I’m in the process of moving and trying to figure out some sort of furniture layout or feng shui. I have a loose idea, but I’m unsure if the place will yield itself to any inspiration. Any help or suggestions?
I’m in the process of moving and trying to figure out some sort of furniture layout or feng shui. I have a loose idea, but I’m unsure if the place will yield itself to any inspiration. Any help or suggestions?
You can also do stuff like use cheap folding chairs and tables until you decide on real ones, mark out the dimensions of furniture on the floor using masking tape, drape fabric samples on things to help you visualize the final furniture etc.
Some other design principles to keep in mind is:
And most importantly to interior design is lighting. I cannot stress enough how important good lighting is for making a room look good. A well lit room can make any room look kind of decent, and bad lighting can make any room feel uncomfortable.
People, at a base level, don’t like not being able to see areas of a space, like areas that are in shadow. It is a deeply engrained survival instinct because that’s where predators hide. So if you light a room from a single point source like a single ceiling fixture, you will have a bright spot in the center, dark spots at the edges, and shadows cast anywhere between objects and the wall. This is the worst way to light a room.
What you want is lots of sources of diffuse light. Lots of shaded lamps from lots of angles will create a much more comfortable space. It’s also why people like those ceilings covered in a grid of pot lights. That grid of tons of pot lights creates a ton of different light sources. It’s not perfect on its own though, it still creates downwards shadows, and will still benefit from diffuse side lighting like lamps. And I keep stressing shades and diffusers because glare is just as bad as shadows. If a point source is too bright, your pupils have to contract to see things near it, and this suddenly makes everything else in the room too dark. You want soft, even, indirect lighting.
When it comes to the importance of lighting, remember that everything you see in a room is light. You don’t see the objects themselves, you see the light that has bounced off them. Lighting effects everything.
Since I teach from home, lighting is a huge issue! My direct lightbulb is warm but overhead so I looks exhausted. I will eventually try a floor lamp and try to find temporary solutions. Thanks for all the tips!