| Planning Your Space |
Good furniture
arrangement begins with analyzing your space and the contents of your
room. When planning the arrangement of a room, think about how many people
use the room, how traffic flows, and how the room is used.
The first
step in planning your space is to determine the focal point of the room.
Find the dramatic element that draws your immediate attention. If your
room has an attractive feature, such as a fireplace or picture window,
center your furniture arrangement around it. If your room doesn't have
one, create a focal point with furnishings. Dramatic window treatments,
an interesting display of artwork, or a beautifully decorated bed can
help define the space.
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| Graphing a Floor Plan |
After determining the focal point, draw a floor plan of your room using graph
paper and the provided furniture
templates. Use one graph square for every foot of actual space. Be
sure to include windows, staircases, doors, fireplaces, and the focal
point of your room.
Measure
major furniture pieces and make a template of each piece. After you have
cut out the templates, color each in the hue of the piece it represents;
then you can get a good idea how color is mixed throughout the room. Move
the templates around to find the best arrangement before moving the first
piece of furniture. (Your back will be glad you did!)
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| Using Placement Guidelines |
To ensure
that movement in the room is unrestricted and all pieces of furniture
are organized, keep in mind the following:
- Rethink
traffic routes. Your traffic paths need a minimum of 24". Try to
keep major traffic paths from interrupting the central furniture grouping
in the room.
- The sofa
in the living room, the bed in the bedroom, and the desk in the office
demand the majority of space available. Arrange these pieces of furniture
first.
- Allow
14" to 18" between a coffee table and the front of the sofa.
- When creating
areas for conversation, keep furniture pieces within eight feet of each
other to allow people to talk comfortably when seated. Remember to keep
these pieces facing each other when possible, instead of side by side.
You'll probably want to include tables beside the seating so people
will have a place for food and drinks.
- Allow
sufficient space in front of chests to allow doors and drawers to be
opened easily.
- Do you
watch television in the room? If so, the distance between the television
and the seating should be three times the size of the screen. In other
words, to comfortably watch TV on a 30" screen, you should sit
90" away from it.
- In seating
used for reading, remember to make room for appropriate light whether
it's a floor lamp or an end table with a lamp.
- The dining
area requires plenty of space to move freely. Allow two feet between
the back of the chair and any other piece of furniture or wall. Remember
to measure this distance assuming someone is seated in the chair.
- In bedrooms,
the minimum clearance between the edge of the bed and the wall should
be 24". In addition, allow at least 36" between the edge of
the bed and any door that opens into the room. If you place two beds
side by side in a room, allow at least 18" between them.
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| Achieving Balance and Visual Interest |
Balanced
rooms are more pleasing to the eye and make more effective use of the
available space. To keep your rooms from looking one-sided or dull, remember:
- Make
sure all the tall or heavy pieces don't end up in the same area of the
room. Mix bigger and smaller pieces throughout the room, but keep in
mind the scale of the items you put beside each other. You wouldn't
want to place a dainty round table by your oversized, comfy armchair.
A large chair will require a larger end table. So how do you achieve
a mix of bigger and smaller items? Remember that a grouping of smaller
items can balance out a weightier item. Two small armchairs and a table
balance a larger sofa.
- Balance
doesn't simply apply to the size and scale of the furniture. Be sure
to mix color and pattern throughout the room as well.
- Avoid
leaving pieces of furniture sitting alone in the room. Connect pieces
by placing tables or lamps nearby. For example, if the sofa is positioned
in the middle of the room facing the fireplace, anchor it by placing
a table behind it.
- Use different
heights of furniture and accessories. As someone looks around your room,
you want their eyes to move up and down.
- For added
interest, attempt to pull furniture away from the walls. If you have
a sofa placed against a wall, consider placing a table behind it and
pull it into the room.
- Angle
furniture when possible to take the rough edges off of a room. A desk
or dresser usually looks better angled across a corner than straight
against a wall. Angles make the room warmer and present a casual, lived-in
style.
- If your
room has a curved mantel or a large bay window, a round or semicircular
furniture arrangement may complement it.
- If your
room lacks architectural detail, you may want to add moulding
or a French door to create visual interest.
- Remember
rooms are more inviting if they are not overfilled with furniture. If
you have a piece that throws off the room's balance or is seldom used,
consider moving it to another room, storing it, or giving it away.
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| Creating a Multipurpose Space |
Many of us
need to use an area in our homes for more than one purpose. For example,
the living room often acts as an everyday gathering spot for family, a
place to entertain guests, a space to watch television, an area for the
kids to play and even a room for guests to sleep in a crunch. Here are
some ideas to help you define separate areas within a room:
- Use furniture,
such as tables or upholstered pieces, to outline separate, functional
areas of a room. A sofa can separate a reading space from a television
viewing space.
- Open bookcases
divide areas, and they also lend an illusion of spaciousness.
- In the
bedroom, instead of anchoring a bed against the wall, try using the
headboard as a divider for sleeping and dressing areas.
- Use area
rugs to help define areas within a room. You can mix rugs of different
patterns within the same room as long as the color coordinates. Using
two rugs of the same size may tend to divide the room in equal halves.
Unless the areas you want to create have equal proportions, select rugs
of differing sizes to create more interest and contrast.
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