If your quandary is, “home decorating ideas: great room, odd shaped”, then the solution may be simpler than you think. An odd-shaped room need not be a disadvantage when decorating a room. In fact, in a great room, it could well be an advantage. Use the odd spaces to create distinct areas in the room, and use patterns, paint, and focal points to make it feel more regular and less odd-shaped.

A great room is not called a great room just because it looks fabulous; it combines the uses of several other rooms into one; often the family room/living room with a study, or a dining area too. So what if your great room is odd shaped? Here are some home decorating ideas great room odd-shaped.

Great Room Odd Shaped?

If you are head-scratching over “home decorating ideas great room odd shaped”, first consider the functions the great room will provide, and turn the negatives into positives.

Odd shapes may seem like a chore when decorating, but they actually include features that add character to a room. Try and make something of them, before trying to camouflage the odd shapes you see as problematic.

Use the Space

An alcove or an under-stairs space could be turned to your advantage, by housing a small home office, or suitable storage for books in a study. Small nooks and crannies can be used to display ornaments, or large vases with colorful flowers, and make a focal point of them.

Using fragrant blooms is also a wonderful way to alter the mood from one end of the great room to the other. Adding spotlights to these areas helps draw the eye to these spaces, instead of noticing an odd-shaped room.

Like any decorating challenge, the key is in the planning. Use the shape you have to your advantage and first plan what each part of the room can be used for.

Flooring

While a great room has to encompass the uses of several rooms into one space, it also needs to retain a flow from one section of the room to the next. Flooring is a great way to distinguish one space from another. Try having a neutral carpet for the living room area, and then a wood or laminate floor for the dining area.

Consider the proportions of these areas before deciding on floor coverings – cutting tiles, or wood floors may be more difficult if the area is particularly odd-shaped, especially if you are doing this yourself.

Paint and Pattern – Visual Tricks

If you want your odd-shaped great room to appear larger, then choose a soft grey for the walls, rather than a neutral cream or beige. Cool neutral colors have the effect of making the walls appear to recede, whereas warm tones have the opposite effect.

When there are odd shapes in your great room to consider, then different tones of a single color can be utilized effectively. Pick out architectural details, and lighten dark corners, by using pale and dark tones of a single color, in different areas of the same space.

The pattern is a wonderful way to trick the eye, and it’s worth trying this out when it comes to soft furnishings and window treatments. A bold patterned fabric framing a window makes it a focal point, drawing the eye to the lightest area, and away from the odd shape of the room.

If All Else Fails

If all these solutions still leave you feeling in an odd space, when all you want is a great room, then you may need to consider more drastic steps.

Installing a faux wall not only has the advantage of disguising an odd space (especially useful in a room with a sloped ceiling) but there should be room within it to install some storage space as well. Bookcases and cabinets can be altered (or custom-made), and used in a similar way to divide the room – combining storage with a great aesthetic look.

If budget is a consideration, then why not try a screen to disguise an odd space, which will also serve as a divider between one space in the great room, and another? Modern screens can be painted, in keeping with your color scheme, or try charity and thrift stores, for screens with character.

Resources

Linda Barker Trade Secrets, David, and Charles, 2000