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Friday, September 13, 2013

Making Your Furniture Work In A New Space

8:22 AM

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(Image Courtesy of Christopher Barson)

Moving from home to home can be a challenge. Boxing up all your possessions and moving them from one place of residence to another is a hassle-no one wants to pack up everything just to unpack it all again somewhere else. And moving your furniture can create obstacles all its own. As if being big, bulky and hard to move weren't enough, it can be a headache trying to make your furniture work in a new room. Often times, many frustrated movers choose to scrap many pieces of their old furniture and start from the beginning. Though this option may be appealing, it can be a costly decision to make.

It is important to remember when moving that every space is different and just because your old furniture worked in your former residence, doesn't mean that it will work in your new one. There’s no need to worry, though, this article from apartmenttherapy.com offers some practical solutions to solve your furniture woes. Read on for a few tips to make your old couch fit in your new space.

1. Alter It.

Furniture that looks and feels wrong in a space can often be made to look and feel right, or at least a lot closer to it. Painting and re-upholstery are just the tip of the iceberg here; consider carpentry and creative solutions to change the actual size, structure and use of your pieces.

A too-small dining table can have a new, lower base added and become a grand coffee table. The top of an old table can be put on new legs or vice versa. Bookcases can have doors added or doors removed, or be placed on their side to become sideboards. Even upholstered items can be changed; consider removing the back of a too-structured sofa to create a chaise, or removing the arms of a chair so that it will fit in a smaller space.

2. Mix It Up.

Often we see our furniture in room sets, simply because that's how we've always used it. The sofa belongs in the living room, that armoire in the bedroom, those chairs in the hallway. Removing your blinders and mixing it up can go a long way to making your things look at home, but in a fresh way.

So maybe your chest of drawers doesn't fit in the new bedroom — could it work in the dining room to store plates and accessories? How about the old TV cabinet — maybe it could be a linen closet in the upstairs hall. Use some still-beautiful-but-superfluous dining chairs as bedside tables in the spare bedroom, or mount the old full-length mirror horizontally in the front hall.

3. Upgrade the Important Stuff.

Sure, you might be attached to your old furniture, but those sore-thumb pieces are always going to bother you, especially if they're big, conspicuous items. Sometimes it's best to say goodbye to a few key pieces and replace as necessary.

If you upgrade where it counts — say, a new sofa or dining table, some lighting — you'll probably find that other items bother you less, and might even start to look at home next to their new neighbors. The key is to overhaul slowly, one piece at a time; that way you won't go overboard and can monitor the evolution of your new home.

Do you move often? Have you struggled with the old-into-new issue? How have you made old furniture work in a new way?

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