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10 Steps to a Well-Designed Room

7 Mar

How do designers get that “done” look? It all comes down to 10 essential steps—and we’ve got them all right here!

Know what you want from a room.
The first step in designing a room is figuring out exactly what the room will be used for. “When people have great rooms,” observes designer Katie Leavy of Capital Design in Washington, D.C., “they put their television in there, their kids play in there, they’ll even eat in there.” If you’ve got the space, try to narrow things down. Decide, for example, if your room will be a living room that you’ll entertain in on just a few occasions, or a family room you’re going to use everyday. A room’s purpose should be one of the strongest cues for the decor.

Remember who lives there
Will children use this space? Will pets play here? The occupants should always be considered when selecting fabrics and finishes. Interior decorator Jackie Glisson of Just a Decorator in Memphis, Tennessee, notes that while silk slipcovers would be a sophisticated choice for an adults-only room, they wouldn’t make it through one season in a space that routinely hosts kids and pets

Know what pleases your senses
Most designers want to see any photos you’ve earmarked from your favorite design magazines. In fact, one design company insists that all clients compile and share their favorite looks as a “homework” assignment. Designer Alia Myer of Jessica Hall Associates in Larkspur, California, tells clients: “Try to turn off your internal filter, the one that says this is good, this is bad, and put a Post-It on anything that appeals to you. Let your first reaction guide you.” When you go back and look them over, these images tell a story of what you like and what your room should be.

Keep size in mind
One of the biggest issues facing homeowners today is the ever-expanding scale of sofas. “When I’m called in to rescue a room, it’s often because the furniture pieces really don’t fit the size of the room,” shares Jackie Glisson. “Most people think they have much more space than they do,” says Alia Myer. Then they buy oversized furniture, “and it feels moshed together.” The solution? Take out a measuring tape and a piece of graph paper. Draw a floor plan of your room to scale (let one square equal one foot, for instance). Or if you can find your blueprints, use them—and make extra copies. As you consider buying additional pieces, mark off their intended location and make sure they’ll fit before bringing them home.

Go with your flow
A beautiful home should have continuity from room to room. You wouldn’t wear a yellow shirt with purple pants and green shoes, so why would you decorate each room in your house with an entirely different color palette or style? To prevent each room from looking out of place, try to maintain similar tones and themes throughout the house. “When you do one room, you have to think about everything that touches it, all of the spaces that connect. And stay with the whole scheme of the house,” says designer Stephanie Henley of Beasley & Henley Interior Design in Winter Park, Florida. Jackie Glisson notes, “When I do a home, when you walk from room to room, there’s some element that continues.”

Focus on one great piece
Designers say that sometimes an item you already have and love can become their inspiration for the rest of the room. “It can be one tile, one chair, one pillow—it depends on who it is, what they like and what they’ve got, and we go from there,” explains Katie Leavy. What looks do your favorite things inspire? Maybe Grandpa’s handsome desk would be more at home in a ’40s-themed home office. Perhaps the rustic seascape you picked up on your honeymoon could become the centerpiece of a beach-cottage bedroom. Or a vase of your prize roses might look just right in an English country living room surrounded by lots of floral upholstery. Line up a few of your favorite things in the room you want to redo—and let the one that moves you most lead the way.

Formulate a plan
Some designers can keep all of this information in their heads, others carry their floor plans, photos and design ideas around with them at all times—but they never dive in without thinking it all through. Try to envision your room when it’s completely done, and then plot out what steps you’ll need to take to get to that point. Be sure to create your own room-design file. You’ll want to include key measurements and inspiring images. You’ll also want to keep a shopping list based on things you’ve seen in stores, on websites and in catalogs that are a good fit for your dimensions, theme and budget (you may find something even better down the road, but it’s good to have a point of comparison). Designer Stephanie Henley suggests keeping Ziploc baggies of the fabric swatches, flooring samples and paint chips you’d like to use (label their purpose clearly, she notes, but write in pencil because you may change your mind). Clearly everything is flexible, but having this plan at your fingertips will help you make decisions and keep the momentum going.

Shop around
“Sometimes people buy the furniture showroom. They get a bedroom suite where the nightstands match the headboard and the headboard matches the dresser,” says designer Jackie Glisson. “Instead we want it to look like we put some thought into it, so it’s not something you’ll see in your neighbor’s home.” The best way to accomplish your own unique look is to avoid buying matching furnishings from one store—and instead, shop from a variety of retailers, auctions and flea markets. You don’t need to buy everything at once. Establish a basic look and feel and let your style—and decor—evolve over the years. Also, when they’re shopping, the pros know that form and function are equally important. You’ll never relax on a rock-hard sofa no matter how much you love the fabric and working from home won’t feel right if your desk isn’t big enough to keep everything organized.

Be fresh, not faddish
Do you plan on redecorating every two years? Can you afford to change things often? If not, you may want to avoid trendy patterns on expensive pieces. The pros suggest choosing neutral colors for large upholstered pieces (like your sofa) and using more of-the-moment accents (like pillows in a hot new hue) that you can easily replace when trends change. If you want to make a bigger splash, there’s always paint. “Just painting a room can make it feel entirely different,” notes Alia Myer.

Light it up
“Lighting is some of the best decorating you can do,” says Jackie Glisson so be sure to have a variety of lighting installed in every room. Include task lighting focused on what you’ll be doing in the room, whether it’s reading or checking your e-mail, as well as ambiant lighting to set the appropriate mood. Designers suggest converting your light switches to dimmers and including a few different lamps to provide a number of lighting options. “You can never have too many lamps,” says Glisson.

Make it personal
Great design and personality are not mutually exclusive. Your room should be a reflection of your style. In fact, designers consider their work a success when clients say a room feels like their own, explains Alia Myer. Blow up a beautiful photo taken on a recent vacation. Devote a shelf to favorite books or a seashell collection. Jackie Glisson also observes that buying original artwork is more accessible than ever. At art shows and online galleries, an original painting or unique print can cost the same or less than mass-produced art from the local furniture store. And there’s no way your neighbor will have the same thing.

By Emily Lapkin, HGTV.com

10 Ways to Spruce Up Your Place on a Dime

7 Mar

  1. First impressions are everything. Spruce up your front door — things like a fresh coat of paint, a new knocker or even a shiny knob work wonders. Make sure your doorbell works, too. No one likes to be ignored.
  2. Refresh your walls with vibrant colors. Pick a room in your home and designate it the “summer room.” Repaint, refresh and rejuvenate the walls with one of those luscious, incredible hues found in the vibrant summer blooms. Muted yellows, soft blues and vibrant greens are great choices.
  3. Recycle fabrics and textiles. Lighten up any room by giving up heavy fabrics for light and airy ones. In the living room, for example, take down your old drapes and replace them with an open weave such as chiffon or organza. Change out dark throw pillows and slipcovers by adding crisp white, a bright solid or even modern, floral patterns.
  4. Bring the beach into your home in a simple way. Buy some synthetic coral from your local aquarium or fish store. It lasts longer than real coral, comes in amazing colors and costs a lot less. Try mounting coral on wooden stands, framing them or using them as centerpieces for your dining room table. How about using a giant clamshell as a decorative bowl?
  5. Clean up your kitchen cabinets. Spruce them up with a fresh coat of paint or stain, or simply remove the doors for a truly European-style kitchen. If they are just plain dirty, use a brush and a wood cleaner to get those dirty fingerprints out.
  6. Fix up an old ceiling fan. Have new blades installed, or just clean out and repaint the old ones. Not only will the fan look more attractive, but your air quality will also improve.
  7. Declutter for a quick makeover. Just like little squirrels, we hunker down and store our goods during the winter. But come summer, your home can get cluttered with knickknacks, heavy blankets and bulky furniture. Put some of it away in storage. Larger, clutter-free spaces create the impression of a bigger house.
  8. Let the sun shine in. Strategic placement of a mirror can add an enormous amount of natural light in your home. If possible, hang a large mirror in the living room directly where the sun beams in. In addition to bouncing light, it creates virtual space and overall appeal to a small room.
  9. Clean out the garage for a drive-in theater and more. Home theaters, gyms, game rooms and computer rooms are the latest trend, but with every room in your house spoken for, the next best place to turn for extra space is the garage. Paint the walls, put in that big screen, set up your sound system, and throw in a seating element to add comfort and style. Have friends over, open the garage door, and have yourselves a party.
  10. Follow my three “R’s” rule for design: Refurbish, Repaint, Recycle. Going green takes simple smarts and small steps. By reusing items such as old furniture, frames and artwork, you can make your own small contribution to saving our planet
By Frank Fontana, HGTV.com

Best Budget Decorating Ideas

7 Mar

Creativity is key when it comes to decorating on a dime. Here are savvy ways to add style without maxing out your budget.

Paint
“Paint is the cheapest investment you can make, but the one with the most dramatic result,” says 24 Hour Design’s Angelo Surmelis. Go ahead and put some color on those walls for a fresh — and inexpensive — new look.

Do It Yourself
“The biggest budget buster is hiring people to do stuff that you could do,” says Design on a Dime’s Kristan Cunningham. Consider what you’ll save by taking on some relatively simple projects: Painting, tiling, installing a new floor, sewing curtain panels or throw pillows — whatever you feel up to trying. “It’s easy to learn to do that stuff, and there’s lots of information out there to help,” Cunningham says.
Barter
You may not have a wad of cash or a lot of home-improvement know-how, but you have other resources that can help get your decorating project off the ground: the people you know. Call on a group of relatives, friends and neighbors who — in exchange for lunch and the promise that you’ll do the same for them — can supply the muscle to rip down old wall paneling, roll out paint or assemble a roomful of flat-packed furniture. Go ahead: Be creative — and don’t be shy.

Shop Secondhand Stores
Thrift stores, consignment shops, church rummage sales, online auction sites, estate sales and even salvage yards offer a bounty of discount decorating booty. Look for furniture with solid construction and classic lines that new upholstery or paint will bring back to life. Cunningham, for example, snatched up a vintage settee for $500 at a consignment shop, then had it painted white and upholstered with luxurious mohair for a unique piece with a baroque-modern twist. The designer also regularly scouts secondhand shops for funky, vintage lamps. “Put a crisp new barrel shade on it, or take a lamp with an interesting shape and spray-paint it glossy white and it looks like a $700 designer lamp,” she says.
Look for Less-Than-Perfect Merchandise
You may be able to snag super deals on slightly damaged items, floor models and seconds (i.e. towels from a dye lot that was slightly off) — so be sure to check stores’ “as is” areas or to ask the manager about fire-sale items. Chances are, no one but you will be any the wiser, and you’ll save big bucks.
Save With Stock Items
Custom framing, sewing, upholstering and other skilled labor can add a bundle to the bottom line. Instead, stick with stock items whenever you can: Buy off-the-shelf frames and mats and trim nonvaluable art prints to fit them. Buy standard blinds that are a bit larger than your window and mount them outside the frame. Snap up stock cabinets and finish them with moldings for a custom look. Order that sofa in a neutral, ready-to-ship fabric and use the money you save to splurge on colorful throw pillows.
Wait Patiently for Sales and Discounts
“Wait to find what you really love at a price you really love,” Design on a Dime’s Kristan Cunningham advises. While you shop, ask if items will be discounted anytime soon. Store and department managers are usually the best sources for this insider info — and may even offer you the discounted price before it goes into effect.
Mix, Don’t Match
Not only is a “matchy-matchy” look boring, but buying entire suites of furniture tends to cost more than putting together a creative, eclectic look. So mix it up by opting for a couch and chairs upholstered in complementary fabrics, flanking a bed with two different nightstands and decorating with other diverse items unified by color, form, material and tone. Or try pairing a stately wood table with shiny aluminum or brightly colored plastic chairs. “Don’t be afraid to mix high and low [end] — or modern and traditional — in your home,” says Cunningham. “It makes it fun and fresh.”
Sew Chic Sheets
If you have a sewing machine, you can quickly and easily transform patterned flat sheets into curtain panels, pillow and duvet covers, tablecloths, even slipcovers — and pay a fraction of what you’d shell out for fabric yardage. Of course, this assumes you’ve had previous (successful) sewing experience.
Add Unexpected Accessories
“Almost anything can serve as an accessory,” Home Decorating for Dummies coauthor Patricia Hart McMillan insists — including found objects and household items that cost practically nothing. Architectural corbels rescued from a salvage yard make arresting bookends, while seashells and driftwood collected at the shore create a lovely, natural grouping. A bowl filled with crisp green apples lends a bright pop of color to just about any surface, and a stack of vintage hardbacks adds height, dimension and character to an occasional table.
Reuse Items You Already Have
You don’t have to buy new pieces to turn your tired domicile into a hip space. Instead, turn a fresh eye to what you already have and think about how it might be camouflaged, repurposed or reimagined. Reinvent a drab dresser gathering dust in the spare bedroom as a dramatic sideboard for the dining room with a few coats of glossy black paint and sparkling new hardware. Make over that old couch with a slipcover in a fabulous fabric. Turn plain pillows into eye-catching accents by stenciling simple designs on them. After all, there’s no better budget stretcher than your own imagination.
By Leah Hennen, HGTV.com

Leah Hennen is a freelance writer in Oakland, Calif., who writes on interior design topics. She details her design finds and decorating obsessions in her blog: More Ways to Waste Time.

Kenneth Brown Talks Design

7 Mar

Fun with flat screens
One of the biggest design trends today is driven by technology, says Kenneth Brown. TV is a big part of people’s lives, but the big armoire in the living room is no longer needed thanks to flat-screen TVs. “Something as simple as flat-screen technology has made a big difference in design.” 

Bathroom as sanctuary
“We’re treating the bathroom as if it’s another living room by bringing in furniture pieces and getting rid of the clinical feeling,” Brown says. Mirrors are framed with wood, tile is stone instead of ceramic, light switches are on dimmers, there’s color on the walls and a comfortable place to sit. “It’s more of a spa environment—a sacred space or oasis where you can escape,” he says. “You should be able to close the door and feel free.” 

Find refuge where you live
Regardless of what room you spend a lot of time in, you need to treat that room with a lot of respect, says Brown. Even if it’s the laundry room. “We’re taking rooms that are utilitarian and making them special. If you have a lot of kids and spend a lot of time doing laundry, then make that room a refuge. Paint it a color you like, put up photos of your kids, consider adding a small fountain so you can hear the soothing sound of water.”

The smaller kitchen
The days when a kitchen was the size of two rooms are over, says Brown. “It was just too big and people were having to run all around just to use it.” Instead today’s kitchens are better conceived and use space efficiently, he says. “More than ever the kitchen is the gathering space of the home, but the space has been reappropriated so that the actual functioning part is smaller and the rest of it may be a combined living room/den space.” Cool kitchens >>

Social responsibility
Part of the move to smaller spaces is fueled by an increased sense of social responsibility, Brown says. “We’re turning away from the big McMansions with a kajillion feet of space because it’s a waste of space and resources,” he says. “As designers and homeowners we have to be socially responsible and look at the millions of dollars involved for finishes and carpet and paint. For something to be special it doesn’t have to be huge.”

Color trends
Brown’s favorite colors are of the moment. “It’s always about testing color combinations and the feeling that creates,” he says. “Right now I love chocolate brown and teal blue. The chocolate is a warm color you can sink into, like a candy bar, and the teal is a refreshing punch of life.” Brown’s advice for adding a trendy color to your home: do it in the small ways. “You don’t have to put the season’s orange on a wall. Think about vases or pillows so that when the orange trend is over you haven’t invested too much money.”

Understand your space before you design it. “I’m not just talking about the walls and the floor and where a window is, but everything. The volume of the space, the light and where it comes from,” Brown says. The biggest design mistake is thinking that you, or a designer, can walk into a place and really know what needs to be done, he says. “It’s like a very good paint job. The best paint job is always about spending more time with the prep. I’ve found that the more I prep myself on the space and the homeowners’ vision and what they want, the more able I am to give them that good paint job, which is the room they want.”

Comfort is key. A Kenneth Brown room isn’t a success unless it’s comfortable and someplace the homeowners want to be. Like his own home (see “At Home With Kenneth Brown,” at left), gracious environments are meant to be beautiful but totally livable, he says. “Combine that couch you sink into with pieces you love that give the room smash or personality.”

It’s more about taking out than putting in. “A problem people have is that they see things that they like and believe they have to have all of it,” says Brown. “But it’s not filling up space that is important; it’s about putting up things that mean something to you. If there’s a blank wall it’s OK to have it empty until you find that piece that speaks to you. Editing a room so that it’s not cluttered will help keep your mind at peace.”

By Ann Krueger, HGTV.com

The Power of Black

7 Mar

In the decorating world, black is defined as the absence of color. It’s funny, then, that even a little black in a room—any room—can have such an impact. Black elements can bring a pastel room down to earth so it’s not too feminine or washed out. In a space with an eclectic mishmash of furnishings, a repetitive dose of black—a pillow with black piping, a black-and-white photograph, a black fireplace surround—can provide cohesion and pull the whole look together. A touch of black helps neutrals sing and strong colors pack a contrasting punch. So why not try a bit of black in your next decorating scheme? It may not be a “color,” but black is still beautiful.

Black, according to interior designer Mark McCauley, ASID, is a forever color—forever night, forever classic, forever formal. Consider the enduring charm of the classic little black dress or the black tux. “Black is a little dangerous because of its association with nothingness, but it also can feel solid and orderly,” he says. Whatever else you can say about black, it is not wishy-washy.

By Anne Krueger, HGTV.com