![]() Home Owners !! Need Advice |
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builders, mortgages, realtors,
Gallagher says to forego the photo-op look in your living
room and allow it to be an expression of yourself. The living room should
"show your family and friends who you are and what you care about."
The answer to that question could also be the answer to decorating dilemmas for most homeowners, says Winifred Gallagher, author of House Thinking: A Room-by-Room Look at How We Live (HarperCollins, 2006). "For many people there’s a big gap between our obsession with home and furnishings, and the much more basic concept of thinking about what you and your family need from your house," says Gallagher. "It boils down to: ‘Is this space, this closet, this window, this patio, improving my life or not?’" In her own living room, for example, Gallagher has a group of four Morris chairs set in conversational circle. One day she pulled one of the chairs away from the social group and set it next to a sunny window in another part of the room. She spends time now using that space to read or to enjoy the view. "My living room is working for me in a way it didn’t before," she says. "I’m getting more for my money." Often a "psychological renovation" will go much further than an expensive remodel in really affecting the way you feel about living in your home, Gallagher says. And a psychological renovation is much easier, not to mention much less expensive, than a physical one. Here, some of Gallagher’s ideas for re-thinking key rooms in your home: The entry: This is the space that should welcome you after a hard day. "Your entry should say, ‘You’ve left the wild and woolly world behind and you’re entering a refuge,’" says Gallagher. All too often, though, we enter our homes from the garage into a laundry room, or through a back door cluttered with shoes, sports equipment and the week’s recycling. If you typically enter your house from the garage, organize the garage so you’re not walking through an obstacle course to get to the door. If your garage has a window, add a plant to the space. For any entry, even a small one, put a table against a wall with a mirror or plant, "something that says, you’re in a special place. Now things are going to look up." Your Happy Habitat
Move furniture away from the walls. "People
have a tendency to line up furniture around the walls and leave a big
jungle clearing in the middle." Instead, think about creating arrangements
that encourage people to sit around and talk. Gallagher changed her own
living room to arrange the chairs in a circle, which encourages people
to make eye contact and really engage with each other.
Don’t make all your decisions based on
money. Many people remodel kitchens because they think it’s the best way
to get a higher price for their home at resale, Gallagher says. Often,
however, buyers will want to redo the kitchen anyway, because it’s a few
years old or doesn’t suit their tastes. "If you want to live in your
home as if you’re just managing an asset, you’ll make different decisions
than if you want to live in your home as an experience in the here and
now."
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