Posts Tagged ‘Tips’

officeroomThe condition of the room you are working can affect the mood. Sometimes there are conditions that are not felt directly on our senses. However, if prolonged, would affect the peace.

Fluctuating temperature difference when working indoors can cause anxiety and loss of concentration.

Light entering the room could give effect to the savings in electricity usage. This also indirectly reduce carbon consumption for electricity generation.

Carbon emission reductions ranging from micro-scale can be done by using plants as a supplementary element of the room.

People tend spend a great deal of time remodeling their backyards, building new porches and decks and planting new trees in the front yard; but not as much effort goes into improving the interior design of their homes. If you stop and think about it, it doesn’t make sense to spend thousands on making the exterior of a house look beautiful while letting the interior be drab and boring. If the interior doesn’t match up to the exterior, guests will be a lot less impressed with the house, and all the hard work and money will be for naught. Luckily, spicing up the look of your home’s interior is not all that difficult. Here are just some of the ways you can enhance your home’s interior.

1. Furniture
A change of furniture can go long way for making a home’s interior more appealing. The overall look and feel depends greatly on furniture design and arrangement, so change it up a little and experiment with a new set of couches or tables. Make sure that your furniture is the right size for your home, as furniture that’s too big or too small for a room can ruin the design.

2. Colors
A new paint job is probably the cheapest and most effective way of giving your house a complete interior makeover. Try something radically different than what you already have, especially if you’re one of the many homeowners who’ve kept the white walls that came with the house. Don’t be afraid to add some color and attitude to your living room or kitchen.

3. Accent Furniture

Try decorating your home with new accent furniture. Vases, new picture frames, plants, tasseled couch cushions, etc. Accent furniture can bring an interior together in a way that completes the look and feel of a room. You don’t need a lot of accent pieces either, just enough to give your home interior a sense of design continuity. Overdoing the accent pieces will result in your house looking tacky and crowded.

4. Structural Design
Don’t be afraid to tear down walls. Knocking down the wall that divides the living room from the dining room can make a house look more spacious and airy. Or maybe you want to build a new wall or partition, or add an archway into the hall. Changing the structural design of your home’s interior can breathe new life into it and be a lot of fun. Of course, check with your building inspector before making any changes.

5. Feng Shui
Feng Shui does not require you to buy anything extra. It is simply about learning how to arrange objects in your home in a more aesthetically appealing way that lends it a calm and relaxing mood. You’ll find plenty of Feng Shui guides and manuals at your local library.

If you can’t remember the last time you had a good night’s sleep, it could well be your rickety old bed (not your stressful lifestyle) that’s to blame. We spoke to the best in the bedding business to get this top advice on shopping for a new bed.

1. Invest in quality

Nigel Cairns of Bedworld says, ‘The one golden rule is that you pay for what you get. The more you pay for your new bed or mattress then the better the quality will be.’ A bed will continue to lose its comfort and support year after year so buy the most expensive one that you can afford. A good quality bed should last ten years.

2. The seven year itch

According to the Sleep Council, ‘the critical ’seven year itch’ can be a make or break moment for many marriages and mattresses’. If your mattress is more than seven years old it almost certainly needs replacing. Decide whether you want an open coil, pocket sprung, latex or foam mattress with the help of our Buyer’s guide to mattresses. But first take the Sleep Council’s MOT quiz and assess the state of your sleeping equipment.

3. Roll around

Try the bed in all of the sleeping positions you tend to use, not only on your back,’ says Lucy Benham, assistant buyer for beds at John Lewis. ‘Place your hand in the small of your back and try to move it about. If it moves too easily, the bed may be too hard for you; if it’s a struggle to move your hand, then the bed is too soft. If you can move your hand with just a little resistance, the bed may be just right for you.’ Sleep easy on this Hotel 4-poster bed from John Lewis.

4. To slat or not?

Adam Black, of bed specialists Feather & Black says, ‘Flat wooden slats are the equivalent of placing the mattress on the floor. Always opt for a sprung base, be it a sprung divan or sprung beech slats.’ Foam mattresses are ideal for slatted bases as the springs on other mattresses will push through the slats over time and shorten the life of your mattress. Their Well Base bed (£654.75 for a super-king) combines the comfort of a divan with the contemporary look of a bed base. Superior style and comfort. Stephen George, bedroom furniture buyer for Harrods, is even more specific. ‘If going for slats, we recommend that they should be sprung timber slats, not be more than 6cms apart,’ he says.

5. Supersize me

‘Opt for the largest bed size the room can accommodate’, says Black. ‘Small beds are fine when you are getting on well with whoever you share it with, but tend to seem much smaller at those other times’. The Sleep Council says a regular four foot six double bed gives two sleepers less space than the size of a baby’s cot. But, warns Toby Ash of New Heights, ‘Consider the other furniture you have in the room and ensure that you have sufficient space around the bed to make the room functional. Mark out the size of the bed you are considering on your floor to ensure it is not going to be an obstacle.’ Feather & Black’s regal-looking Highgrove bed from will ensure sweet dreams.

6. Upholstered headboard

‘Solid wooden beds will last longer than veneered ones,’ says Adam Black. ‘Buying upholstered headboards which have removable covers makes sense. You can clean and dry-clean the covers once in a while and you can always give your bedroom a facelift by updating the fabric on the headboard.’ As for the end of the bed, Toby Ash of New Heights says ‘high footboards can look great in large rooms with high ceilings but taller people may find a low footboard more comfortable and less restrictive.’

7. Keep the bed bugs away

Sensitive types should opt for a hypo-allergenic mattress like this king-size Rockingham mattress from The Conran Shop which will help asthma and breathing problems. Their anti-dust mite properties will stop you from sneezing all night long.

8. Matchmaker, matchmaker

How do you match the mattress to the base? ‘These days almost all quality mattresses perform just as well on a slatted base as they would on a sprung divan,’ says Black. However, he warns salesmen will confuse customers by linking mattress performance to a particular base to make a double sale.

9. Guest beds

Guest/folding and storage beds provide flexible solutions for overnight guests. With a small bedroom, it makes sense to use your bed as a secondary storage option. Opt for a Platinum raised inflatable aerobed from John Lewis.

10. Ready built or flat pack?

Make sure you find out from retailers whether they will deliver the bed in one piece or whether you’ll need to put it together yourself. These days there are flat pack options that extend far beyond IKEA. The Bourne double bed from Furniture123 is simple and chic.

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