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Are you having a tough time decorating problem rooms?
Learn how to disguise bad architecture with these tips
on decorating problem rooms.
Five Easy Tricks for Handling Problem Rooms
Copyright 2004, Pamela Cole Harris
Do you have a room that's just too much? Too long? Too
narrow? Too tall? You can camouflage that problem space
with a few visual tricks! .
1. Is your room too long? Divide it! Create two or more
separate groupings in the room. Have an area for
conversation, one for music, or one for media viewing.
The possibilities are endless! Use area rugs to define
each space and tie the whole design together. Dark
colors on the short walls at either end of the
long space will make them appear to advance and shorten
the space visually.
2. Is your room too narrow? Arrange your furniture on
the diagonal to fool the eye! Linear elements such as
art, shelves or rugs should be placed on the short
wall to add visual width. Painting the longest walls a
cool color which will make them appear to recede can
trick the eye and visually widen the space.
3. Is your ceiling too low? Add height to your room with
tall, vertical elements, such as bookcases. Long
curtains which drape on the floor can also add visual
height, as will tall lamps or torchieres. Painting
the ceiling a light, cool color (which appears to
recede) will make the room seem brighter and more open.
4. If your room too tall? Lower the ceiling by
incorporating more horizontal lines in the room.
Shelves, art and crown moldings are just a few of the
elements that can lower the height of the room. Another
way to lower the room is to install molding or chair
rails one half to three quarters of the way up the
walls. This trick visually shortens the
room. Painting the ceiling a dark, warm color will also shorten the visual
space.
5. Is your room too big? Divide it into more intimate
areas! Grouping a couple of chairs with a
loveseat, two chairs and a small table, a sofa and
chair, or other similar arrangements will make the room
seem cozy. Warm colors advance visually, so painting the
room a warm color will make the room seem more intimate.
Whatever problem your room has, a combination of color
and line can make a huge difference in the way the eye
perceives the space. Now, if only I could make my
hips recede!
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Pamela Cole Harris is a writer, eco-decorator and author
of
"100+ Wildly Imaginative Ways to Make Your Own Coffee
Table -
a Handbook for Creatively Deficient Decorators."
Visit her
website,
http://www.homeandgardenmakeover.com for her
unique
decorating and remodeling style (and a free newsletter!)
Or for
unique content for your website, written especially for
your
keywords and audience, visit
http://www.pamelacoleharris.com
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