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Selling Your Home |
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Moving
Furniture
If you’ve ever thought about
unstuffing those closets and getting rid of items that just take up space, the
time is now. And what better opportunity to reassess your family’s lifestyle
than right before a move? Discuss with your family how your needs have changed
over the years and how your new home might accommodate them.
Look at Your Furnishings Objectively
& Consider these suggestions:
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Weed out the furnishings you no
longer use or enjoy, or those that have been stored away indefinitely. Instead
of moving them to the new home, have a garage sale and use the profits to help
finance your move.
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Unless you’re buying all-new
furnishings, determine how you can adapt your current color scheme to complement your new home. New throw
pillows, wall-hangings or window treatments may be all you need to pull the
look together.
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Decide where you’ll arrange
furnishings in your new home by creating your own floor plan. Using graph
paper, draw each room to scale, with 1 inch equaling 1 foot of space. Indicate
the location of doors, windows, built-ins and electrical outlets. If you’re
buying a newly constructed home, your builder may be able to provide a floor
plan.
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Next, measure the size and shape of
your major furniture pieces and draw them to scale.
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Cut the shapes from graph paper and
arrange the pieces in different ways until you discover a floor plan you like.
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Consider using furnishings in
different rooms of the new house. A favorite living room chair may work better
in the new bedroom; a dining room cabinet may now look at home in the den.
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If space is at a premium, turn some
rooms into multipurpose areas. For instance, in a living/dining room, define
the areas by using a hutch or other large piece of furniture as a divider. A
sofa bed turns a den into a guest room.
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Position living room furniture so
six or more guests are within easy listening distance of each other. In the dining room, allow room around
the table so guests may be seated and served with ease.
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Find a focal point in each room —
something that draws your eye to it. Focal points are architectural, such as fireplaces, or
decorative, such as wall hangings or window treatments. Accentuate your focal
point with your furniture arrangement.
Group for Impact:
Focus
attention in a room with a handsome grouping of furniture. This room showcases
a formal arrangement of furniture with space for a piano and two seating areas.
Zones are defined by area rugs which can be placed on hard surface floors or
over existing carpet.
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