Need advice for decorating a studio apartment using this sofa
tinker1121
9 years ago
last modified: 9 years ago
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amykath
9 years agoAnnie Deighnaugh
9 years agoRelated Discussions
Decorating a studio apt need ideas PLEASE!
Comments (13)Since it's a small space how about keeping most of the walls light and adding an accent wall with some texture looking repositionable, removable, alternative wallpaper I think this is on Modenus but may be elsewhere). That way you could keep an open feel but add interest with the walls with wallpaper and the rest with cool wall art. You could give the illusion of more space. When or if you decide on a reusable wallpaer color just add some pillows of that shade to your bed. To further that idea add some interesting lighting, some that shines up and some that shines down (mix it up) and have dimmers. Have a wall with art that has painting lights....See MoreDecorating the Babe Cave - Hunzi's Studio Pink Home Office & Studio
Comments (163)Late night ramblings: Oh, good grief! Did I never show you the 95.5% finished work? Yes, you know it's not 100%! MrHunzi still hasn't put in the counter and the sink for the coffee bar. He has a good excuse, by the time we were ready to do it, the stupid virus was upon us and we couldn't invite his work buddy over to help, and then the next shiny object took over... the BIG RENO - The BIG RENO is all the super necessary and completely unsexy stuff we've put off doing for a decade or two or three. So far, we have spent 3 yrs sucking all the 100yr old insulation out of the attic, spray foaming the roof deck, upgrading the electrical panel, burying the service lines, trenched and burying the roof runoff system, fixing a bit of masonry, cleaning up a few thousand feet of wiring, installing a 1100sqft of plywood flooring in the attic during the height of the pandemic (I could have floored it in gold bullion and had it be cheaper), putting in a pulldown sliding attic staircase, tearing out a few tons of lath and plaster (3.25tons to be precise) from the upper and lower halls, cleaning and adding meeting rail locks/latches to 16 huge double-hung windows and installing interior storm windows to tighten up the envelope, and pouring a concrete utility pad for the reason we've been doing all this work - getting HVAC installed in this 140yr Shrine To Our Lady of Perpetual Renovation! (cue angelic singing). Yes folks, in a few weeks' time, the window air units will be no more! (Well, except for the converted side porch office, that's a whole other problem for another time.) And we're getting a whole house generator to boot, because, go big or go home. Anyway, I promise as soon as all the piles of stuff that have nowhere to go right now are gone, I'll take some lovely photos and show y'all the BabeCave. I'm about to reopen it to clients after all the hot mess of 2020/2021 is done. (I am about to have a breakdown over this part of the reno- the absolute CHAOS of everything everywhere. This is the part that breaks a lot of DIYers, and I know we'll get through it, but it's tempting to say eff it and start over with something that's "turn-key". With all the other projects we've done, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, LR, DR, Library, they have been easy to compartmentalize and keep the mess to that location. Y'all! There is no part of the house that isn't getting touched and there is no refuge from piles of tools, stuff that has been moved out of the way for something and has nowhere to go, oh and there are literally 17 giant bales of insulation stacked in my dining room and it's 2 weeks till Thanksgiving. No turkeys will be sacrificing their lives for us this year! Oh, only 5 of those bales have immediate use after the ducts go in, 4 more are holding for when we do the bathroom because MrHunzi is worried we might damage them somehow when demoing that ceiling if we put them up now, and the rest...there was somehow a mad rounding-up error on how much was required, so yay, I'm going to have the privilege of dragging them down into the basement, putting it up in the boiler room ceiling, and crawling up into the 2ft high crawlspace ledges and scootching around on my back to insulating them with Rockwool, because waste not, want not, and I have 8 bales to spare.) It's all good - the goal in this house is always to stuff every possible accessible space with Rockwool because fire is the one thing that is super scary in an old house like this - if you've ever tossed a stick of lath into a fire and watched it go WOOSH and contemplated, my whole house is made of that stuff, you too would be willing to backcrawl in dirty, dead mouse filled crawlspace ledges with the goal of not making your house fireproof, but to at least buying you an extra minute or two to make it out. And this is the one time that MrHunzi gets off easy - he can't work in quarters that tight, and while I'm no skinny mini, I can, so yay for that. But I know it will get better. As soon as the ductwork (and insulation for the hall) is installed, I'm planning to call in my fabulous assistant and we are going to organize and PURGE like mad, then I'm going to call in the Stanley steamer guys to clean every floor in the house, and beg my housekeeper to come back to work. I'd really like to do it now before the contractors descend on us right after T-Day because I'm actually horrified to ask anyone to come work in this house in this condition - I'm not sure they won't think we're hoarders. Isn't there a DIY show on TV like this right now? Where the DIY got out of control and the homeowners are a full hot mess and need to be rescued? I feel like someone could nominate us for that show. We are currently the poster children of why not to live in the renovation. Contractors will take photos to scare their future clients out of ever attempting DIY with tales of our woe. Oh and for extra fun, Thanksgiving weekend, the Mini-Mes are coming to stay with Nana for several weeks, because it's not chaotic enough without throwing two small children, 4yr (girl) & 8mon (boy), into the mix between Thanksgiving and Christmas. I think I was fine until I realized there will be a point while the HVAC guys (arriving Monday after thanksgiving) are working here for 2 weeks where I will need to remove ALL THE FURNITURE from the nursery and ROLL UP THE CARPET, so we can put the ductwork in for the DR below, while I have infants/preschoolers who need to sleep in that room because the other guest room is 6ft deep in all the crap from every other place and will have the nursery room furniture piled in there to boot. Everyone be sure to say your prayers and light your candles to Our Lady of Perpetual Renovation for us. We're going to need them! ;-) Once the HVAC is done, a brief interlude for celebrating Christmas, and the purge and cleaning have commenced, it's drywall, paint, add more fancy applied moldings on a huge staircase wall, and we'll pour a concrete driveway big enough to land a 747 (well, maybe not quite that big but at least a 7/11 parking lot) and that will probably mushroom into more landscaping. And then maybe by this time next year, we can declare victory. For five minutes at least. And then, we'll see if there's anything left in the tank to work on that truly evil old converted porch/office reno - that thing is going to mushroom like a nuclear cloud. And then there will only be some minor drywalling, install a window and pocket doors for the dining room, the 2nd-floor bath (only bathroom on the 2nd floor shared by 3 bedrooms so making it master-bath nice is the plan), and the kitchen to do, you know, nothing major.... But I promise - photos soon....See MoreI would like help decorating an 80's and 90's studio loft apartment?
Comments (1)it's a very general question..)) can you be a bit more specific? share some pic? tell us a bit more about your style preferences/needs? otherwise would be like me asking "what should I wear to the dinner tomorrow?"-and no one ever saw me, doesn't know my wardrobe, has no idea what is the restaurant and where, and what's the occasion and what's the weather and who will be there besides me.....See MoreStudio Apartment Living - Need recs!
Comments (12)Agree that you should consider a murphy bed. Otherwise... In that small a space, don't buy a headboard and foot board. Instead, buy only a good quality metal bed frame (with rollers) that can transition and, with wood cross slats, hold either a twin or full mattress and box springs. Some have twin/full/queen options. https://www.lasvegasfurnitureonline.com/products/universal-twinfullqueen-4-leg-metal-bed-frame-with-wide-rollers While you're living alone, by adding some bolsters and cushions (several body pillows with shams to match your bed covering will do), you could use the frame as a day bed -- sofa by day, bed for sleeping. Also note, when space is at a premium: Don't buy stuff you don't need. Invest only in the basics only and choose smaller items when practical. Sit in any seats you're considering buying -- choose comfort over style. You want to go vertical to maximize storage/use -- choose tall cabinets or chests with drawers -- not necessarily one intended to be bedroom furnishings -- rather than a low dresser w/mirror. You can always put a full length mirror on the back of a closet door instead. A table with drop leaf sides or to which you could add leaves in the center when you have guests would be much more practical than a large solid table (with a lot of hard chairs) that takes up a lot of room. A pair of comfortable club chairs (wheels a plus) that could serve as both dining and/or living room chairs when you have guests are worth considering. A sofa isn't necessary; however, a love seat would be preferable to a full length sofa. Choose furnishings that have storage. A cabinet with doors could double as a tv cabinet with storage below. End tables and/or bed side tables could be a two drawer filing cabinet. You can add caster to add height or choose one with a third shallow top drawer. An upscale executive desk chair might also serve as a recliner. A recliner for your tv viewing wouldn't need an ottoman. Any ottoman should be a storage ottoman with a lid that flips to become a coffee table when needed. If you're on a tight budget, consider making a few visits to Habitat for Humanity Restore Store for bargains. GoodWill and charity thrift stores are more likely to have bargains than "antique"/vintage -- used -- furniture stores. Inventory changes with each donation/purchase, so make more than one trip. [My dining table is a conference table that came from the used furnishing section of a local office supply store. My smaller breakfast table came from Habitat for Humanity. My tv stand is a hutch -- top only -- from a china cabinet bought at a local "antique"/vintage -- used furniture store and resembles the top, glass door part of this: https://www.pinterest.com/pin/230668812139985416/ These used items are all well built and serve my purposes every bit as well as new choices costing much more.]...See Moreseww1
9 years agotinker1121
9 years agoAnnie Deighnaugh
9 years agochristine 5b
9 years agoUser
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9 years agoamykath
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