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25 Living Room Decorating Mistakes That Everyone Makes

The living room is the unsung hero of any given house. It is the central location for all the family members to get together and enjoy board and/or video games, a good television show or movie, or relax on the couch with a good book.

But some decorating mistakes will turn your living room into a cluttered, clunky nightmare. And, believe it or not, more people make these mistakes than you realize.

If you’re in the market for a renovation or a redecoration, don’t make one of the following 25 mistakes.

1. Buying Furniture Without Measuring the Room

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It happens: you see a couch, you fall in love, and you immediately swipe your credit card and get it delivered to your house. Then, the couch gets there, and it takes nothing short of a miracle and the strength of God to get it in the room, where it promptly overwhelms everything else.

Before you make that must-have purchase for your living room, measure the total square footage and make sure that what you want isn’t too big…or too small, for that matter.

2. Buying Area Rugs That Are Too Small

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If you have stone or wood floors, it may be tempting to buy a small area rug to add a bit of “decor” to the space.

But if the rug you get is too small, it will look awkward and out of place in the space. It will, in essence, be worthless.

3. Buying Area Rugs That Are Too Big

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Likewise, buying an area rug that’s too big will overwhelm the room and make it look messy.

A good rule of thumb is to get a rug that “touches” every piece of furniture in the room, so it can be tucked under it appropriately.

4. Not Enough Overhead Light or Lamps

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Living rooms don’t need as much lighting as other rooms in the house, but that doesn’t mean it needs to be darker than a cave.

Make sure you have sufficient overhead lighting, or lamps, to bring in sufficient light to the room.

5. Painting the Walls White

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There was a time in the not-too-distant past when shows on HGTV encouraged homeowners to paint every wall in their house white. Every shade of white, from eggshell to ecru, was encouraged.

Today, however, homeowners realize the importance of choosing colors that reflect their personalities. Unless you live in a hospital, do not paint the walls in your living room white.

6. Decorating Around Something You Can’t Stand

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Whether it’s a family heirloom, an old piece of furniture from your college years, or just something that doesn’t work anymore, there’s nothing worse than keeping something in your living room that you just can’t stand.

Don’t decorate around it — just throw it out or donate it to charity. Habitat for Humanity accepts furniture donations nationwide.

7. Not Enough Functional Storage

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The living room is the place where everyone congregates to relax, play, and watch television and movies. If you have young children, this also means that they’ll be bringing toys and games around…and not having enough functional storage, or no functional storage at all, will make the room look messy and cluttered.

Functional storage, such as this credenza, will go a long way in providing storage that keeps things tidy and pretty.

8. Too Many Tchotchkes

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Either you’re a tchotchke person, or you’re not. If you’re a tchotchke person, do not get every type of tchotchke and put it out on the tables, chairs, and every other surface. Not only will it make the room look cluttered and messy, but it will be impossible to dust and keep clean.

Five tchotchkes of your choice are more than sufficient in any given room.

9. Sacrificing Comfort for Style

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The point of a living room is to have a place where everyone can meet up, relax, and have fun.

As tempting as it may be to get a trendy, uncomfortable couch — or any other piece of furniture — don’t ever sacrifice comfort for style. You are not going to appear on the cover of Architectural Digest, and no one will judge you for securing a comfortable, affordable couch instead of a high-end piece of art.

10. Designing Around the TV

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As TVs get bigger and bigger, and cost less and less, it’s become tempting to make the television the focal point of the living room, and to choose every piece of furniture around it as though it’s a statue of a Catholic saint (or of Buddha, or Krishna, or Cthulhu, or the deity/demon of your choice).

However, the room will flow much better, and make more logistical sense, if the television is simply a functional part of the overall decor.

11. Hanging Artwork or Photos Too High on the Wall

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If you have to crane your neck up to see the artwork, or the photos, it’s too high on the wall.

Instead, hang the artwork, or the photos, at or slightly above eye level. This way, your eye will be naturally drawn to it, and it won’t overwhelm the room.

12. Having Too Many Photos All Around

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We’ve all been to Grandma’s house and seen all the old photos, in every type of frame, here there and everywhere. But hanging photo frames indiscriminately can make the area look cluttered and unorganized.

Instead, consider a photo wall, and make that your “accent wall.”

13. Choosing the Wrong Lampshade

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The last thing you want is for everyone’s attention to be drawn to a weird lampshade in the middle of an otherwise calm, functional living room.

Make sure to get a lampshade that matches the rest of your color and decor scheme.

14. Not Updating Your Crown Molding

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Crown molding can be difficult, if not impossible, to take down from your walls. It can therefore be tempting to leave it in place when you’re redecorating your living room.

But if your crown molding is damaged or extremely outdated, keeping it on your walls will make the room look damaged and outdated, no matter how modernized it becomes.

15. Cords Hanging Everywhere

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In today’s technologically advanced world, it’s all but inevitable that your living room wall will be awash with cords, cords, cords everywhere.

Avoid making your room look like your office space by investing in some cord covers that easily attach to walls, or the back of furniture, and blends in with the space.

16. Too Many Focal Points

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A shiplap wall. A photo wall. A wallpaper wall. A chalkboard wall.

Too many “different” walls will lead to too many focal points in the room. Pick one “special” wall and make that the focal point.

17. Matchy-Matchy Prints and Colors

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We understand that people have their preferred color palettes but making everything all one color — whatever that color may be — will make the room look like something out of a book. Literally.

Don’t be afraid to mix up colors and patterns, within reason, to give that room a fun and funky feel.

18. Clunky Furniture Everywhere

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Even if you have a living room with high ceilings and more square footage than a New York City studio apartment, hauling clunky furniture everywhere will make it look small and crowded.

Choose one big piece of furniture — for a living room, that furniture should be the couch — and keep the rest of the furniture small and complimentary.

19. Cheap Window Treatments

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You know those $29.99 curtains at Walmart that seem like a good bargain at the time? They’re not.

Not only will poorly made, cheap window treatments fall apart quickly (thus costing you more in the long run, as it will cost you to keep replacing them), but it will kill the vibe of the whole room. Instead, splurging on nice, semi-permanent window treatments will save you money in the long run.

20. Playing Too Much Into Modern Trends

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There was a time, not so long ago, when HGTV renovation shows featured open concept everything. It didn’t matter if the home could withstand the pressure of getting walls ripped down from stem to stern, or if it even made sense with the age and the vibe of the house — just open concept everything, it will be fine!

The reality is, everything was decidedly not fine. Playing too much into modern trends, especially if you have an older home, will force you to redecorate your living room in 5 years or less. Wouldn’t you rather save your money?

21. Making the Space Too Formal

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It cannot be stated enough: the living room is the place for everyone to relax, get together, and have fun.

Making the space too formal will take away from the fun, playful nature of a living room.

22. Too Many Colors and Patterns

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On the opposite end of the “matchy-matchy” spectrum are people that throw every color and pattern together, and hope for the best.

Let’s not do that, shall we? A good rule of thumb is, no more than two colors and patterns in a given room, and that includes the living room.

23. Too Many Wood Tones

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If you’re someone that likes the “wood” look — be it in the form of furniture, flooring, wall shiplap, or some combination of all of the above — it can be tempting to get wood tones in every shade and style.

That, however, will make your living room look messy and sloppily decorated. Choose one, or two, wood tones at most to give your room a warm, welcoming feeling.

24. Plastic Couch Covers

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This is not 1975, you are not staying at your grandmother’s house, and you don’t need those plastic couch covers. (Why. Just why.)

Today’s couches are made with easily washable fabric, so you don’t have to add this ugly, unnecessary addition to your living room. Your kids will thank you for it.

25. Doing It All in One day…or Trying To

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HGTV has brainwashed an entire generation of homeowners into believing that anything and everything can be done in the home in one hour or less. Therefore, it seems all but a given that one would think redecorating a living room would take a day…or less.

The reality is, redecorating a living room can take weeks, or even months, to finish. Be patient with yourself, and others, and trust the process.

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