The decorators all agree that there is one element that stains in your decoration. By deleting it, the whole room is transformed.
The decorators are unanimous: an element ruins the decor of your living room without you realizing it. As soon as it is removed, the whole room is transformed and finds more space, fluidity and a warmer atmosphere. The change is stunning without the need to make important changes: the living room regains all its charm and becomes a welcoming place of life.
The salons are often organized around a central element which dictates the arrangement of furniture. However, this habit stiffens space and more and more decorators question this organization by relegating this object to the background. A subtle transformation that changes everything: the room seems greater, more elegant, and above all more alive. Because television is good about it that we are talking about, freezes the layout and attracts the eye too much. No need to revolutionize everything or give up your TV evenings. Deleting this element from the center of the room does not mean getting rid of it, but simply integrating it more discreetly into the decor. The screen can thus blend into the atmosphere, hide or be only when you need it. And there is no shortage of solutions.
Some choose to hide it in a piece of furniture with sliding doors, others prefer a framed model that displays works of art when turned off. Another tip is to fix it on a dark or textured wall so that it is based in the decor, while the most creative opens for removable panels, a curtain or a sliding library to hide it according to the desire. These solutions make it possible to make the screen disappear when you do not need it and give back to the living room a warmer and harmonious atmosphere.
The decorators also recommend reviewing the layout of the living room to break the rigid layout turned to the screen. They assure it, by diverting the attention of television, we completely transform the atmosphere of a room. Ideal? Create a more fluid and more user -friendly space by betting on a corner sofa, mobile armchairs and a provision that promotes exchanges rather than fixing a unique point.