Houston Chronicle

HOW WOULD THAT COUCH LOOK AT HOME? CHECK YOUR PHONE

- By Michelle Higgins | New York Times

IT is not unusual to order a piece of furniture and realize, once it arrives, that it is completely wrong for your room. A red couch that looked amazing in the showroom may turn out to overwhelm your small space. And the last thing you want to do is invest in a heavy piece of furniture you have to pay to return.

To help visualize that couch in your living room, furniture sellers and interior design firms have been rolling out apps and online programs that allow you to try furniture at home using virtual and augmented reality.

The new tools generally come in three flavors: 3-D features that enable you to virtually place furnishing­s in your room using the camera on your cellphone; styling apps that let you snap a picture of your space, clear it of all furniture and drop in new options as you shop online; and interior decorating services that do it all for you, selecting furnishing­s on your behalf and creating 3-D renderings of your room from photos you provide.

To see how well they really work, I tried out a few from the comfort of my bedroom and living room — both of which need a refresh, if not an entirely new look. Some were trickier to use than others, but each one offers a glimpse at the future of online furniture shopping and interior design.

MODSY

For $69 per room, this online interior design service offers two surprising­ly lifelike 3-D renderings of your space. The process is easy. You provide feedback on the room you want to design, including a rough budget, and take a quiz to help determine your style, selecting photos of rooms you are drawn to. (Because Modsy is an online software program, you can use your cellphone or computer.)

Then, you snap eight photos of your room (one from each corner, and one from each wall) and upload to Modsy. In 10 days or less, you receive an email indicating your renderings are waiting for you in your Modsy account. If you like an item in your room, you can add it to a shopping cart. A personal shopping service coordinate­s shipping and delivery, ensuring that you have to enter your address and credit card only once.

The style quiz, which determined I was a “mod enthusiast,” was fairly spot on: “You go for Danish Modern design and streamline­d furniture, but incorpotra­ditional rating some pieces for comfort strikes the perfect balance.”

The 3-D renderings I received were not only surprising­ly realistic but also fun to explore, showing each room outfitted with two sets of new furniture to scale and presented at various angles, including topdown and 360 views. And while a few pieces of furniture were not my first choice, most of it appealed to me.

The first bedroom design had a similar layout to my current setup, replacing my simple teak bedroom set with a Tate upholstere­d bed (from Crate & Barrel) and Culla night stands (from Article) for a “soft midcentury look,” according to Modsy’s design descriptio­n, which was emailed to me when the renderings were finished. A marbled wool rug (from West Elm) anchored the space while an Aspect walnut desk (from Crate & Barrel) was paired with a deep blue Helvetica chair (from West Elm). The second design, which was bolder with richer blue and white tones, flipped the bed to the other side of the room — a layout I had never considered but now would consider trying — replaced the desk with a dresser, reading nook and added a dowel mirror (from West Elm). The few hiccups I encountere­d were easily resolved by tapping on a service bell icon for help with my designand dashing off a note about my issues: a couple of items, including a table lamp I was interested in, were not itemized in my list of products to buy; and I was not in love with the sectional that Modsy suggested for my living room or the art on the wall.

For $199, you can get unlimited revisions and access to a Modsy designer via phone, chat or video. I opted for the cheaper version, which allows for one revised design per room and unlimited use of the “style editor,” which allows you to swap products and adjust layouts yourself. While using the bell service was a breeze, I found the “style editor” a bit clunky. It was not available on my phone. And when I tried to swap out a piece of art in my living room design using my laptop, I encountere­d a glitch that did not allow me to scroll down to see more options. As a result, I could access only a handful of alternativ­e artworks, none of which appealed to me. Jacqui Wimberly, a Modsy publicist, pointed out that the style editor was an experiment. “There was such a high demand from customers to be able to make changes on their own that Modsy decided to release it in the beta state while they continue to work on a full-fledged editing feature,” she said.

In the end it didn’t matter, as the Modsy designer I reached via the service bell icon was willing to swap it out for me.

HUTCH

If you would rather create your own renderings for free, Hutch may be the app for you. Hutch, which debuted this year for iPhone and Android users, lets you be the designer by snapping a photo of your room and decorating in 2-D.

Within an hour of submitting a photo of your room, Hutch virtually clears out all furniture, children’s toys and clutter so you can fill it with furniture sold via the app. You can create your own look by selecting from furniture and accessorie­s sold by Hutch’s partners or choose from a list of completed designs called “filters” to superimpos­e a specific look onto your room, complete with a price list of the furniture used.

Don’t like the Deco Inlay nightstand (from Anthropolo­gie) under the “flea market finds” filter? You can easily swap it out with a Marotta end table (from Wayfair). Tapping an item sends you to the seller’s website to find dimensions or to buy.

While the filters were easy and

fun to play with, I was disappoint­ed by the lack of options when trying to create my own look. Although I was designing a living room and bedroom, there were no options to customize other spaces like a dining area, children’s bedroom or playroom. And while I wanted to put a TV console under the window in my living room, the only categories available were sofas, coffee tables, lamps, art, curtains and rods, bouquets, and side tables. Afewofth e categories, including side tables, table lamps and chairs, only offered one option: sold by Hutch, all of which were out of stock. And for nontraditi­onal

spaces, you may have to use your imaginatio­n or try a couple of different Hutch angles before you find a filter that fits your layout. Beatrice Fischel-Bock,

Hutch’s chief executive and co-founder, said that more rooms were in the works and that she would have her team look into what must have been a glitch I experience­d when personaliz­ing my living room.

“We have thousands of products in the system,” she said. “You really shouldn’t be seeing just one. There should be at least 10 backup options.”

By November, Hutch plans to let you play with layouts to make it easier to design nontraditi­onal spaces.

HOUZZ

Apple’s latest operating system for iPhones and iPads rolled out on Sept. 19 along with a flurry of new apps that leverage Apple’s new augmentedr­eality developmen­t platform. Houzz, the home renovation and design site, was among them, with a new version of its 3-D shopping feature, “View in My Room 3D,” which lets you immediatel­y place three-dimensiona­l images of furniture, for free.

Say you are shopping online for a floor lamp for your dining room. A tap of a button below the item lets you view the lamp in your room by accessing your phone’s camera and superimpos­ing a 3-D image of the lamp on the screen.

(Ikea, Wayfair and others rolled out similar features in the App Store with Apple’s latest operating system. Wayfair’s version also works on devices supported by Tango, Google’s augmented-reality platform.)

Houzz’s new version comes with a catalog of 500,000 products in 3-D. It eliminates a quirk of the previous iteration, which required users to pinch and zoom furnishing­s into place — an arduous task in my experience, that resulted in inadverten­tly shrinking items down to the size of a pea whenever I tried to fit them to my space. Now the app eliminates that frustratio­n by automatica­lly sizing images to scale. A new version of “View in My Room 3-D” was released on Sept. 26 for Android users.

Seeing the images at scale removes the guesswork involved in figuring out whether that coffee table will actually fit in your cramped living room. You can also now walk up to that coffee table to get a better sense of its texture. Multiple items can be viewed at once on the screen, with each automatica­lly added to a shopping list so you don’t have to leave the app to buy. Just don’t try to virtually hang a ceiling lamp in your room. The app does not yet support ceiling lamps in 3-D.

If all you want is to get an idea of how a specific piece of furniture will look in your room, Houzz is a good, fast option. For those who want to play around with different looks, Hutch will help you do that for free. For those of us who want more handholdin­g while decorating a room, Modsy is a solid, low-cost alternativ­e to seeing an interior designer in person.

 ??  ?? Above: New online apps and programs like Modsy can help you visualize furniture in your home. Left and right: The app Hutch, which debuted this year, allows a user to snap a photo of a room and decorate it in 2-D.
Above: New online apps and programs like Modsy can help you visualize furniture in your home. Left and right: The app Hutch, which debuted this year, allows a user to snap a photo of a room and decorate it in 2-D.
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Hutch
 ?? Modsy via The New York Times ??
Modsy via The New York Times
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