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How to get the best living room furniture layout at your place

There are a number of things we can do to achieve the best living room furniture layout. In this article you will find solutions, as well as stacks of visuals that depict living rooms that have successful layouts. 

1- PULL THE SOFA OFF THE WALL

A common issue when trying to get the best living room furniture layout involves the sofa. So often it’s wedged right against the wall. 

It always reminds of a school disco with kids on the walls and a giant dance floor in between them. Try instead to pull the sofa off the wall and give it room to breath.

Also don’t be afraid to have the sofa cut across the room. It can often create a sense of cosiness in the space. Just make sure the sofa back is low if you’re going to do this.

In a small space as well, moving your sofa off the wall about 20cm is recommended.

In a larger room, you’ll often find that moving the sofa into the middle of the space and grounding it with a rug makes the entire zone feel fuller and more resolved.

2- CONCEAL THE TV: DON’T LET IT DOMINATE

In most cases the living room’s main purpose is to watch TV. But ideally you don’t want it to be the first thing you see when you walk into the room. If the entire room layout can be flipped (so you see the sofa when you walk in instead) this is your ideal solution.

If you can’t flip the room, you need to bring in a focal point near the TV, so your eye doesn’t go right to the big black box. Try an artwork, cluster of frames, or painting the wall behind the TV black.

3- CREATE A CONVERSATION PIT

Often, living rooms are set up with sofas and armchairs on one wall, and an entertainment unit on the other. This can often make the space feel long and narrow, with two giant pieces of furniture mirroring one another in the space.

The space can end up feeling like a hallway, with two open ends. The solution is to introduce some seating on the ends of your living room, so more of a conversation pit is formed.

Every living room benefits from a conversation pit, even if you don’t use it a lot. The chairs don’t have to sit directly across from the sofa, but they can sit on a diagonal or on the adjacent.

Another thing you can do is actually place low armchairs, stools or a bench seat in front of a wall-mounted TV, facing the main sofa. 

4- GROUND THE SPACE WITH A BIG RUG

Achieve the best living room furniture layout is definitely about function. You need the room to operate for you and the way you live. But the look is also important, and how pieces connect and relate to one another is key. A rug is one of those pieces that might not necessarily be functional, but it does make the room feel grounded. And it connects your sofa to your armchairs, and stops the coffee table ‘floating’ in the middle.

The biggest issues when it comes to the rug in the living room is that it’s never big enough.  When it comes to your rug: go big or go home.

Small rugs in living rooms actually make them feel smaller. You need to tell the eye where the outer limits of the room are – and that’s what the rug does. It tells the eye where the living room zone starts and ends. So definitely make sure you go larger than smaller here.

5- ENSURE THE COFFEE TABLE CAN BE ACCESSED

Often we see living rooms with rather large sofas in them, and a tiny coffee table that is metres away from it that can’t be reached. In this scenario, it is better a larger coffee table, or to pull the coffee table closer to the sofa (or both!).

Sometimes you’re faced with having a rather large sofa, and a large rug, but needing a jumbo coffee table. And jumbo coffee tables can be hard to find. The solution here is to consider a nest of coffee tables. There are loads of round nest coffee tables on the market that’ll take up a large chunk of real estate on your rug. That way, you can reach them and they also feel right from a scale perspective.

If the coffee table is there merely for decorative purposes, you need to follow rule number six, which is a little scroll away.

6-PLACE SIDE TABLES BESIDE SOFAS OR ARMCHAIRS

Side tables are a godsend. They tick all the boxes: low-cost, super versatile and functionally amazing.

It’s essential you have side tables when trying to get the best living room furniture layout. The reality is, not everyone is going to be able to reach the coffee table. That’s just how it works. So give them somewhere to rest their mug or glass and pop a side table at each end of your sofa (space permitting).

This not only works from a usability angle, but they can make your room feel balance and resolved. It gives your coffee table another piece of furniture to connect to stylistically. And it can often have a sofa make more sense in a space.

tan leather sofa in living room with round marble coffee table

7-GIVE UP YOUR OBSESSION WITH SYMMETRY

A lot of us get too caught up in symmetry. The TV unit is smack bang in the middle of a long wall. The sofa is centered perfectly across from it. Art is meticulously hung either side of the TV.

This approach can often make a room feel too formal. And in many cases, the room can feel smaller because there’s a lot of wasted space not being utilised properly.

The solution is easy; embrace the space being a little unbalanced. Moving a TV unit to the left a little can give you room for a shelf to display things on. Or moving a sofa to one side of the room can allow more space for an armchair, side table or floor lamp to be brought in. 

8-MOUNT YOUR TV AND UNIT IF POSSIBLE

Truthfully, I’ve never walked into a space and thought the TV was better left on an entertainment unit rather than being wall-mounted. It always looks better on a wall. 

The trick to getting TV’s on walls right, is to ensure the set is not mounted too high up the wall. You want it to be at eye level or slightly higher when you’re sitting down.

Most of the time the set will look nicer mounted, as will the unit beneath it. It also means your entertainment unit can be more streamlined and less imposing in the space.

And, as already mentioned; mounting the TV means it doesn’t have to be the focal point in the room. And you can decorate around it with more experimentation.

 

Source from:https://www.tlcinteriors.com.au/howto-decorate/living-room-layout/

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