Feng Shui Interior Style for Couples Bedroom Space
The following Interior post, have a title ‘Feng Shui Interior Style for Couples Bedroom Space’. We hope this information of home and decorating below, will have purpose that beneficial for all HomeZookers who want to know about recent interesting home trends, decoration, gardening, and design ideas topics. Feng shui, which literally translates to “wind and water” is the ancient Chinese art of placement. Try this feng shui principle in your bedroom to promote rest and relaxation.

Couples Space
Couples Bedroom Space, Create a Space for Couples.The symmetry of the bedside tables and lamps as well as the hints of red used on and around the bed roll out the symbolic welcome mat for romance in this room designed by Ann Wisniewski. One is indeed the loneliest number even when it comes to bedroom furnishings and decor. “Having only one nightstand or space on only one side of the bed to climb in and out is very symbolic of solitude, and can actually hold your single status in place,” says Terah. “Single people also tend to have accessories and art that depict solitude, [like] a single flower in a vase.”
Instead, if you’re single and don’t want to be, “decorate your bedroom as if a partner is already there,” Terah says. Symmetry is key, so position nightstands and lamps on both sides of the bed. Accessorize in pairs or multiples, too: Place a bunch of flowers in a vase and hang art depicting romance and unity, which feng shui gurus say creates a “couples’ energy” as well as a sense of balance and abundance in the room.
In the feng shui “map” of the bedroom, called the bagua, the far right corner is the “love center.” Whether you’re single or coupled, consider building a “shrine to love” in that spot. Accessorize a table, dresser or shelf with a photo of you and your mate (or other art that depicts a happy couple), a pair of candles, a book of romantic poetry and a heart-shaped box. “It becomes an environmental affirmation of your relationship goals,” Terah says. A thriving plant with rounded, not spiky, leaves is another nice addition. Silk plants or flowers are OK, according to feng shui practitioners, but never keep a sickly specimen or dried foliage here, since their symbolism is obvious.
Another feng shui no-no: king-sized beds. Not only do they create a physical chasm between you and your mate, but they “are split down the middle by two box springs, which creates a symbolic dividing line between partners that can affect their unity,” David Daniel Kennedy, a feng shui teacher and consultant in Berkeley, Calif., and author of Feng Shui for Dummies explains. If you’re not about to trade in your beloved California King, even for the sake of your other beloved, a red sheet placed over the box springs will help unify the two separate halves.
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November 26, 2009 | Posted by admin
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