Happy New Year everyone!
So hard to go back to the good habits after the
holidays! So hard to find meaning after spending time in Paradise (a Caribbean
island in my case). I feel like a fallen angel and then I remember – the
meaning of the interior design is to adapt our surroundings. It is to have our
surroundings serve us better. And it is only I who can spice my space …
I do have an on-going small DIY project – trying to bury
the cracks on the ceiling under cornices – brilliant idea. But the light is
bad, and it was time consuming to find the right tools. As already mentioned, I
am looking for lessons in the journey and not working towards a deadline. So,
my ceiling, my cracks, material for another post.
For the current post though, I wanted mostly to
summarise where I stand with my future living and dining room.
1. It is a converted bedroom, because a) access to
the bathroom should be there for both future bedrooms, b) is the room at view
when entering the flat, and c) communicates better with the kitchen, and also
has the potential to ventilate better.
2. The room is quite small – on top of that there
are two doors and windows – a floor plan is available with an earlier post.
3. The challenge was explored at length in the
previous post. The classic theory of interior design recommends zoning, and
indeed two zones are possible one for dining, the other for sitting… and the
previous post tried to see how many combinations are possible with those…if the
furniture is small – plenty of combinations indeed.
4. A crucial choice is at hand – sitting or dining
group next to the window? If dining – then less space for storage, and sofa
away from the window. Now, the sofa better be close to the window – the
home-owner (I) is a maniac reader. So daylight is so important when it is
there…
5. Right, daylight – but if you’d go back to the
suggestion for the future master bedroom – there you’ll see identical arm-chair
setting next to the window – so it would be a duplication in a really small
flat. Nevertheless, I would like to explore one variant where the sofa is next
to the window.
And now, on to SketchUp!
It is the most intuitive 3D modelling programme, so I
was able to create the room model swiftly. For
the sake of presentation, I start with a floor view, which will subsequently be
presented form different angles (mostly impossible as is the case with 3D –
just compare digital models to actual photographs of rooms).
Now, one thing to know about SketchUp rooms – they are
boxes, like shoe boxes, and we just turn them round in space in order to get
the view that illustrates a point. So, the floor plan, for example, is looking
through the ceiling. The ceiling itself, like any other side of the shoe box,
has two surfaces. In order to be able to see through it, the outer surface has
to be “transparent” …
Next thing, obviously, are the objects I filled my
room with. Coming mostly from IKEA, they are all available in the 3D
Storehouse. In my future real room, I may or may not use those, I may as well
re-upholster. One shortcoming that is immediately visible – the colours do not
render as nicely. In fact, the contrast between surfaces under direct light, or
in the shadows, is so stark, that one fails to notice that the colour is meant
to be the same. So, the following exercise shall test mostly the view of volumes,
and only in second place the actual application of colour, texture and light.
It was a happy discovery, that in SketchUp there are
so many artistic ways to render an object. In order to kill the glitter, the
contrast and sleekness of the first image, I opt for a mild almost chalk
representation.
And on to the views.
Firs view is what we should see, when entering – I
think it is a very good presentation of a room if the first sight is a nice
luxurious sofa. It is cosy, inviting and in the same time decorative. It can be
a focal point in itself.
Now, what is painfully obvious in the floor plans is
the lack of symmetry. And we know symmetry makes things logical, proportional,
good! It is natural. If we want to call for attention, then we brake the symmetry.
But this room doesn’t have it all there to explore… and therefore the floor
lights on both sides of the asymmetrical sofa.
Another issue is the bathroom door – I want it to be
invisible. So, I am wandering if the sofa is in a way in front of it, passage
provided, won’t it blend in with the walls?
Last on this view – I think it is a cat height view.
Again, back to the trickery of computer generated images. A lot of angles are
impossible, best views are from outside of the shoe box through transparent
walls, all in all things that don’t happen in the real life.
I love the next view – it is from behind the bathroom
wall, and it aims at the intended focal point. Actually the TV in this interior
is mostly for my boyfriend, I personally do not watch. I am only saying this
because a sight of a screen has become more natural in our lives, than it is
natural. If you wander about the vertical lines – they belong to the door I am
seeing through. These are some of the peculiarities of SketchUp we have to bear
in mind.
Following view is toward the entry door, and literally
through the window but from the outside. The said window is already adorned
with some floor length curtains. Another peculiarity of SketchUp – I am not
skilled enough to show them, so they are invisible. It is a bit of an issue
with the sofa, as in reality we wouldn’t want for it to hide the curtains.
Also, we shall not be able to push it towards the wall as much as needed…
Mental notes for the differences between real life and electronic model.
Before moving on a final note on the dining group – it
needs to be not as simple. I may have to play with just this one and see where
imagination and resources take me.
And the final one – back to the sofa – this time not
as a cat, but may be a parrot perched on the ceiling light. I still like it
very much. I am still unable to see if sofa is not an obstacle to getting to
the bathroom… but it is a way to go.
The conclusion on colours is plain – beige and grey
and orange work. In reality, I want them to be taupe like, but matching the oak
door, some cream/champagne/light beige. Grey as a staple. And notes of bronze,
not orange, because it is so fashionable. That much is sadly not conveyed by
the SketchUp.
Naturally, so much more to learn and practice. I’d be
so happy to read some comments. Any comments. About the space planning,
presentation, colour scheme. How logical is my logic?
As a preview for a future post, and what I believe
needs to be done over and over for the said room – handmade sketches of
elevations and perspectives. Somehow, I never get round to starting. Saw a tempting book in the shop today, and did not succumb to temptation, because it
seems to me I mostly buy but seldom practice.
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