4 simple, smart furniture arrangement tips for decorating your first home

(BPT) – Buying your first home? Congratulations! Now you get the pleasure of decorating and deciding where everything should go in your new residence. But arranging furniture to optimize room layout in a home can be very different from placing furniture in an apartment. You have a lot more to consider than just deciding where to put your sofa or which wall to nestle your bed against.

“Smart furniture placement can make a well-laid-out room even more appealing and functional,” says Susan Yoder, a designer for manufactured home builder Clayton Homes. “Having so much space to work with can be intimidating, so it’s important to put some thought into how you’ll arrange things ahead of time.”

Yoder offers a video and tips for optimizing room layout:

Plan the purpose of your room

The design features of your room will heavily influence the arrangement of furnishings and artwork, but you also need to consider how you’ll be using the room. Will your living room be where the family gathers to watch TV and movies? A spot for family meetings and conversations with guests? Somewhere you’ll go to relax quietly with a good book? All those things or none of them?

Plan your room layout to accommodate the different uses to which you’ll put the room. One way to do this is to create zones for different purposes. For example, a sofa and some chairs might face the TV while a small table and wing chair in a corner could be perfect for quiet reading.

Find your focal point

Every room should have a focal point, that spot that automatically draws the eye as soon as you walk into the room. In a living room, this may be a fireplace, picture window or a great view of the interior. The layout of furnishings in the room should flow toward the focal point without blocking it from your view when you enter the room.

If your room doesn’t have a focal point incorporated into the design, you can create one in a number of ways. Many people use a large TV as a focal point in living rooms (and that’s fine), but you could also paint one wall in an accent color, hang a large eye-catching piece of artwork or use a striking piece of furniture.

Tailor for traffic flow

Modern floor plans tend to be very open in the current market. Even in older homes, where rooms may be more separated from each other, living areas will typically have more than one doorway. It’s important to keep ease of movement in mind when you’re arranging your furniture.

Avoid blocking natural traffic patterns, such as the line from door to door, or the space between areas like kitchens and breakfast nooks. Never obstruct a door or window by placing a piece of furniture in front of it – unless the piece is short enough that it doesn’t block the full window. Generally, straight lines facilitate movement, so imagine straight paths throughout your rooms and place furniture accordingly.

Keep scale in mind

Finally, a word about scale – ensure the size of your furnishings matches the size of your room. A large sectional sofa or king-sized four-poster bed will overpower a small room and leave you little space to move around in. Likewise, too many pieces in a snug space will make the room feel even smaller and cluttered. Conversely, a large, open room can withstand the presence of some larger furnishings, whereas very small pieces will look lost in a big space.

“Decorating your new home is one of the great joys of home ownership,” Yoder says. “With a little thought and planning it’s possible to create a room layout that really works for your lifestyle and the room’s design.”

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