Key points
- Screw the TV with design tricks – such as gallery walls, bold wallpapers or screens inspired art.
- Choose smaller TVs or elegant models such as mixing frames when not being used.
- If he hides, he feels forcibly, hugging a hug and balance him the decor around her.
A lot of things stand out in every beautiful interior design photo: a well-shaped room, beautiful furniture and cohesive color palette. But if you move through the living room, living room and even photos of the bedroom, you can notice a common thing that is missing: television.
This is not because no one has TVs these days – although Monica Nessbach, the founder and the main designer of the designer’s interior, says that is part of it.
“Many our clients don’t want to see this great black rectangle in their walls.” She says. “Even our multifistence clients decide that TVs are entirely left in the unit models and use art instead.”
If you leave the TV in the name of the art sounds impossible, we understand. Instead, we set up several our favorite experts to share their advice for better mixing our TVs to the room to avoid the overall scy.
Think about function first
Amy Courtney Design
If you don’t want to eject television, then Lauren Sullivan From a good X design gave us some great warning words. As you are looking for a solution, mandatory priority determine the function – differently, you may not have a TV.
“When he disguises any TV, the functionality is crucial,” she says. “Doesn’t make such a good job hiding the TV to get awkwardly just to watch it.”
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Turn on the TV in the wall gallery
The wall mounting of the TV among the beautiful gallery wall is one of the amazing option, Nessbach says. This works especially good if the black is the current shade in your space.
“Imagine your TV surrounded by framed art pieces with black frames,” she says. “By playing with different sizes of rectangles, both large and small, it will look like a deliberate piece within a framed artwork, especially when it is included.”
It also works well even if it is black your favorite color. Many TVs these days are characterized by screens in inspired art when not used, and Nessbach has given us advice to record new wall functions one step further.
“Lift the TV from the gadget into a gallery worthy with a deceptive formation,” she says. “This technique does not add only elegance, but blurs the line between technology and art.”
Adjust it to a beautiful background
Nessbach says that you can accept the innate brightness of your television by pairing with something equally as dramatic-similar to attractive backgrounds.
“Is that a lush botanical print or a striking geometric pattern, your TV will sit in the middle of the background that requires attention for all the correct reasons,” she says.
Consider a smaller TV
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Laura Chappetto Flynn, owner and leadership of the design network elements, says that it has extensive experience in the home at home is not necessarily, especially if you want television to be easily sheltered. With increasingly unobstructed in galleries walls, Flynn says there is more furniture options for smaller televisions.
For smaller television, it can be as simple as the surrounding TV with visually attractive pieces that will draw around. “If you like the giant TV, the chances of not hiding that baby in the closet,” she says. “Be sure that the TV has some other interesting items around it to be burdened.”
Buy a beautiful technique
Design: Well, design / Photo: Caroline Sharfnack
Television manufacturers in recent years have realized that consumers want more beautifully designed television. One excellent option is a TV with a reflective screen.
“Mirrored TV screens cannot be intertiously mixed into your decor, making your TV disappear into the surrounding ambience until it is time to use,” Nessbach says.
Flynn agrees, saying that only Samsung’s frame of the TV for a similar reason. When not in use, the screen returns to the artwork. In addition, this line also contains framing options and a whole gallery of potential images to work with any aesthetics.
“It really makes a real difference in the room where you may not want the big black rectangle to be the focus of your room,” she says.
Invest in a customary solution
If you build a new home or create a customized entertainment center, your options are almost endless. According to Nessbach, one of her favorite ways to conceal television is mounting on the sliding slab door.
“It’s a smart solution that allows you to save it when you’re not used until you average flar when showtime,” she says. “It’s like big disclosures on the design runway.”
Hug
Design: Network design elements / PHOTO: Erin Kongra
Your home is not a perfectly stylized camera for interior design. Flynn says that if you try too hard to find the perfect solution, you can finish more harm than good.
“I’ve seen hiding a TV that just made a whole room for help,” he says, notice, remarked a specific instance of hiding television behind the large floors that looked worse than the TV itself.
“I think sometimes people try too hard to hide something that is obvious there,” says Flynn. “If you have TV, sometimes it’s okay just to have a TV.”