Saskatoon StarPhoenix

High-tech help is at hand for home, garden layout

Apps show how furniture will look, or even how plants can be arranged

- KATHERINE ROTH

Planning out how to arrange furniture in your home — or plants in your garden — used to involve a pencil, graph paper, a measuring tape and a lot of imaginatio­n.

The process has got easier — and way more streamline­d — thanks to a burgeoning selection of home and garden apps.

Furniture companies, interior design firms and even landscaper­s have been rolling out a new generation of apps and online programs to make the process more foolproof for novices and pros alike, often using virtual and augmented reality technology.

“Design apps are really great for generating ideas, and deciding on materials and sources for do-ityourself projects,” says Margaret Mayfield, an architect in Los Osos, Calif. “And they ’re also very helpful for communicat­ing design ideas to contractor­s and architects.”

The technology allows you to see what furniture would look like in your home before you buy it, using just the camera on your phone, for example, instead of dealing with the hassle — and back pain — involved in returning, say, an illchosen sofa.

And the design apps do not stop at the door. There are landscapin­g apps to help take the guesswork out of deciding what to plant and where and when.

Among the most popular home apps is Houzz, a free app with 40 million users around the world each month, according to Liza Hausman, vice-president of industry marketing for Houzz. Features include a huge database of design photos — searchable by style, country or colour, for example — to create a personaliz­ed “idea book.”

The site’s Visual Match feature allows visitors to order furniture and other products that are the same or similar to those seen in the magazine-type photos. You can work with a friend by using the Invite a Collaborat­or feature, or, through Directory, contact local designers, architects or landscaper­s.

One of the newest features is View in My Room 3D, which invites you to look at your room through your phone and then — using augmented reality technology — place a selected piece of furniture there to see what it would look like.

Other indoor design apps include Hutch, Home Design 3D, Rooms, and interior design apps from stores like Ikea and Overstock.com.

For outdoors, Houzz features articles and advice from gardening pros, and a forum where home gardeners can share ideas and suggestion­s.

Another popular landscapin­g app is iScape, which helps you visualize your garden, save and share ideas, and buy gardening products.

As with all technology, though, the apps have a learning curve that in some cases is far greater than the old graph paper and pencil method of laying things out.

And profession­als warn that for major jobs, it’s still best to seek out a pro.

Just don’t be surprised when your landscaper or designer pulls out their phone to consult an app.

Matt McMillan, a landscape designer in Pound Ridge, N.Y., says, “My designs are very focused on drawing nature into the garden. So I frequently consult the Cornell Lab of Ornitholog­y’s Merlin app. I also have apps for dragonflie­s, butterflie­s and mushrooms. I can’t live without the Toolbox app in general, and specifical­ly its compass.”

 ?? HOUZZ ?? Houzz’s View in My Room 3D is an augmented reality tool that lets people preview more than one million furniture and decor products from the Houzz Shop in 3D, within their homes before they buy.
HOUZZ Houzz’s View in My Room 3D is an augmented reality tool that lets people preview more than one million furniture and decor products from the Houzz Shop in 3D, within their homes before they buy.

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