Investment property

Furniture Ploys for Small Apartments

In a prosperous economy, people like to live large. Everything seems to take on larger proportions - just look at how big utility vehicles and televisions have gotten lately. Homes and furnishings have grown as well. But the new scale doesn"t work well with your small apartment space. What can you do? The National Association of Home Builders and the National Association of REALTORS have both noted the increasing demand for larger homes, which have added as much as two rooms and 700 feet over the last 20 years for the average new home. As homes are sprawling, furniture is being proportionately scaled to complement these new large spaces. Some retailers are even making a specialty of carrying furnishings sized to scale for the magnificent homes that are being built today. That is all well and good, but you"ve just moved to a tiny apartment. And the last time you went furniture shopping, you couldn"t find a sofa that would even fit through the front door. What"s out there for you? Until the trend turns around to smaller furnishings, the best idea is to play to the strengths of your apartment and its size. 1. Choose a decorating scheme that complements your home, one that you can afford and that you can develop as you go along. New ideas in decor seem to be nostalgic in nature, heralding back to other eras, from the Victorian period to the Gilded Age/Progressive Era and the Shaker period. The popularity of the movie, Titanic, has brought attention to the opulence and beauty of the era. The Boomers turning fifty have spearheaded an interest in furnishings from the fifties, which have spare clean lines and a Jetson-age utilitarianism. These styles are a plus for you because furniture from these periods are typically smaller in scale and often easily available at good prices from flea markets, antique malls, re-sale shops, garage sales and estate sales. 2. Eliminate furniture except for the essentials - you need a place to sit, to eat, and to sleep. In a small apartment, anything else will be gravy, especially fitting room to entertain friends or to accommodate a roommate. Take care of the basics first. 3. Draw your home to scale, marking the locations of power outlets, phone lines, windows, doors, fireplaces, and bar areas. Before making a major purchase such as a bed or a sofa, ask to measure the piece and cut out a little paper duplicate to place in your drawing. If it overwhelms the drawing, the real thing will overwhelm the room. Be sure to leave room for other pieces that you may want to add later, such as nightstands, end tables, plant stands, etc. 4. Scale down where you can. If you don"t have room for a table for four, buy a cafe table instead. You can seat four friends at a 42- inch round table, instead of a 48-inch tabletop - you"ll just have to leave off the salad and butter plates. Instead of buying the couch, purchase the love seat. Buy furniture that serves two purposes. Can the dining table also serve as a workstation? Can the bed be folded into the wall or into a sofa? Can you play chess on the end table? 5. What is left must bear scrutiny. When you have pared a room down to its essential elements, whatever is left must be able to withstand the spotlight. A small antique table with an interesting shape and polished patina can take on new importance. A color backdrop on a wall or a piece of fabric used as a throw can draw the eye where you want it to go. If in doubt, throw it out. From a minimalist background, the wrong choice will blare at you like a fog horn. 6. Look at spaces in a new way. Look at every nook and cranny. Is there room for a desk under that dormer window or in that corner by the stairs? Can that sloping ceiling accommodate at bookcase underneath? Go for untraditional arrangements if they will work better in your space. You don"t have to have an end table at each end of the couch, and an ottoman can easily serve as a coffee table with a tray placed on top. 7. If small isn"t for you, then less may be more. You can add drama to a room by having large-scale furniture, but fewer pieces. One large sofa can offer as much comfort as a bed and a sprawling coffee table (or steamer trunk) in front can offer more table-top storage for books, magazines, drinks, and appetizers than several smaller scaled down end tables and occasional tables would. 8. Keep clutter to a miniumum. The more room you have to move around the more spacious your apartment will feel. If you don"t have enough storage, use walls and the backs of doors to hang hats, scarves, and throws. Decorative hooks are an apartment dweller"s best friend and can be used to hang pots and pans. Shelves can really maximize space and add to the ambiance of your apartment.


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