Decorating Small Places
Believe it or not, local designers say small rooms are just an illusion. Tinker a bit with furniture, fixtures, color and storage and they say pretty much anyone can turn a shoebox of a space into a seemingly expansive area. Here are a few tips from them on how to make the most of your pint-sized spaces.
Inside the perimeter
Daria de Golian of Daria Designs says that when she works on small spaces, she empties the furniture out of the room and puts each piece back in one by one. Sometimes by doing that, she says she can find better ways of arranging furniture so a room doesn’t feel as cramped.
“If you don’t fill every corner of the room and you bring the furniture closer to the center of the room, the space becomes larger and easier to move around in,” De Golian says. “Most people put their furniture around the perimeter of the room because they think the space in the center gives the room a feeling of being more spacious. You want to draw those pieces in, however, so that people feel more invited because the room is more intimate.”
De Golian says she rearranged a combination dining room and den that was 24 feet by 17 feet. By doing so, she was able to add more seating, block out separate living areas with two different rugs, and gracefully place a sofa, loveseat, 6-foot table, two wingback chairs, console, coffee table and armoire.
Size (and function) does matter
Brad Epperson of Epperson Design Inc. says it’s also important to scale the accessories to the room’s size. “If you go to some of these suppliers and manufacturers, they make all of this oversized furniture for “mansionettes;” that just doesn’t work for every space,” Epperson says.
Small rooms pack more punch when the furniture and accessories are not only properly sized, but multifunctional. For example, Epperson says ottomans can work as coffee tables and desks can also function as end tables in a small room. Epperson cites a 12-foot by 14-foot study that became a multipurpose space as an example; the sofa in the room was a sleeper sofa (guest room); there was a television (entertainment room) and a desk (office). In that same office, Epperson installed double sliding pocket door because open, traditional doors cut into limited space.
Dark and dramatic
Jackie Naylor, ASID, with Jackie Naylor Interiors Inc. says dark colors add depth and drama to small rooms. “As incredible as this may sound, I painted the walls in one room a black lacquer and put draperies on two walls that were perpendicular to each other,” Naylor says. “The doors had opaque glass in them, the furniture was scaled to the room and a mirror was framed and put on the wall in a way that reflected the draped area. That played up the smallness in a way, but because of the dark colors, the room seemed more spacious.”
Dark colors and monochromatic finishes help rooms have a spare, uncluttered look, Epperson says. Dark colors make it harder for the eye to see depth, he says, but he cautions that dark colors sometimes seem overwhelming in smaller rooms and that you should use your best judgment. Meanwhile, curtains and draping give walls height, Naylor says, and an attitude that doesn’t look “shrunken down or small.”
Let there be light
Interesting lighting, glass and mirrors give a spatial effect to the room that’s “not too glitzy,” Naylor says. These fixtures provide the room with focal points that de-emphasize its size, she says. Meanwhile, De Golian says it’s always good to have three different sources of lighting in the room, whether it’s a window, an up-lit screen or a floor lamp. Layering those lighting elements gives rooms a feeling of depth. Adjustable lighting “whether it’s a table lamp that adjusts up or down or track lighting” also helps small spaces look larger, Epperson says.
Nooks and crannies
Naylor says that with small bathrooms or kitchens you can use cabinets that are 12 to 15 inches deep, or recess the storage into a wall area. Tubs can be scaled down to fit the bathroom, as can showers. If there’s space in your closet, place your dresser inside so that you have more space in your bedroom. In the kitchen use over-the-cabinet space to display collectibles, hang pots from a ceiling rack and store some cooking utensils in baskets or tins to maximize cabinet and drawer space.
The bottom line is that no matter how small your space may be, with the right design tricks, you can give any room a feeling of spaciousness.
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