| The
Living Room
Some living rooms are
little more than a coffee table where the mail gets tossed and a sofa
where you collapse each evening. Others are too stilted and formal to be
of any real use, and because they go unused their occasional visitors
feel uncomfortable, as if, like the glass candy bowls and potted plants,
they too are on display.
And then there are the living rooms that combine the best of both
worlds, and allow for both relaxation and entertaining.
This living room really knows how to live. Here is a room designed for
comfort, yet gracious and formal enough for hosting even the most
important parties.
Looking at it through Sheffield's Three Principles of Interior Design,
we see first that the function of this room is to welcome guests and
make them feel comfortable and at home. The room is built for relaxed
conversation: the two easy chairs angled toward one another, the two
straight-back chairs facing one another across a small table, and the
white ottoman allow for conversation among a group. And, there are
enough tables so that guests can have a place for their drinks or
snacks. As the Sheffield Course creator, Bill Turner often remarked,
"A table for every chair!"
But another function of this room is simply for relaxing alone or with a
companion. Those easy chairs are so inviting that you can easily imagine
pulling the ottoman over, putting your feet up, and tucking into a new
novel on a winter's afternoon.
The mood of this room is clearly one of relaxation. It's formal enough
for entertaining because it's so well-designed, but the feeling is one
of luxurious relaxation. The casual aspect of the mood is enhanced by
the slightly messy fronds in the vases, which bring in an air of the
wild outdoors and prevent the room from feeling stuffy or overdone. The
open curtains, which are barely noticeable at first glance, add to this
airy feeling, letting in loads of natural light.
Finally, everything in this room works in harmony. The deep egg yellow
of the ceiling and upper wall matches the yellow background of the
fabric. The chairs are upholstered in the same fabric used on the table
and for the curtains, and the plain off-white rug prevents the floral
pattern from becoming overwhelming. The flowers in the vase add a nice
counterpoint to the printed flowers on the fabric.
All in all, this is a room that would give its visitors the relaxed
feeling of an early summer's afternoon, at any time of the year.
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