Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Fake a Bigger Small Space

Fake It with Paint

I will often paint the walls, ceiling, and trim in the same color. Lighter colors make a space feel larger and airier.

Fake It with Paint

Float the Furniture

Don't push all the furniture against the walls! Float some pieces when creating conversational seating arrangements. Choose pieces that can help to create distinct zones in a small area without taking up too much visual space, like clear acrylic pieces.

Float the Furniture

Edit, Edit, Edit

It has been said before, but it is so key: Edit, edit, edit. And when you're done editing, edit some more. If your space is full of stuff, it will never feel spacious. 

Edit, Edit, Edit

Divide and Conquer

The best way to make a small space feel spacious is to make sure that you have designated areas to make everything seem larger. A studio, for example, should have a bedroom area, dining area, kitchen area, etc. Use different rugs in some of those areas to help make things feel larger.

Divide and Conquer

Try the Rug Trick

I like to use a large rug to cover the majority of the floor. It will draw your eye across the entire space, making it appear more spacious than it actually is.

Try the Rug Trick

Stretch the Space

A smaller room calls for full-size rather than smaller furniture, and lower seating heights. Color rather than white walls always makes the space feel bigger, too.

Stretch the Space

Reflect Light

Mirrors can add depth to a room and also can add more light. I always hang mirrors where they can reflect a window.

Reflect Light

Fool the Eye

Hang roman shades behind the drapes -- also at ceiling height, but rolled down to just below the top of the window -- in order to trick the eye into believing that the windows go all of the way up to the ceiling.

Fool the Eye

Slim Down

Be mindful of visual weight when you have a small space. Try a sofa that has exposed legs versus a skirt, or a pedestal table for a dining room instead of something with four bulky legs. 

Slim Down

Scale Smartly

Play with scale. Try using larger pieces versus multiple, smaller pieces in a room. Instead of multiple chairs, try a love seat, and pair it with one larger art piece on the wall above instead of an art collage.

Scale Smartly

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