How to Create the Right Ambience in Your Home

26th June 2018

If you’re looking to enjoy the comfort of your own home, you must get the atmosphere right. From pendant lights to cosy furnishings at the dining table, adding the softer touches to your interior design can help to create a room with character, atmosphere and a mood.

Picking the perfect colour

Our mood can be easily affected by the colours that are around us, so it’s important that you surround yourself with the most beneficial hues.

However, when it comes to changing the décor and opting for a more refreshing colour — you must consider room size. If your kitchen is small, you’ll want the space to be bright and airy so you might opt for predominately lighter shades for the walls or cabinetry. That way cooking need not be a dark and isolating experience. A restricted pale palette also makes for a sleek aesthetic that can be personalised with splashes of colour and will have you staying on trend for 2018. Ideal Home has aptly named this the ‘Unicorn-inspired’ trend featuring pale blues and pinks, personalised with glinting bronze and metal.

This can alter depending on the room type though, if you have an open plan kitchen/diner, you’ll be able to use darker tones as it won’t feel too daunting. Dark blue cabinets, as House Beautiful have predicted, are set to be the most popular colour choice this year for modern kitchens. The second thing you’ll need to consider is the lighting in each room, so, consider where and how natural light may shine. The personal palette will vary from client to client and it is important for kitchen designers and interior designers alike to use their expertise to help their clients make informed choices about colour schemes. The option of hand-painted cabinetry allows you to experiment with changing trends but also gives you an authentic texture on the wood that you simply can’t achieve with spray paint finish.

The perfect way to determine what look you want to achieve in the home is by creating a mood board — or a Pinterest alternative to display pictures of different colour schemes together without having to make a purchase. When pulling together ideas, keep a few questions in mind such as How do I want to use this space? What impact will lighting have on these colours? Or What is the psychology of this colour? The kitchen or living room (usually whichever is the biggest room in the home) is the best place to start as these are likely to be your most centrally located rooms and all other palettes branch off from here. Paint this larger room in a bold colour, and work around the home either complimenting the first shade, contrasting it or matching with a soft, neutral hue.

Listed below are different colours and how they are perceived:

Texture tasting

You can be as creative as you want with the textures in your home. In fact, if you’re looking to achieve an informal, cosy setting then steer clear of a regimented list of restricted textures and you’ll find textures that marry well irrespective of their feel or material. Mirrors and glass objects are a good accent to any texture. To create a broody feel, consider rich, dark veneers. For a softer touch, incorporate silk upholstery, velvet floor-length curtains and hints of aged brass and copper.

Experimenting with lighting

Lighting can have a huge influence on your mood too. Different rooms around the home require different styles of lighting due to the nature of tasks and activities that go on in each space. Even within a room, it is vital that you use more than one type of lighting if you are to achieve any sort of ambience.

Look at the living room, for example, an area will be dedicated to watching TV and will need ceiling lights, possibly on a dimmer, so that the right light can be achieved throughout the day and when the curtains are drawn. One corner may serve as a dedicated reading spot; if so, then a floor lamp that provides a softer light closer overhead will make a world of difference.

If you want to enjoy your bespoke kitchen space, whether you’re dining or working — having the right light setting in place is essential. To create the right ambience in the kitchen, invest in pendant lights – perhaps in varying heights – and with a warm temperature to the bulb. Plinth lighting is also a clever way to add warmth as well as a focal point to the design; this has a particularly striking effect on an island, giving the illusion of ‘floating cabinets’.

However, how you want your home to look and feel is a personal journey in itself — and you should make the decisions. Other ways to improve the ambience in your home include transforming a space with scent and layering different aromas. Changing colours, textures, smells and lighting are all simple, inexpensive ways of changing how a room feels.

This is a collaborative post.
Sources:
http://www.idealhome.co.uk/kitchen/kitchen-trends-191617
https://www.forbes.com/sites/houzz/2013/07/29/how-to-pick-a-color-palette-for-your-whole-house/#61a509cb3716
https://www.houzz.com/ideabooks/13038406/thumbs/Pick-a-Paint-Help–How-to-Create-a-Whole-House-Color-Palette
http://www.bbc.co.uk/homes/design/colour_psychologyofcolour.shtml

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