Decorating
Blunders: Revamp Your Home with Easy Fixes
You've spent a fortune on the perfect sofa, drop-dead
wing chairs, and truly artistic wallpaper. You've even sprung for an entertainment center
that's not made out of plywood and cinder blocks. So why doesn't your room feel pulled
together? What's keeping it from looking great?
Chances are, you're making one of the decorating world's common mistakes, whether it's
a roller coaster effect of uneven furniture heights or something as simple as skipping
accessories. Scan this checklist to see if you've made a decorating faux pas:
Buying without a plan. Who hasn't snatched up a comfy chair or a great lamp just
because it caught their eye? It's often hard to incorporate such impulse purchases into
the rest of your decor. It's better to start with a plan -- one that matches your
lifestyle. If you have kids or pets or simply love to put your feet up, opt for furniture
with sturdy, not delicate, fabrics. If you love to eat in the family room, choose a large
enough coffee table and end tables.
- Forgetting a focal point. A fireplace, an incredible entertainment armoire or anything
large and eye-catching should be the dominant feature of a room. That gives you a starting
point -- like an anchor for your room from which everything else emanates.
- Creating a shouting gallery. Don't be afraid to pull furniture away from walls into a
cozier grouping. For an ideal conversation area, use a sofa and two great armchairs -- all
in close proximity. Put a coffee table in the middle and end tables within easy reach. Try
to avoid furniture placement that requires people to walk through this conversation area
to get somewhere else.
- Making rooms off-balance. Both the placement and the size of your furniture can make a
room look off-kilter. Don't crowd all the large pieces on one side of a room. A low-slung
sofa; a long, horizontal wall unit; and bottom-heavy tables force the eye downward.
Balance them out with taller furnishings or accessories. Make sure your upholstered pieces
are about the same height; anything that's much taller or shorter will look out of place.
- Choosing the wrong lighting. Inadequate lighting can wreck a room. A ceiling fixture
alone is rarely enough. For reading, choose table lamps or floor lamps rather than
up-lighting torchieres near your favorite chair. Use track or recessed lighting to
highlight artwork. And brighten all your rooms the easiest way possible -- by using the
maximum wattage bulbs your lamps allow.
- Getting hung up on artwork. The old decorator's standard is to hang art at eye level.
Instead, decide where you think the picture should be -- then hang it three inches lower.
Group similar types of pictures together rather than scattering them throughout a room (or
your house). Hang similarly sized pictures so their bottoms are flush. Complementary, not
competing, frames bring cohesiveness.
- Forgetting to include YOU in the decor. You've just bought a home, not a sterile
doctor's office, so surround yourself with things you love. Don't be afraid to have a
stack of magazines in a basket near the coffee table, paperbacks you love on the built-in
bookshelves, or a pretty - but functional - throw on the sofa so you don't have to drag a
blanket from the bedroom on chilly nights.
Several of these mistakes are illustrated in
before-and-after pictures in Use What You Have Decorating (Perigree, 1998), a terrific
resource for easy-on-the-budget decorating, written by Lauri Ward. She's the founder of
Use-What-You-Have Interiors in New York City, a company that does one-day decorating
makeovers.
Written by Diane
Benson Harrington
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can help? -- Let me show you how!
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