What Can You Do with Long and Narrow Hallways part 2

It is not often that hallways have windows, but if you wish to add some softness with furnishings, you may decide to cover the door with a full length curtain or blind a great boon if you also suffer from a draughty entrance. Special curtain poles (portiere rods) are available that lift as you open the door so that the curtain won’t drag on the floor or get caught as the door opens; or you may find it useful to have a curtain on hinged pole that will swing back against the wall when you would like the curtain open.

For added interest in the hall and up the stairs display favorite pictures and paintings; have a low but long bookshelf along one wall which will also serve as a handy shelf; and hang a mirror for the last is an especially valuable addition to a hallway. If the space is long and narrow, a mirror hanging on one wall will enhance the width by reflecting whatever is on the opposite wall (a light, for example, would become doubly strong) and if it can be positioned to reflect some outside light, so much the better.

What Can You Do with Long and Narrow Hallways part 1

As the proportions of a hall are frequently rather uncomfortable a long and narrow room, or high walls leading up to stairwell this area is a prime candidate for playing with color and lighting to enhance the good points, and detract from the bad. To make the space seem wider and the back of a long, narrow corridor appear closer, paint the ceiling and back wall in the dark shade, but keep the side walls as pale as possible. Shiny surface will also reflect light making them appear slight sheen for the walls.

If you live in a period property, there may already be moldings on the walls of your rooms and the hallway is a prime candidate for them as they add decorative details and enhance proportion. The large expanses of wall can also be well served by adding a dado rail and being decorated with different color or finishes above and below. Authentic moldings are available in plaster or wood, or you may just prefer to paste on a wallpaper border. Getting the proportions right for positioning the top of the dado can be difficult, but the best place to aim for is about a third of the way up the wall. Experiment by drawing chalk lines along the wall.

Make Your Stairway and Hallway Warm with the Right Color part 1

The first room that anyone will see when visiting you is the hall, so make it as inviting and welcoming as possible. Choose warm color for the décor and make sure the lighting is sufficiently bright and yet warm to enable your visitors to see everything well. There is nothing worse than arriving at a home on a dark and stormy night, to walk into a murky, gloomy entrance hall. Equally, if you have a porch or standing area outside the front door, make sure that this is well lit, too. Lights with infra red sensor are especially useful here as you can leave them turned on when you go out so that on your return they immediately light your way home.

Sadly, all too often the hallway is merely a narrow passageway with the staircase leading from it and it can be very difficult to make sense of the space. If you have a hall like this, one option you may want to consider before doing anything else, is knocking it through to another room to create a living room hall, or even a dining room hall. Rooms are becoming increasingly multi functional and if you look at your space laterally like this, you can often bring to mind some excellent solutions for making the most of what you have.

Make Your Stairway and Hallway Warm with the Right Color part 2

Halls, or even hall dining rooms, tend to be places where you pass through all too quickly, and so are good candidates for strong color or exciting decorations. Research by a paint company has shown that many people choose to decorate their hallway in shades of green a subconscious desire to bring the outdoors in, perhaps, if this is your natural remember that greens can be either warm shades, if there is a higher proportion of yellow in the mix, or cooler, if the blue element of green predominates.

When you are choosing your shade, experiment with tester pots first. The expanse of wall in a hall is usually so large by far the greatest surface area in this space and awkward to decorate, that it would be disastrous to find you have the wrong color when you have finished. Look at the color in natural and electric lighting, too. Depending on the sort of bulb that you use to light the hallway, the color will be greatly affected. A yellow tungsten bulb or the white of halogen lighting, for example, will dramatically change the overall affect in the evening.