ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Megan Morgan

Megan Morgan studied Fine Arts with a focus on color theory and has spent fifteen years completing hundreds of real paint projects across residential and commercial spaces. She writes about color reviews, side-by-side shade comparisons, and the practical science behind buying decisions, covering LRV, undertones, sheen levels, and how lighting shifts a color from the strip to the wall. Her work is built on testing, not trends. When a color looks right in theory but fails in a real room, she documents exactly why.
Megan Morgan studied Fine Arts with a focus on color theory and has spent fifteen years completing hundreds of real paint projects across residential and commercial spaces. She writes about color reviews, side-by-side shade comparisons, and the practical science behind buying decisions, covering LRV, undertones, sheen levels, and how lighting shifts a color from the strip to the wall. Her work is built on testing, not trends. When a color looks right in theory but fails in a real room, she documents exactly why.

Recent Stories

Making s’mores without a stove or microwave sounds tricky. But all you need is a cardboard box and some sunlight. A DIY solar oven costs almost nothing to build and takes less than an hour to put together. Kids love it, and it actually works. Here, you will learn exactly how to make a solar oven step by step using materials you already have at home. You will also find out the science behind how it works and fun activities to turn it into a proper learning project. What You Need to Build a Solar Oven You do not need

A slow drain never picks a convenient time. It always shows up right before guests arrive or during the morning rush. The good news is you do not need a shelf full of chemical products to fix it. Most clogged drains respond well to simple ingredients already sitting in your kitchen. A good DIY drain cleaner costs almost nothing, takes minutes to put together, and is safe for your pipes, your family, and the environment. Here you will find the best natural methods for every type of clog, tips to keep drains clear long-term, and when it is time to

Outside windows work against you in ways indoor glass never does. Rain doesn’t clean them; it deposits dirt, pollen, and mineral residue that dries into a hazy film. Sprinkler overspray leaves hard water stains. Bird droppings etch glass within 24–48 hours if left untreated. And the screens sitting in front of the glass filter the same dust and exhaust particles back onto the pane every time the wind picks up. It’s not that your windows are difficult to clean. It’s that they’re up against constant exposure that indoor glass simply doesn’t face. The method matters more than the product. Get

You’ve cleaned your windows, and they still look dirty. There’s no smear you can point to, no obvious streak, just a dullness that wasn’t there before. For most people, the problem isn’t the product they used. It’s the technique. Professional window cleaners don’t have access to a secret formula. What they have is a method: a specific order of steps, the right tools, and habits that eliminate the most common causes of streaks before they happen. The best way to clean windows isn’t about scrubbing harder; it’s about starting correctly, working efficiently, and finishing thoroughly. Let’s find out exactly how

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