7 Tricks on How to Decorate Your Living Room in an Instant

208
0

The living room is the place you’ll likely spend the most time in—kicking back and entertaining guests. It’s pretty important that you brainstorm before you decorate your living room so it feels the most, well, at home.

On AD’s first episode of Re:Design—a series where designers take turns putting their spin on rooms that desperately need a refresh—we enlist the help of New York–based interior architect Darren Jett, who knows a thing or two about punchy living spaces. As he previously told AD on a tour of his splashy Brooklyn apartment, “I don’t want to create just a beautiful space, I want it to be a space that transports you. It’s really doable for any budget or scale. You just have to have an imagination and a willingness to go there.”

Jett notes that the spaces in question have one common thread: Each is a white-walled space that features incoherent furniture arrangements and varying degrees of clutter. By turning his exacting eye to the problem, he offers tips on furnishings and paint and maps out new design schemes. Minor touches like lighting, a fresh coat of paint, and a few key pieces of new furniture can transform even the most lackluster living room. See how Jett takes the wheel on reimagining five different living rooms with simple upgrades that anyone can implement when dreaming up how to decorate on their own.

1. Carve out a bar space, if you plan to entertain

Jett’s first project is a blank slate living room with a fireplace as its focal point. The homeowner, Carrie, wants this living room (one of two in her home) to function as an adult entertaining area. Jett suggests a dedicated area to mix cocktails and store liquor bottles. Imagine a drinks area with a handsome bar cart. Adding a fun lamp gives this nook additional charm and rounds out the space.

2. Play with texture

For a room that doesn’t have anything in the way of window or floor coverings yet, Jett recommends drapery “with a rod that hangs higher up beyond the window” for added softness and a textured rug (consider jute, hemp, or sisal) underfoot to tie the room together. To punch up the bare white walls, Jett suggests a fresh coat of paint with faux texture. His trick? Limewash painimewash painimewash painimewash paint to keep the walls from looking “so flat and so new.” Then complete the living room by placing artwork for a dose of interest.

3. Add curves to seating arrangements

The next homeowner, Carol, describes her living room as “stiff” and wants something fresher that will flow into the adjoining dining room. To update the boxy sofa and chairs in the room, Jett suggests a new seating arrangement around the fireplace, something like a serpentine Vladimir Kagan design or a neutral off-white sofa with gentle curves that could help draw people into the space. “When you walk in the door, you see this form that takes you around, almost like an arm giving you a hug,” he explains. For the other chairs around the fireplace, he prescribes softness, like what you’d find in an upholstered boucle armchair.

4. Dial up the contrast with earthy paint

A room is “much more impactful if [you] aren’t afraid to play with color,” Jett notes. His suggestion? Painting all the walls and ceilings terracotta to warm up the “imposing architecture” of the space. “When you have something that’s light and white, sometimes it can feel too big and a little bit too impersonal,” he explains. Plus when everything on the walls is richer and moodier, it heightens the feeling of lightness evoked by the creamy seating arrangement.

5. Fix messy spaces with sleek storage

The next homeowner, Brandon, primarily has a problem with having too many things in his living room, so Jett focuses on ways to tidy up some of the clutter. “Everything needs to have a home and everything needs to have a place,” he explains. His solution is a minimalist ’70s bachelor pad look that centers clean lines and references Joe D’Urso’s modern “high tech” designs. Jett suggests adding bolder, edgier elements to the space—like a big black leather sofa, a wide credenza underneath the TV for additional storage, and a sleeker standing desk—to clear some of the clutter around the workspace.

6. Streamline with a set focal point

The next homeowner, Dan, wants a living area not dominated by his kid’s toys, so Jett focuses on consolidating the multiple storage units with one comprehensive bookcase to house toys and beyond. Another tip for re-centering the space is to implement a traditional sectional sofa under the window as a focal point—a kid-friendly slip-cover model, specifically, to protect against spills and stains—plus a neutral rug underfoot to balance out the “visual headache” of having a bunch of toys strewn all over it.

7. Make impactful color choices

Our last homeowner, Mona, has a playful personality that isn’t reflected by her drab studio apartment, which has an odd shape to boot. In order to help her utilize the cramped space, Jett suggests softening up the stark walls with sheer, colorful curtains on the big windows. To add in even more personality, he recommends investing in some statement pieces like a colorful table.

[Read More…]