I want my house to feel like a giant fluffy blanket that just hugs me and keeps me cozy, and I think it’s safe to say most people want that. As much as we all love being outside and having active lifestyles, when you come home, you want to feel relaxed, safe, and comfortable. ‘Cozy’ isn’t something you buy. It’s a feeling, and it means different things for different people.
I’m not saying you can’t go on Pinterest to look for inspiration, but my point is that creating that feeling of ‘Ooh, I feel so great here’ doesn’t necessarily mean you can buy specific items, and you’ll have it. As a matter of fact, I think buying a bunch of stuff is a waste of time and money if all you’re going for is creating a cozy atmosphere.
So let me show you how to work with what you already have.
What Makes a Home Cozy and How to Get There With the Stuff You Have
If some of your rooms feel off, you don’t need to go out and buy more stuff. What you need is more warmth, and you can get that with what you already have.
Rearrange, Don’t Replace
I’ve noticed that most living rooms have every piece of furniture shoved flat against the walls. Not only is that not creative, but it also makes your living room feel like a waiting room at a doctor’s office. The issue isn’t with your couch or your lamp, but with the way you’ve positioned your pieces.
I’d suggest pulling the seats closer together (just a foot or 2, not too much), and you’ll see how much more natural conversations will feel. If you have armchairs, angle them a bit to make the room feel more casual and inviting. And definitely use a rug to define the seating area. Even an older, slightly worn rug will do, and it’ll look much better than a blank floor.
Add Meaning, Not More Stuff
You could have the most perfectly decorated room in the world, but it’ll still feel hollow and blah if there’s nothing personal there you can connect with. The perfect example of this is a hotel lobby and your friend’s kitchen. The fancy hotel lobby looks nicer, right? But still (for whatever reason) you feel better sitting in your friend’s kitchen.
When it comes to meaning, it can be a lot of things: a drawing your kid made, a weird souvenir that cracks you up every time you see it, personalized wall art, the plant you bought when you first moved out of your parents’ house, etc.
Use Soft Textures You Already Own
Softness is SO powerful, and many people aren’t aware of it. If you have a room that only has hard surfaces in it (like wood floors, glass tables, metal lamps, etc.), there’s nothing cozy in it. Sure, it could be a good office, but not a place where you want to lounge and relax. So, add something soft anywhere that you can see it.
I don’t mean you need to go out and buy new cushions, though; the throw blanket you’ve folded on the back of the couch will do. Instead of it being neatly put away, drape it over the arm and stack the pillows you have on one chair instead of having them all spread on several seats.
The trick here is layering. One blanket feels almost messy, but if you overlap two on the same chair? Now, that’s intentional. If you don’t have as many blankets, even a scarf will do.
Fix Your Lighting
Lighting can make your living room feel cozy or like a dentist’s office; it has a huge effect on the atmosphere. If you have harsh overhead lights, then you’re trying to relax in a dentist’s office, so fix that. Don’t buy new lamps, just look around your house for some other (smaller) sources of light, or swap out the bulbs for warm white ones.
Candles are an ideal addition to any atmosphere, but you can also place a simple desk lamp on a low shelf to get that warm light. For the most part, overhead fixtures are a no-no. They’re functional, sure, but they don’t exactly create that cozy feel you’re after.
Make Everyday Items Part of Decor
Are you still hiding things you use every day because they’re not ‘aesthetic’? Well, don’t.
I see so many people hiding their coffee mugs in cabinets and stacking books on hidden shelves, and it’s such a waste to tuck away every sign of daily life. Your house should feel lived in; there’s no coziness without it. Why not try the opposite?
Put 3 mismatched mugs on a tray and leave them on the counter. If you’re currently reading books, stack them on the coffee table and let them be. None of this is messy; it’s how you make a space feel yours.
Conclusion
See? I told you you won’t have to spend a cent to make your home cozier and more comfortable.
Coziness has nothing to do with what you buy and everything to do with how you use your space. You already have everything you could possibly need; you just need to use it in new ways.
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