14 Mar 2008 02:21:36 | Veronyka Lau
For most people, they can count the times they redecorate their
homes in a lifetime on one hand. It's a shame because this is
not because they don't have great ideas about how they want
their homes to be, but that the thought of redecorating brings
the following obstacles to mind:
• Where to put up if I am renovating? • I have accumulated a lot
of furniture and household items, how in the world can we
integrate them with this ultra modern design I am interested in?
• We have spent all that money doing up the place when we moved
in and now we have to do away with it? What a waste. • It's one
big financial outlay!
But our tastes change, moods change over time. New notions
inspire us even after we completed our renovations. Is there a
way to invest in our homes in a flexible, relaxing and
manageable way? To be able to afford stylish home
transformations year after year?
Yes! This does call for a whole new way of looking at home
renovations, not as a singular large-scale undertaking but
modular projects that keeps the design process fluid and fun.
Modular transformations: Where to start?
Amazing transformations can be achieved by changing colour and
texture around the house with a new coat of paint, new fabrics
or overlays. A homeowner is taken by the Asian resort-style at a
holiday trip to Bali wanted to give his home that same feel in
his home. What he did was to overlay wooden decking in a
strategic section of his living room, added indoor landscaping
and enhanced his lighting. The solution was effective and
relatively cheap.
To be able to enjoy many years of such surface transformations
at a whim without major hacking and construction work, you will
need good planning at the start. A good home design is all about
form and structure, storage planning and circulation of
movement. These are important decisions that homeowners need to
make and should not be based on preferences for style as these
change over time, but on lifestyle, family timetables,
day-to-day habits and future household needs.
Good planning that takes these human factors into account will
ensure that no matter how often you choose to make
transformations in your home or how radical the style, it
doesn't throw your lifestyles out of whack by negatively
impacting critical spaces, creating odd corners and circulation
of movement. This home improvement blueprint can also guide you
in making those big-ticket furniture purchases and lessen the
urge for impulsive imprudent buys.
With a good understanding of the form and movement in your home
as well as lifestyle needs, embarking on small-scale projects to
give your home a new look and feel, be it asian, modern classic
or gothic revival, would be fun, fulfilling and ultimately
successful.
On a more personal level, families can also use this kind of
home planning exercise as a way to find out more about each
other's lifestyle needs and involve everyone in the vision of
making their homes cosy, lively and liveable.
Lighting - Endless possibilities with a small budget.
Everyone's moods are ever changing - sunny and bright,
contemplative, dark, romantic, sultry - if only you could
transform your home as often as you change your moods!
You can with the right lighting. The same room can look vastly
different under different modes of illumination. A good lighting
system will afford you a variety of lighting conditions, soft
and warm for entertaining, bright and efficient for household
chores like ironing, focused and glare-free for reading.
If you have a small budget and big plans for your home,
designing a multi-purpose lighting system may be your finest
investment. Lighting not only invokes fancy, it also helps put
an attractive glow on old, uncoordinated furnishings (and don't
we all have those around the house).
Home designing and decorating can be a most frustrating yet
infinitely fulfilling activity. Start with a bright attitude, a
good understanding of the design process and plenty of
communication between family members and you are not likely to
go wrong.
About Author :
Veronyka is a partner and designer at Incubate Interior Design,
Singapore. www.incubate.com.sg