Any suggestions on how to furnish this?
Hey @joseph15362 — I saw that you shared this in a couple of different areas in our forum, but I've consolidated the discussion here because this is where it will get the most eyeballs! Can you tell us more about the type of furniture you're bringing into the space? How do you plan to live/use the studio? Posts with more information tend to get more replies since it helps us help you out. Looking forward to your reply! 🙂
am very open to suggestions/ vendors but don’t want to break the bank obviously I would like to separate sleeping and living areas perhaps wirh throw rugs?
I plan to use this studio as my primary residence.
Thanks! I prefer to have space for a bed.
No need for a home office; I do wish to be able to watch TV. A dining table is nice; we don't need crumbs on the couch!
let’s have TV in a wall and I prefer to watch it from a sofa!
This was interesting. Just wondering whatever happened to the room arrangement in this one.
I am assuming that the two openings on the left edge of the illustration are windows (or a window and a door to a balcony), I would use a couch either at an angle facing that corner back far enough that you could have a tv on the adjacent wall, the dining room table outside of the kitchen door but also I would sit and face that view when I ate. It would leave the bed of the back of the kitchen wall. The headboard could be on either the west of the north wall. A round rug in the corner, or a rectangular rug could placed in the corner of the room that would end under the couch.
Alternatively, I would try placing my couch touching the north wall - facing west, to take in the view, with a console table - or if it feels tight, with the dining table touching the back of the couch. I think that would result in a larger bed area. tv going next to the door to the balcony.
Perhaps decide how many persons you would like to be able to seat on a regular basis for both comfort and dining then consider potential pieces.
For me, the clearest way to model is on graph paper, and making around paper pieces to see the actual spaces that would remain.
Have you considered visualizing this in 3d?