Archive for January, 2009

Modern Bedroom Sizes, Futons and Bunk beds.

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

The natural focal point of the bedroom is the bed itself; this means the selection of the bed is important in establishing the overall design of a bedroom, particularly if the frame is unusually interesting. The variety of bed styles available ranges from a simple futon mat, to a traditional box spring and mattress, to a waveless waterbed, with variations and alternatives in between.

In the United States, standard sizes were established in the 1950s for bed frames and mattresses: King, 72″ x 84″; Queen, 60″ x 75″; double or full, 54″ x 52″; and single or twin, 39″ x 75″. Unless your bed is older than this, it will be one of these universal sizes, regardless of the type of bed frame. And although the sizes of American beds and bedding were standardized in the 1950s, the closest-to-standard sizes in pillows include: king, 26″ x 36″; queen, 26″ x 30″ and standard, 20″ x 26″. Other pillow sizes include French continental or eurosquare, 26″ x 26″ and the Russian pillow, 14″ x 14″.

Futons are ideal for studios and small spaces, as are Murphy beds. First introduced in 1905, the Murphy bed folds into a closet to open up more floor space when not in use. Some are hinged at the head and some hinge at the side.

Bunk bedBunk beds and trundle bed styles are space-saving alternatives to an extra bed in the guest room. Bunk beds are stacked on top of one another, while trundle beds have a second bed that slides out from underneath the first bed. Bunk beds are primarily found in children’s rooms.

Update the cafe curtain

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

cafe curtainsCafe curtains, which traditionally cover the lower half or bottom third of a window, offer privacy while admitting light from the top. To make them look fresh and elegant, modernize the proportions. Instead of hanging the curtains halfway up the window, he raises them one mullion higher. (Mullions are the wooden strips between panes of glass.) In a window without mullions, raise the curtain roughly a foot above the halfway point;  experiment until the proportions look right. Consider curtains of white linen with a simple pinch pleat, using pinch-pleat hardware from any fabric shop.

Tip: Align your curtain rod with the mullions, or the window treatment will look disorganized.

Riding the Design Wave

Thursday, January 1st, 2009

When the home office surge began, options in furniture and other equipment were limited. What was available was designed for offices, not homes. The personal computer was so new we didn’t really know what to do with it.

home office furnitureBut now homeowners, designers, and manufacturers are taking a figurative step back, and a second wave of office design is the result. After all, if it’s your home, why dress it like a steno pool?

Attractive, home-scaled furnishings, space-saving products and hardware, more refined textures, and both bolder and subtler colors are aimed at complementing, not clashing with, your home design. Even electronics makers changed their previously predictable beiges and grays.