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maddybeagle

Help me arrange the 'front hall' area of my living room

13 years ago

We've discussed this a bit before, but now I have a picture that shows the space clearly. Typical bungalow: the front door opens directly into the living room. This pic is taken from what will be the living room proper, with the fireplace at my back; the archway at the left of the frame opens to the dining room.

Here's what you see as you move towards the dining room from the front door; the walls in the foreground are part of the living room; the d.r. walls will be a soft blue, and the kitchen walls will be pale creamy yellow, similar to the living room:

The question: how best to arrange this space as a welcoming and functional and non-messy entryway. I need a place to hang dog leashes, as well as the coats and shoes that will inevitably accumulate here. In some weather, muddy shoes can be left on the front porch, but the reality of going out with dogs mostly means everybody needs to be suited up before we go out the front door.

The wall with the radiator and windows is 13' across. Aesthetically, the walls in this room will be a pale, creamy yellow (BM Man on the Moon), with BM Simply White trim. (Long story for those who were following along on the bungalow living room thread, we decided to use a blue on the walls of the adjoining dining room, so decided not to use a competing aqua in the living room.) The front door will be replaced with an appropriate bungalow-style wood one. I'm tentatively thinking it would be nice to have either a hall tree or hooks on the wall just behind the door, a desk to put mail on, with a pretty lamp, to the left of the radiator, and perhaps an upholstered bench in front of the radiator for sitting on to {{!gwi}}, and a rug that runs from the front door to the dining room door to help define the area. I have several pieces of furniture that could be deployed here - a 19th-c. partner's desk that would *just* fit to the left of the radiator; a Gov. Winthrop desk pretty much identical to {{!gwi}} that would fit in that space with a little more room; various smaller antique tables - and I'm open to buying one or two more pieces.

Questions: Do I also want a piece of furniture to the left of the front door as you come in, to partially block off the entryway from the living room, or would that chop things up too much? Should I try to find a small-scale armoire for a real closet-like space? (If so, it would need to go on the dining-room side of the radiator, for reasons of space.) Anybody have good pictures of an attractive entry hall-type space carved out of a living room like this? Thanks!

Carin

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