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Does Each Wall Need a Picture Hanging on It?

The key to any successful interior design is balance. That means when it comes to hanging pictures, no, you don’t need to fill every wall space with pictures. Empty wall space can be used as a crucial design element to enhance your décor.

Decorating Walls With Pictures

There are very few instances when you need to place a picture on every wall in your home. The art of deciding what should go on the wall involves considering other décor elements.

Furnishings and Pictures

The pictures you add should blend in as though they’ve always been there. Furniture pieces create natural breaks in a wall and present empty wall spaces that may be ideal for pictures. Examine the shapes and patterns the furnishings create around the empty wall space. Decide whether the space should be filled or if it would be better left empty.

Examples of furnishings breaking up wall space include:

Adjacent Walls

Consider the furniture and any architectural features on adjacent walls and how these break up wall space. Often, you’ll want to skip adding a picture on the adjacent walls.

For example, you may decide:

Window and Door Walls

Window and door walls can offer interesting picture opportunities.

Room by Room Guide

Before you start hanging pictures, consider the room layout. You will see all kinds of wall space left exposed. Architectural features can limit or present opportunities for decorating with pictures.

Foyers and Back Entrances

Most foyers feature some type of furniture. Unless you have an unusually large foyer, one wall may accommodate a console table, mirror, table lamp or wall sconces and perhaps a chair. Try hanging a picture on one of the walls but not all of them.

An irregular wall that is short and created to accommodate a coat closet and is perpendicular to a longer wall can be used to add design interest. This design is a great way to add interest by mixing shapes on a short wall space to give contrast to the oversized picture on the adjacent wall.

Staircases

A staircase presents opportunities for pictures. These include:

Living Rooms

A living room often features a TV, perhaps an entertainment unit, a couch or sectional, a recliner or two, end tables, lamps and other furnishings. Once you have these pieces placed in your room, stand back and try to see only the empty wall space. This is now your canvas to work with.

If your TV rests on a stand or is wall-mounted with wall space around it, you may want to add a few pictures. To add pictures, treat the TV shape as you would any other picture and design around it.

A fireplace is such a focal point that many people decorate the mantel and space above the mantel with pictures. Depending on the fireplace style, you could have several types of picture arrangements. For example, add pictures on the wall above the mantel. Floor to ceiling fireplaces that have wall space on either side are excellent areas for displaying pictures.

If you have a sectional, break up the long look of a sectional with pictures on the wall space above or use round, square, and rectangle pictures to create a gallery wall above the long part of the sectional. Do not hang pictures on the adjacent wall, especially if the wall is broken up with tall lamps or plants.

A couch creates a linear effect that defines the available wall space above it.

Dining Room

The dining room offers several possibilities for placing pictures. Keep in mind the furniture on each wall and the wall space surrounding each piece defining the available space.

Kitchen and Breakfast Nook

Kitchen walls are typically covered with cabinets and pantry doors. The key to adding pictures here is choosing appropriate picture sizes for exposed wall space.

Hallway

Hallways are often neglected with bare walls or over-used with too many pictures. Finding a balance is key to the successful use of pictures in this area.

Bedrooms

The two most common places for pictures in a bedroom are above the headboard and night stands.

Bathrooms

Some bathrooms offer very little wall space while large ones may have more bare wall space.

Accent Walls

An accent wall can often become overpowering, especially if it has a decided pattern. For example, if an accent wall features different colored rectangle tiles, you can repeat the rectangle shape with a pair of stacked pictures on an adjacent wall. Don’t overdo it since your focal point is the accent wall.

Wall Decorating Is an Artform

If you love symmetry, then you will strive for a balanced look with your picture placements. If you prefer a more carefree look, then you may decide that an asymmetrical placement of pictures is just fine. Ultimately, you must decide what you like looking at and how you want the wall space filled in your rooms.

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