Mistake: Wallflower Furniture
Your room may feel bigger with all the furniture pushed up against the wall, but if you find yourself having to shout across the room to have a conversation, it may be time to rearrange. In this living room, the sofa "floats" in the middle of the room, but it's closer to the fireplace and the chairs, which creates a cozier conversation area.
Mistake: Beds that Partially Block a Window
A bed that peeks over a window frame looks odd from the street and can lead to uneven fading. However, what if it's the only place for your bed? Make it look better with these tricks: Hang floor-length curtain panels that fall behind the headboard and block the back of the headboard from the window, or install top-down, bottom-up shades, which will allow light to come in, but will be a backdrop for the protruding headboard edges. If your style is modern, go with a platform bed with a headboard that's low enough to fit beneath the window trim. You can also install an entire wall of curtains as a fabric backdrop.
Mistake: Off-Balance Rooms
Shoving the furniture to one side of a room is like a see-saw with only one person. But achieving balance doesn't mean you have to go completely symmetrical. A love seat on one end of an arrangement can be balanced by two chairs on the other end, for example.
Mistake: Ignoring Traffic Flow
In addition to thinking about how furniture pieces relate to one another and the room, you'll want to think about the traffic flow, or how people enter, exit, and navigate the room. For living rooms, make sure people can easily get in and out of the seating grouping without having to awkwardly tango around a side table, for example. If your room has several entries and exits, plan a clear path between these points, such as between an archway that leads from the kitchen to the living room and patio doors.
Mistake: Eschewing Smaller Furniture
Just because a piece isn't oversize doesn't mean it can't serve a purpose. Large furniture can quickly overtake a space, so don't ignore smaller settees, slimmer console tables, and petite end tables as contenders for tiny rooms. A bulky sofa can often only go one place in a room, but a smaller version can be flexible enough to fit multiple places.
Mistake: Forgetting to Get Situational
Yes, you may be able to walk between the dresser and the bed, but what happens when you open the drawer to get your clothes out in the morning? Or if you need to open a buffet drawer when guests are gathered around your table? Try to arrange furniture so that you can comfortably open drawers and doors without having to step to the side.
Mistake: Thinking Single Function
When arranging and selecting furniture, consider all the activities your living room will see and plan accordingly. A pair of stools, for example, can be used as seating when you're hosting a large group of people, but can also be moved around the conversation area to be used as end tables during a cocktail party.
Mistake: Off-Center Light Fixtures
Do your dining room a favor and hire a drywall professional to remedy this problem and relocate your dining room light fixture over the table. For a quicker fix, you can also swag a fixture that has a chain.
Mistake: The Bowling Alley Effect
Long, narrow rooms are the bane of furniture arranging. But there is a way to play up this awkward space to your advantage: divide the room into zones. Arrange the conversation area in one zone and place a desk along the back of the sofa to create a work zone, or place a small table and chairs in the area behind the sofa for homework or playing games. You can also place two small chairs and a side table along the back of the sofa for a smaller secondary seating area.
Mistake: Bad Backs
Nothing makes a room fall flat like a bad first impression. So if the first thing you see when you walk into a room is the ugly or plain back on a piece of furniture, rethink your arrangement. Tuck a chair with a pretty front, but a bad back into a corner. Or give reupholstering a go and cover the back in an eye-catching patterned fabric.
Mistake: Uninspired View
Your main seating piece should have a focal point, whether it's a window, a fireplace, or an archway/opening into another room. If the only logical place for your sofa faces a blank wall, the remedy is easy: fill the wall with a bookcase and craft an attractive display of books and accessories, or stage a gallery wall. For extra interest, place a console table below your art arrangement.
Mistake: Poor Rug Relationships
Ideally, all legs of your furniture should be on the area rug. If that isn't possible, aim to have the front legs of the furniture placed on the rug.
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