Set the sound in the front door

If you want to make a great first impression on your home, paint your exterior doors in a fun, bright tone. “Red is the color of happiness in many cultures,” says Lara Allen-Brett, a director from New Jersey. The red door meant a “welcome” for tired tourists in early America, and in the churches it represented a safe haven.

Two other shades are gaining traction: orange and yellow, according to San Francisco-based staging designer Christopher Breining. Both colors are associated with joy and warmth. One thing to go for: an outdated display door. Get rid of it or replace it with a full-length glass door that you can change to a display panel.

Paint the walls with light and neutral colors

Stick to colors like beige or gray, especially on the first floor where fluency is important. “You want to minimize disruptive transitions,” Breining says. Neutral walls give you the most flexibility in decoration, so you can easily change accessories

And if you have two small rooms side by side, painting them in the same neutral color will make them look bigger. Look at the paint strip and move it up or down a shade or two to get a subtle variation from room to room, Allen-Brett suggests.

Living Room: Make sure your couch speaks to your chairs

Think of the hotel’s comfortable lobby: the furniture is arranged for groups to invite discussion. When placing furniture in your living room, look for a similar sense of balance and closeness.

“A U-shaped discussion area with a couch and two chairs facing each other at each end of the coffee table, or an H-shape with the couch facing directly into the middle of the two chairs and a coffee table, is ideal,” says Michelle Lynne, Dallas ’Actress Manager.

A common mistake to avoid: Pushing all furniture against walls. “People do that because they think it makes their room look bigger, but in fact, moving the furniture away from the walls makes the room feel bigger,” he says.

 Let the sun shine on your kitchen

“When it comes to heavy, old-fashioned curtains, a bare window bank is better than ugly,” Lynne says. Ideally, windows should be both functional and stylish - think of views combined with full-length panels.

If your room has a lot of sunshine, choose light colors that don’t fade. The most popular lightweight fabrics for panels are cotton, linen and silk blends as they tend to spread well.

Hang at least one mirror in each room

Mirrors can make a space feel brighter because they bounce light around the room, "Breining says. But placing one in the wrong place can be almost as bad a thing as not having one.

Place the mirrors on the walls perpendicular to the windows, not directly opposite them. Hanging a mirror directly opposite the window can cause light to bounce out of the window.

Scale the art on your wall

“There’s a few more ridiculous things than hanging small works of art on a wall that’s too high,” Breining says. The center of the image should hang at eye level. If one person is short and the other tall, calculate the average of their height.

Also note the scale; big wall, choose a big oversized piece or group smaller pieces into a gallery style. In the latter case, do not spread the images too far apart. 2 to 4 inches between subjects usually looks best.

Lay out lighting

Each room should have three types of lighting: ambient, which provides general lighting and often comes from ceiling lights; homework, which is often found above the kitchen island or reading area; and an accent that is more ornate, emphasizing, for example, works of art.

In the living room, it should be at least 3 watts (42 lumens) per square foot. The visual trick Breining invokes: the use of rising lights. “Placing a canister top light or flashlight in a corner shines on the ceiling and makes the room look bigger,” he says.

Anchor mats under the legs of furniture

Follow these basic rules for the area rug: "In the living room, all four legs of the sofa and the chairs in the furniture group should fit in it; the rug should define the seating area," Breining says. “At least the two front legs of the couch and chairs should rest on top of it,” he adds.

Even living rooms with smaller proportions usually require an 8 x 10 foot or 9 x 12 foot carpet to accommodate enough seating. If the size of the rug is too small, everything will look unfavorable.

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Give Old Finishes The Cinderella Treatment

Got dated fixtures? Reinvent them with spray paint and inexpensive refinishing kits. "A 1980s brass chandelier can get a new lease on life with a quick coat of hammered-bronze or satin-nickel spray paint," says Breining.

Even outdated kitchen cabinets benefit from a few coats of white paint and new hardware. And if you thought there was no hope for Formica countertops, think again. Breining swears by Rust-Oleum Countertop Transformations, a DIY counter-coating product that mimics stone, making even the ugliest 1970s counter look fresh.

What's left to do: Swap out cracked and mismatched switch plates and outlet covers for updated matching ones. Says Lynne: "Nothing drags down a refreshed space like a dingy, almond-colored switch plate."



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