Help me think about how to decorate my piano room
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Looks good! The red circles between the framed pieces worked out well.
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Thank you!
@wtg said in Help me think about how to decorate my piano room:
Looks good! The red circles between the framed pieces worked out well.
Yeah, I like that order. I don’t like how lined up it looks at the bottom, but when I get another chair in there, I think it will be good.
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What kind of chair are you looking for? Would you want two matching chairs, and move the red chair to the tail end of the piano?
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@AdagioM Good question! Matching chairs could be nice actually. Although it’s not as roomy as it looks in the photos, so the footprint of the chair is important. My funky rocking chair (which is in the living room) fits there at an angle, but other chairs might not work that way. And a regular armchair or plush chair would probably be too deep…
Way back in this thread (I think) @wtg suggested a little shelf or table plus chair IIRC and I said thst wouldn’t work, but now that everything else is in place, maybe it would…
Hmm…
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Looks great!
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Thank you!!
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Would it look weird to have “dining chairs” like this in the piano room? Either one or two. (I would what black probably, not gray, but this is the style)
https://www.athome.com/providence-amina-dining-chair-charcoal-grey/124353350.html?nav=search
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Maybe an accent chair would better if the dining chair looks out of place…
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I think the wall with the red circles art needs to have matching chairs if there are two.
The dining chairs could work well, maybe with the red chair on the adjoining wall where the art is.
Do you have two matching dining chairs that you could move in to get a feel for how it might look before schlepping home something?
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@wtg said in Help me think about how to decorate my piano room:
I think the wall with the red circles art needs to have matching chairs if there are two.
Good point!
The dining chairs could work well, maybe with the red chair on the adjoining wall where the art is.
I like this idea.
Do you have two matching dining chairs that you could move in to get a feel for how it might look before schlepping home something?
Yes actually, just regular ones but they have black backs so would give a good idea.
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That looks really nice!
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Thank you!!
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Ok, so here is what it looks like with some of our dining chairs to the left of the piano.
Two chairs
Side view:
What it looks like with the red chair on the back wall:
Mr SK thinks two chairs looks crowded, so here's one chair:
So it makes sense to me to get two chairs (so I have a set) and I can keep one in the guest room if I decide he's right about two being too many...
I would get something like this:
Or maybe this (it's hard to find these parsons chairs in black)
Anyway, what do you think?
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I'm guessing that I grew up with a completely different approach to furnishing a room than Mr SK did, so I'm we are likely to have different opinions on the furniture placement.
Function is as important to me as aesthetics. If I were a guest, I would feel odd sitting down by myself in a single chair without the chance of having someone else to join me. I think I've been tainted for life by my Mom's reaction to Mr Ilg, her interior decorator, when he waved his hand up and down in the general direction of the corner of the living room and said "we could do a tall dramatic chair here". 1960s, so you can imagine. It would probably have been velvet. To which my Mom replied: "Who is going to sit all by themselves in the tall dramatic chair?" What she ended up doing was a corner arrangement of two small but exceedingly comfy chairs with a table and lamp in between. It was the first place people gravitated to upon entering the room.
I think a grouping of two chairs with a small table in between creates an inviting conversation area. You walk in and put your beverage and/or snack down on the table (bonus: a place to put things down that isn't the top of the piano!) Another guest comes in to join your and you can chat in between listening to whoever is playing the piano.
I would also put a small table next to the red chair, again for the place to put down your "stuff".
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I don't think it looks too crowded with the two chairs, I think it looks "intentional" -- like, this is a place for two people to sit. I think to Mr SK it looks like "you didn't have anywhere else to put those chairs, so you shoved them in there"
@wtg said in Help me think about how to decorate my piano room:
I think two chairs with a small table in between creates an inviting conversation area.
I love this idea, but I'm worried it's not quite roomy enough for the table in between... I'll play around with items I already have in the house and see what it looks like.
What do you think of those chairs I posted? (the parsons chairs, not the ones I already own) I'm trying to keep the footprint shallow, and an accent chair like the red one I have has a much larger (deeper) footprint. Maybe there's a different style I should consider?
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Indeed, it doesn't look crowded to me at all. Without a table I do think they look a little lonely.
There are some very small decorative tables you could put in the middle. I'll find an example or two... and post them.
This isn't the reading nook where someone will spend a few hours. It's just a place to land for a period of time to listen to the pianist and to socialize with other guests. I think any of them would work fine; the smaller size of a dining chair is ideal for the available space.
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Some small nesting tables. One could be between the dining chairs and the other could be moved to the red chair, maybe as needed.
Round:
Rectangular:
I have these. Got them from LLBean years ago. They're not very big at all.
We have something like this (they come in various sizes), but you may not want to introduce the animal element:
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Thanks for the photos! I like the idea of nesting tables, except that I don't like it when tables are too low... But! I will figure out a way to convince Mr Sk that we need more furniture in there, not less!
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Do a little role playing. He's a guest who has come for a piano gathering. Hand him a cup of tea and a couple of cookies on a plate and send him in there with one chair and no table. Play a few pieces on the piano. Like 20 minutes worth.
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@wtg That's some fairly devious thinking.
I do prefer the uphostered chairs you posted rather than the dining room chairs as they will be comfortable for longer musical sessions.
I think it has come together very nicely. I'd give it a little time to see what experience may have to say about the room and how it works for different occasions before I would commit to a "final" design.
Big Al