Showing posts with label Displays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Displays. Show all posts

Friday, November 4, 2011

How to Arrange Accessories Like the Retail Magicians

Dear Melissa:
When I go into furniture stores they have everything arranged on tables so nicely. When I try to do it just looks like I dumped a bunch of things on a table. How do I make groupings look good? K.P.

Dear K.:
When trying to create a vignette of accessories, family photos, and the like, it helps to have an eye for composition. Barring that, try these guidelines. Copy what you admired as closely as possible. If you are more confident, group your accessories by type, size, shape, or color – either to relate them to one another or to contrast them. Try to balance the large, dark objects within the arrangement in such a way that your eye travels around them, and is not drawn to just one place. The aim of composition is visual movement and balance. Vary the height of the objects in the grouping to create a more interesting display. Combine tall and short accessories. If you are arranging a collection of objects of roughly the same size, place them at differing heights on top of books or decorative boxes.
If you are still compositionally impaired, remember that “less is more”. Make a statement with just one really impressive accessory on the table, and leave it at that. M.A.K.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Rotate Your Collections

Dear Melissa:
Help! I keep buying tchotchkes and I can’t stop myself. I pick up mirrors, pottery, ceramics, everything. How do I make sense of this? Should I throw it all away and start from scratch with an idea or color scheme at least? S.B., MD 
Dear S.:
A woman after my own heart! Your collection of “stuff” already has a theme: your personal style. What’s needed is not necessarily an intervention, but a plan.

Collect all of your misfit items from around the house. When you have them all together, group them by their most common element. This may be by material, color, function, etc. Displaying your collections in groups will give them a cohesive look and greater visual impact than scattering them around your house. If your grouping of collectables is all the same height, use stacked books to raise the height of some objects to create a more interesting tableau.

Once you’re happy with the look, STOP. Pack up the rest of your items, and perform the exercise again in 6 months. By rotating your accessories periodically, you’ll be able to refresh your home with the items you’ve packed away, and gain a new appreciation for them. Happy shopping! M.A.K.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Lacking Drama

Dear Melissa:
My house is decorated, and people seem to like it, but I don’t know, it seems to be lacking drama. My walls are painted soft colors, but something is missing. N.I., OK

Dear N.:
Maybe all of your colors are so soft, there is no punch to the rooms. You do not want your colors to match exactly. Vary the shades of your colors for visual interest. Say for example, your room is basically a medium blue. You don’t want all of the pieces to be the same medium blue. Some items could be navy blue, others powder blue. You could even throw in a totally different accent color. Variety helps.

Perhaps the problem lies with your accessories. They may be small and unobtrusive or scattered, instead of grouped for impact. Unless you are a collector, one large object can be better than five tiny ones, which may just look untidy. If you are a collector (or just have lots of stuff) group the pieces for more impact in a display cabinet, on shelves, or on one tabletop. In the case of the latter, arrange them in an interesting manner – in small groups of like kind, shape, or color; or with some on top of books or decorative boxes for varying heights. M.A.K.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Pint-Sized Collector

Dear Melissa:
My adolescent has the smallest room in the house and the most stuff. She’s a collector and every surface is covered. Can you suggest something to stop the battles? Frustrated Mom

Dear Frustrated:
I totally sympathize. I have two collectors myself, and we’ve tried everything, including the dreaded “mom cleaning with a garbage bag”.
Consider replacing some pieces of furniture with those that do double duty, such as a captain’s bed, a cabinet with built-in hampers, wall mirrors with an attached shelf/hooks, and a vitrine (glass-topped display table). Trust me, you’ll feel better freeing up some horizontal surfaces just so you can actually see the dust for a change.
There is also untapped space just below the ceiling. Consider running a 4” deep display shelf around the upper part of the walls. Your child probably just wants the comfort of having her favorite things nearby where she can see them. Keep only her actual playthings within easy reach.
You might also try rotating her collections, the way adults do when they have too much clutter. Possessions feel fresh and new again when brought out of storage. And if all else fails, keep the bedroom door shut. M.A.K.

No Flatscreen over this Mantel

Dear Melissa:
We have a couple of questions concerning what to do with our walls. Could you tell us when to place art or a mirror over a fireplace mantel? I don't need mt TV in this room. Also, where is a good place to group family pictures; we live in a raised ranch and have a long hallway leading to the bedrooms, and an entranceway with a massive wall that needs something. Thank you.
D.Z., NJ

Dear D.Z.:
Let me address the fireplace mantel first. Since the fireplace is usually the focal point of a room, one has to consider what is worthy enough to occupy this “seat of honor.” Artwork, clocks, and mirrors are all perennial favorites for this prime real estate. Sculpture, collections, and candles also work well. Artwork and other objects placed over a fireplace become slightly more important than the other accessories in the room, so choose something you love. Consider adding a spotlight or a picture light.
Mirrors add sparkle to a room and can help to brighten it when placed near a window or other light source. When placing a mirror over the fireplace, or anywhere for that matter, one must also take into account what else will be reflected in the mirror besides light.
Whatever the choice, keep the scale in mind, trying to complement the size and shape of the fireplace, neither overpowering it nor letting the fireplace dominate.
The location of family photos is a personal choice, but my preference is to display them in a more private area of a home, like a bedroom, family room, den, or that hallway you mentioned. I think that would be a perfect location for a grouping of photographs.
As for the large entry wall in your raised ranch, the options are endless. An accent wallpaper or paint color can be a good foundation. Since this is a large area, either think big or think multiple arrangements. Something sculptural or three-dimensional would be a nice change from the usual pictures. (Just make sure you can get past it on the stairs.) Whatever you do, try to avoid a single row of pictures marching up the stairs like little soldiers. Groupings are much more interesting. Overhead lighting is critical in this typically dim space, so explore wonderful chandeliers, pendants or accent lighting.
M.A.K.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Displaying Barbies

Dear Melissa:
Can you suggest any interesting ways to display a child’s collection of Barbies? These are not the expensive collector dolls, but they are all over her room and new ones keep arriving. She loves to play with them so I can’t toss them or put them up in the attic. P.C., MA  
Dear P.:
Believe me, I’ve been there. Except my daughter’s Barbies were all nude with tangled hair, so displaying them was not really an option. Have you considered placing them in shoe pockets on the back of her door? What if groups of them went to “sleep away camp” in some plastic bins? You might also consider seating them on a shelf around the ceiling of her room. Pretend they’re airline passengers on line at the TSA checkpoint, until it’s their turn to join in the fun. I highly recommend clothes, though. M.A.K.