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frankie_in_zone_7

Take photos to get the real picture

Frankie_in_zone_7
13 years ago

I have posted almost this same thing on the Kitchen forum, where folks have been posting photos of their beautiful rooms. But it was driven by some of my recent de-cluttering and spring re-organization energy spurt and so more related to organizing spaces and habits.

I have been doing my spring cleaning and re-arranging, especially bookshelves and counters/tabletops, and also was going through some recent family photos to pick some for framing. Naturally some are taken in our home at different times of year and over several years.

In these photos, the clutter or lack thereof, and the effect of "artful clutter" vs that which just looks bad and gives bad vibes, is so apparent, same for colors, contrasts, lighting and so forth. In different holiday photos I can also really see "successful" holiday decorating ideas vs. ones that didn't cut the mustard. In the photos the "good" things and the "bad" things really jump out at you and sometimes in this sequence of photos in one space you can compare, wow, I had this all just right (or wrong) here, and then when I re-arranged that it changed everything.

It has been very rainy and cloudy here the past week, but sun is on the way. Over the weekend I plan to take a series of photos (natural daylight helps a lot) of various rooms, shelves, table tops and so forth and see if I can compare them to what I thought I was achieving or trying to achieve. One example was I found some kitchen photos and while I thought at the time it was pretty cleaned up, in the photo there is just chaos. "Desired" effect can vary with room or area, such as, calming effect may be what I want in one area vs. interesting or exciting view or arrangement somewhere else. I have a lot of bookshelves and try to combine books with other objects and find photos especially useful to see what looks good.

Of course there is an effect of looking at a photo vs. being in the space yourself, in which you actually experience the room differently, so that, I believe, just as you might dress or make-up someone one way for TV and another way for live, photography may create both constraints and liberties not present in real life, but still, the photos can help in some ways. You can notice items and at least ask, is that necessary? Especially if there are things that are making life more complicated, or you're thinking you might toss or replace.

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