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How well developed is what we call your 'aesthetic sense'? If you have a good aesthetic sense you don't need an interior decorator.
Feng shui is just what the chinese call aesthetics, though they throw in some mumbo jumbo, mind you so do some western decorators.
As a garden designer a lot of people used to tell me they didn't have a clue, but were perfectly capable inside. In actual fact the same basics apply.
What we call an aesthetic sense, I think is hard wired. It's what we are comfortable with and expect to see in the natural world. When things are 'out of kilter' it jars, disturbs, makes you nervous.
If you want to step outside the box with colour, look at what occurs naturally, the more unusual are to be found in rocks, leaves, shells and twilight.
In a forest you'll find one dominant tree, two or three understory trees, five or six bushes... when you get down to the floor you'll find that things get eclectic. You'll find rooms, different things growing in different locations. And you'll find transition, some things common perhaps to all locations. And you will always find paths, some places are best for sleeping, some for eating and some for drinking, (we're talking kangaroos, deer etc.) Getting between them quickly is as important for a kangaroo as a human.
So in your home you have one dominant style of furniture, especially in each room. On the mantlepiece you can have a more eclectic collection. Themes and repetition and transition are always good.
Simple is the word. Designing a garden I draw up paths following function from A to B and draw in the plants I want to use. Then I simplify both, then I simplify again.
NB. Modern landscaping takes that to an extreme They may only use three different species and plant them in blocks, I hate that, it works, (aesthetically) but it's just lazy and boring.
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