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How To Make Your Room Look Larger
by: Olivia Filipetto
Although many new houses today are large, unfortunately they may
contain small rooms, a little smaller than we'd like. Small rooms
can feel confining and uncomfortable. Luckily we can utilize certain
design concepts that fool the eye and make our rooms seem larger.
Try these inexpensive decorating tricks to make your rooms live
bigger.
1. Use Light Colors
Light and brightly colored walls are more reflective, which will
help to maximise the effect created by natural light. This does
not mean you have to live with white walls. There are a wide range
of light colors paints available, such as light green or cream beige.
Once you've chosen your wall color, choose your trim and moldings
colors. Paint your trims and moldings in either the same hue as
the walls, or a lighter color. Lighter objects appear closer while
darker or shadowed objects appear further away. When you paint your
moldings a lighter color, the wall appears further back - thus making
your room appear bigger.
Now, don't be worried that your room is going to be bland and uninviting,
bolder and darker colors can be be used in furniture, artwork and
accessories.
If your colors are already dark, try to move the darker colors
to a 'background' role while maximizing your neutral white or ivory.Be
careful when using wallpaper. Solid colours are the safest, with
tiny patterns taking a close second. Whatever the wall color or
finish, we recommend the ceiling in a small room be painted stark
white to maximize brightness.
2. Mirrors
Mirrors can have a favorable impact on a room's appearance. A large
mirror in the room will reflect light around the room. The mirrors
also reflect both natural and artificial light to make a room brighter
during the day and night. They bounce light deep into the room,
making it appear larger. This is especially effective with near
a window so the outdoors can be reflected.
Use glass-front or mirrored cabinet doors to make spaces feel large
and uncluttered. Large, expansive mirrors over vanities, mirrored
wardrobe doors or a floor-to-ceiling wall of mirrors (combined with
our decorating suggestions) can make even the smallest of spaces
seem larger.
3. Arrange Furniture At Angles
Arrange some of your larger pieces of furniture at a angle. You
don't have to place the furniture at an exact 45 degree angle, often
a lesser angle looks best if you can balance the look with another
furniture piece.
Setting your furniture at an angle works because the longest straight
line in any given room is it's diagonal. When you place your furniture
at an angle, it leads the eye along the longer distance, rather
than the shorter wall. As an added bonus, you often get some additional
storage space behind the piece in the corner, too!
4. Scale Furniture
Keep furnishings in scale with the rooms. In small rooms, use slim
rockers, open-back chairs or a simple sofa or love seat rather than
overstuffed furnishings to avoid overpowering the space.
There are stores that deal exclusively in furniture for apartments
and mobile homes. Despite its slightly smaller size, scaled-down
furniture can be beautiful. An open headboard is best for a small
room. When furnishing, keep the view at eye level unobstructed.
Taller furnishings should be placed at the end of the room opposite
its main entry.
About The Author
Olivia Filipetto is publisher of http://www.bedroomfurniture.com/,
providing all you need to know about enchancing your bedroom and
buying bedroom furniture.
bedroomfurniture@gmail.com
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