Friday, November 4, 2011

How Interior Design Professionals Choose On-Wall Decoration - Hands-On Installation Tips

When interior design professionals say "on-wall decoration," they normally mean flat objects that may be hung on a wall. This covers photos, graphics, platters, mountings, reliefs and many other categories. London is a splendid locale in which to work as an interior designer because it is so easy to find fabulous on-wall decorative options from the busy artisan set, who frequently exhibit in galleries and warehouses across the capital.


Ordinarily, pictures best create a harmonious design feel when positioned in squares or rectangles. London is a global style hub, and hopscotch random shapes can certainly provide visual engagement for high-flair TV-ready interior designs, but in reality it is preferable to focus on standard right angles for most design objectives.


The second point I like to make is that symmetry is key. This is ideal if the interior designer has a single central picture together with a collection of others that constitutes a thematic cluster.


Thirdly, London's interior designers will focus on the idea of 'horizons' to allow for the horizontal alignment of the ceiling-facing edges of many different pictures in a cluster. If you have a variety of rectangle mountings, each of which has different dimensions, it may be preferable to use two horizons - one upper and one lower - to provide a great visual.


Fourthly, top London Interior Design Professionals like to refer to 'anchoring' as another key concept. This involves using the biggest pictures in a cluster to serve as the vertices of an invisible rectangle - smaller pictures are then positioned to develop the remainder of the space.


Fifthly, interior designers sometimes fall back on the cross arrangement when they have a client who craves extra visual flair and the elimination of rectangles altogether. This can be ideal if the pictures are rectangular but of all sorts of different dimensions. The interior designer will position the wall hangings in the shape of a cross, with bigger frames below the "horizon" and more modest mountings above in order to create a feeling of harmony.


Sixthly, a favourite technique among certain London interior designers is to build stability into a design by allowing the biggest wall hangings to migrate down towards the baseline of a cluster, along just one horizontal line. This creates a sense of solidity for the wall decoration scheme. I have collaborated with London's most prestigious interior design boutiques who emphasise placement of the tallest picture at the midline of the horizon in order to pull one's gaze toward the ceiling and create a feeling of exquisite spaciousness.


In the third and final article for this series called "Interpreting Designer Flair - How Interior Design Professionals Choose On-Wall Decoration," I will explore the use of illuminators and reflection to create concepts that delight the observer and guarantee harmony.



Interior Design London - Global Interior Design Consultancy Company in London, UK for interior design services.

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