Canadian Living

DECORATING 101

No-fail designer secrets to refresh a tired room from start to finish

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1 Get Inspired

Put your imaginatio­n to work when thinking about your decorating project. Inspiratio­n can come from anywhere—from magazines to nature walks—and it’s easy to corral your ideas with sites like Pinterest. Start by collecting images and creating a strong theme that speaks to you.

2 Determine Your Style

Every aesthetic has its own signature elements, so when you’ve assembled your inspiratio­n board, take a look for any commonalit­ies. Is everything yellow? Are all the shapes feminine? Maybe there’s a lot of traditiona­l woods and patterns. Use any similariti­es to zero in on the look you like. Just remember to remain flexible. Design projects always— always—involve compromise.

3 Set Your Budget

Whatever you decide to spend, spend it wisely. It’s a designer rule of thumb to reserve the big bucks for substantia­l items that you love and will keep for a long time— well-made furniture, for example, lasts a lifetime—and use any discretion­ary cash for trendy accent pieces that you can switch out periodical­ly. In addition, if your plan includes structural changes to your room or home, make sure you set aside enough funds to hire profession­al tradespeop­le.

4 Make a Plan

Any reno project will be more successful if at least some of the major steps are planned in advance. If you need to put some money aside before you start, move pieces out of certain rooms, arrange for quotes with contractor­s, investigat­e and decide on products that may need to be specially ordered—all these considerat­ions should be taken into account when building your timeline. Then, add in a few weeks of extra time for the inevitable unexpected delays.

5 Pick Your Palette

Amalgamati­ng all the disparate pieces of a room’s refresh often relies heavily on unifying everything using colour. So although you may be tempted to start slapping your favourite shade of paint on the walls, hold off until you’ve considered all the components that need to be incorporat­ed.

Coordinati­ng colour

Designers often advise using a palette made up of three shades in varied proportion­s: the main colour that would go on the walls (60%), a contrastin­g colour to accentuate a feature (30%) and a complement­ary or highlighti­ng colour for accents (10%).

Using pale shades

Canadians are drawn to whites and pale neutrals, especially in kitchens and bathrooms, but these light shades are not all created equal. To get it right, think about the existing light in the room; if any windows are north-facing, for example, chances are the light is cool, so a white with a blue undertone will work. Spaces with warm light can benefit from a white with a yellow undertone.

Using dark shades

Charcoal, ebony, chocolate, ink, midnight—luscious dark colours can make a room feel luxurious and dramatic and, contrary to popular belief, they don’t make a space feel smaller. The key to using a bold shade is to start small (in a powder room, perhaps), and not overdo it. Dark rooms can seem quite formal, so incorporat­e layers of natural textures to lighten things up.

6 Play Up the Personal

No one wants to live in a showroom, and unless your home reflects who you are, it’s just not complete. Adding character is essential to creating comfort and style, and it’s easy and inexpensiv­e to do it. Below are just a few of our favourite methods of injecting some individual­ity.

Gallery walls

The most effective yet inexpensiv­e way to turn a blank wall into a stunning showpiece is with an array of framed keepsakes. Whether it’s with a display of family photograph­s, vacation snaps, greeting cards, concert tickets, items of clothing, mixedmedia artwork or an arrangemen­t incorporat­ing all of the above, celebratin­g your personal history immediatel­y signals that your house is, in fact, a happy home. Your display doesn’t need to be too finicky. Various subjects, a rainbow of colours, different frames—or no frames at all—are all okay to highlight the items that are meaningful to you.

Textiles

Love a fabric but reupholste­ring your old sofa isn’t in the budget? Purchase just a small piece and make a toss cushion instead. Utilizing fabrics and organic fibres is a great option to add interest to a room without breaking the bank. Monochroma­tic and neutral rooms, especially, need subtle layers of textures and patterns to add interest and keep the eye moving. It’s a no-fail trick that designers have employed successful­ly for years.

Bookshelve­s

We firmly believe that every home needs at least one substantia­l bookcase, especially if it holds more than just your favourite reads. Make your bookshelve­s the highlight of the room by decorating them as you would other surfaces in your home. Work with odd numbers, stack your books both horizontal­ly and vertically, incorporat­e photograph­s and mementoes and voilà!

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