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Home Decorating for Comfort First

Tue, Nov 25, 2008

Home Business

Making a house a home usually works best when we put our individual mark on the decor. Whether the look is contemporary, folk or traditional, choosing a look that compliments your lifestyle and your budget can be accomplished without sacrificing style and most of all the feeling and perception of comfort.

Creating a comfortable space focuses on more than just physical comfort. A comfortable room can look the part by incorporating visual effects that are pleasing to the eye. The room should be inviting to all who enter, imparting a feeling of welcome. Regardless of the size or function, any room can be transformed into a space where you are beckoned to come, to sit down and feel right at home.

Formal spaces such as dining rooms and living rooms can maintain an aura of casual elegance yet still impart a feeling formality and purpose. The job of decorating for comfort is easier when working with less formal spaces such as bedrooms and family rooms. Still, a comfortable room can be established using the structure of popular furniture styles, decorating techniques and themes and a little common sense.

When decorating for comfort, a large room, with high ceilings can seem a little foreboding and more of a challenge than a smaller space. Even with this challenge, a large room can be brought down to a manageable scale with a few easy tricks. One of the keys to bringing a room down in scale is to understand exactly what the room will be used for.

If your lifestyle includes frequent entertaining, maximizing usable space may be an important consideration. For example, large pieces of furniture, though appropriate for the room size, may clash with the need for space. Smaller, daintier looking pieces may make the room appear less like a home and more like a museum.

A collection of seating pieces be they sofas or chairs, can greatly effect how a visitor perceives the room. Rather than feeling like a place to relax, the room may give off an air of stiffness and formality. Maybe formal French design furniture, while beautiful and artful, gives the impression that a guest ought to wait to be asked to sit. More informal, yet no less beautiful, American Traditional furniture styles, such as American country, may be perceived as more warm and inviting.

Regardless of the style, furniture arrangements can set the tone for a room. Chairs and sofas grouped closely together give the feeling of intimacy. Widely spaced seating can work to strip away any feeling of closeness while it isolates the guest. Too much furniture in too small a space can make a room feel crowded and equally uninviting.

Like an airport, every room in the home has a traffic pattern that can invite a guest or discourage one. Ignoring the traffic patterns can result in furniture appearing out of place. Always pay attention to the focal point of the room. Whether the focal point is a large window, fireplace or even a doorway, always let the natural flow of the room be your guide to the proper placement of furniture.

Comfort is not just a measure of physical well-being, comfort can also be a feeling. Entering or navigating through a room that ignores visual and physical focal points can be confusing and uncomfortable.

Just remember that while there are no absolutes when it comes to home decor, there is more to creating a comfortable room than how soft the couch feels. Guests and even other family can be made to feel welcomed and put at ease by a room that has been arranged for comfort.

Mitch Endick is a staff writer for the quality online store http://www.finewebstores.com. FineWebStores.com offers unique items for your home or office including Lane Lumber Support Recliners and Adjustable Beds. Visit FineWebStores.com today for all of your home decor and furnishing needs.

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