Design Ideas for a Bedroom & Living Room Together
Double Duty
Every item in a small studio or combination bedroom and living room should do double duty. Storage is at a premium. Choose a desk that turns into a dining room table for two to four people. Or pick a table that has a drop leaf and can slide against a wall. The table is used as a desk and converts to a dining room table. Select a sofa that converts into a bed or use a futon. Test the mattress to make sure it's comfortable. A twin bed with a pleated underskirt and tailored bedspread is a sofa by day with pillows at the back and bed by night. Use hinged baskets as side tables.
Partition
No matter what you do to a queen size bed or double bed it's going to look like a bed. It's uncomfortable to have friends of the opposite sex over when the bed is always looming. Partition the bed so it's no longer visible from every place in the room. Place the bed at one end of the room away from the entry. Use a shoji Japanese screen, hanging curtains or even roll-up blinds from the ceiling to floor to hide the bedroom area. Partitions could be shutters, a folding screen or bookcases. Removable or adjustable partitions allow you to change the space for an airy look when you're at home by yourself.
Define by Color
Even small spaces still allow for different functions within the room. Dining, sleeping, office and entertaining spaces are differentiated through color while maintaining a cohesive look. The trick is to choose colors in the same shades. Your main color scheme might be cornflower blue and chocolate brown. The sleeping area darkens both of those colors. The bedspread is a sapphire blue print, while the throw pillows are a deep brown. The cornflower blue shows up in window treatments, and the chocolate brown in accessories. The entertainment area focuses on light blue and milk chocolate. The room still flows because the color scheme is still blue and brown, but each functional area is just a little different.
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