Friday, April 13, 2012

How to Decorate a Living Room With a Dining Area

Whether you own a home with a great room or a condo with a combined living room and dining area, it can be a challenge to decorate a living room with dining area so that the two areas remain separate, but complementary.

Where does one start? Do you start in the dining room and let it resolve the look of the two spaces? Or do you start in the living room? Should they be the same color? Should they have the same furniture styles? What about fabrics and textures?

Chrome Dining Chairs

There seems to be more questions than answers, that's for sure. But it's not that hard to work with these two spaces, if you take some time to resolve exactly what's prominent to you and make a few basic establish decisions that will set the tone and direction of your decorating plans.

How to Decorate a Living Room With a Dining Area

The first thing to reconsider is how the two rooms flow together. In other words, you don't want them to look different, but complementary. So the styles and colors should work together. They don't have to be the same mind you; they just need to originate a nice visual balance.

Perhaps more prominent is the color task of the two rooms. Because they normally share common walls, you should pick a wall color that works with both rooms. If you have the luxury of buying new furniture, you can elect a main color for the fabric of the sofa that will work with a second and third color. You can then use these secondary colors for the occasional chairs in the living room and the chairs in the dining room.

This allows the two rooms to blend together while retaining their own personality.

With the walls, you can use a main color on the walls that run seamlessly from the one room to the other and then add a second accent to a shorter wall, such as a wall in the dining room. Just be sure that these colors work with the fabrics you've selected. You don't want guests to ask when the circus is arrival to town. Remember, it's prominent to keep a visual flow between the two rooms, not originate two separate rooms. If you want to do that, build a wall instead.

The same principle works for all your accessorizing as well. For example, all the window treatments should match. If you use one type of blinds in the living room you should use them in the dining room, too.

Even though the two rooms need to be tied together, they don't have to be identical. For example, you could go with a nice modern sofa grouping in the living room and accent it with an ebony dining room table in the dining area. That said, you don't want to put a heavy oak dining table in the dining area and try to force it to live in harmony with a black and chrome entertainment town that can be seen in the living room. There's a fine line between eclectic and gaudy.

To added define the spaces, use different lighting. You can go with a nice chandelier over the dining area and then select lamps for the living room that pick up basic elements of its design. If the chandelier has a nice brushed chrome surface, you could add table and floor lamps that use brushed chrome accents in the living room, even if the main color is different. Just be sure that the lamps are useful as well as stylish. Good lighting is requisite for creating dining areas and living rooms that are functional as well as beautiful.

As you look at ways to decorate a living room with a dining area attached, resist the temptation to think of the two areas as being different visually, even though they serve very different purposes. You'll find your decorating task a much more pleasurable sense if you do.

How to Decorate a Living Room With a Dining Area