if you have one in the back you want to enclose for other uses.) You should seriously consider at least removing the stumbling hazard which is your stone sidewalk. When you cut down that tree, it appears you'll have a large blank brick wall on the side of the house next to the driveway and since the driveway is essentially touching the house anyway, a carport could work well on the right side of your house if you don't already have a carport or garage in the back. Budget and building codes and space permitting, you could extend the porch roof to create a carport as well. Since you're cutting the tree on the corner next to the house anyway, do consider using that concrete slab by adding a front porch from the left of the front door to the right corner of the house with a small gable in the shed roof over and in front of the front door.
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