office interior designing and decoration tips and guide

You’ll love a room, even something as utilitarian as an office, so much more if you put your heart and soul into it. Start with a Style Folder I’m always working. Even when I’m not involved in a specific project, I’m keeping an eye out for things I like: layouts from home decor magazines, pages from art and design books, fabric swatches, samples of colors and textures I dig, photographs of clothes with patterns that look great, brochures from hotels, snapshots of rooms, signs, art, restaurants, gardens, lobbies. I save anything that I think is awesome- looking and that might serve as design inspiration at some point. (I also collect airsickness bags from planes, but that’s another story.)
When it comes to redoing a room, there’s one word I can’t reiterate enough: research, research, research. Just to stay organized, I file everything in a “style folder.” You don’t have to create a style folder with one particular project in mind-simply collect things you admire with the hope that they’ll one day be useful. If you just toss in everything that catches your eye, you’ll probably see a certain look start to emerge. You might not have been aware that you were drawn to certain colors, patterns, or types of furniture.
How to Plan for an interior Makeover Magazines are a great place to start. If you have your own subscription, you can just rip out the pages and file them away without having to save stacks and stacks of issues. Also look at as many home design books as possible. When the costs get prohibitive, see what your library has on hand (and if its selection is small, see if they can borrow from other branch. When you’re saving things, though, don’t think only about pictures; think about texture, too. Start touching things. Feel the difference between linen and Egyptian cotton, burlap and velour, and whenever you can toss samples of textures you like into your style folder, do so. (It would ‘probably be bad form to shear off a piece of the bedspread in your cousin’s guest room, so just write down the fabric type and what you liked about it then tuck that note into your folder.)
There are a lot of ways to make a style folder. You can dump everything into an accordion folder. I like to take photos of everything from fabrics to magazine spreads with my digital camera and upload them onto my computer. (You can also scan things directly into your computer and skip the photographing part.) This lets me organize everything into files on my desktop, print out whatever I want, and take it with me when I need to. Just remember to back up your hard drive. That’s a lesson I don’t want to learn again. Fixing them is hard and it will drive you crazy. Good times! The Twelve Steps Making over Interior a room can be a messy job and I’m not just talking about the paint, dust, stray bolts and nails, and all that other stuff that gets all over the floor.
I mean that there’s a mess of things you have to think about and a mess of ideas you have to juggle. It’s easy to forget things or make mistakes. Sometimes mistakes are no big deal, and in fact, you can even end up going in a different and better direction because of a mistake. But more often mistakes are costly or, at the very least, frustrating, so try to avoid them from the start. Because of the intense nature of EMHE, and, let’s be honest, the intense nature of me, I probably seem like I’m all over the place on TV.  I’m actually a pretty methodical guy and this is one place-the planning stage-where being methodical definitely pays off. That’s what these twelve steps are for. Think of them as your guide to getting organized (and preventing future screw-ups). And here’s a tip: Write down everything.