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Furniture
Placement Secrets
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by: Batsheva
Vaknin
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By BatSheva Vaknin
The easiest and most inexpensive way to invigorate
the design of your living room is to rearrange the
furniture items you already own. Furniture
placement can be a daunting task, no matter how
big or small the room. If you are someone who
always figured furniture placement would be better
left to professional interior designers, fret no
more. These tips will help you embrace the task of
balancing your sofa with your coffee table or
armchair, and allow you to create peace and
harmony amongst all your furniture.
Location, location, location
A room must be balanced. Specifically, the
furniture in every room should be placed in a way
that is pleasing to the eye and easy to maneuver
around. If all the heavy furniture pieces like
sofas, armchairs, entertainment centers and
bookshelves are loaded on one side of the room, a
room can feel like a sinking ship.
On the other hand, if you spread your furniture
around the room haphazardly, a room can feel
cluttered even when it is relatively empty. Think
about the size of your living room in relation to
the amount of furniture you have.
You can anchor the room by situating a large
entertainment center against one wall, and then
arrange all seating comfortably around that
anchor. Or, anchor your sofa against a wall, add a
small side table or a coffee table in front for
convenience, and voilá! Your room is balanced.
Sofa Secrets
Using your sofa as an anchor, or as the focal
point for your living room can be an effective
furniture placement tool. However, modular sofas,
or sofas with many components, can be too heavy an
anchor, tipping the balance of the room with its
bulkiness. A creative solution to this problem can
be found in breaking up the pieces of the sofa.
Place the largest sofa piece against the longest
wall of the room, then the smaller sections on the
opposite side. If you have the smaller sections of
the modular sofa face the long sofa at an angle,
you will avoid that boring, boxy look that comes
with having all furniture pieces pressed with
their backs straight against a wall.
A fresh alternative to placing your sofa against
the longest wall is to bring the sofa out, away
from the wall. If you prefer this look and feel
for your sofa placement, allow at least two and a
half to three feet between the sofa and the wall
for comfortable walking space. Less space is
needed between chairs and a sofa, but always keep
in mind walking patterns.
Go with the Flow
Imagine how you and your guests will maneuver in
your living room with all the furniture in its
proper place. For example, if there are two doors,
you may want to place sofas and chairs in a manner
that will allow passersby to walk behind or around
the seating arrangement instead of through it.
If there is only one door to the room, don’t
block the flow with a large coffee table right in
the way of the sofa. Make sure you allow easy
access directly to the sofa and chairs from the
door, allowing for some space around the seating
area as well.
Larger living rooms can be designed so that they
function effectively as two areas. For example,
have one social, entertainment center seating
arrangement in one section, and a quieter study
arrangement in another. Tall side tables can be
placed behind a sofa with decorative vases and
pictures on top, as long as there is still walking
space behind the couch.
When deciding on how to arrange your living room
furniture, listen to your instincts. Wait to
decorate the walls for a few days or even a week
once you have decided on where you are going to
put each piece of furniture, to give yourself a
chance to get used to the new placement. Live in
the space for a bit, and assess how you feel. If
something doesn’t feel right, you can always
move it, and use these tips to help you bring your
living room back into balance.
http://www.homeandliving.com
About the author:
A Yale graduate, BatSheva Vaknin writes plays,
screenplays, and articles on topics ranging from
finding the world’s greatest pizza to decorating
a child’s room. She has just completed her first
novel.
Circulated by Article
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