Sabtu, 26 Oktober 2013

What is the escape game when you start out in a room with a chair and takes forever to solve?

Q. I remember playing it years ago...you start in a room with a locked door and a chair, maybe a lamp. Later on in the game, you end up having to align something near or on a staircase, and something about colored wheels, and also this strange pattern on a computer screen. I know, this is really vague and not helpful but PLEASE help me find this! I think it's one word, probably has a long name that's Japanese or something. it has fairly good graphics.

A. Myst? just a guess


What to do with a really long living room?
Q. OK this is hard to describe, but let's just say that it's 30 by 13 and the picture window ends up right opposite the entry way from the kitchen- so that the couch can't be placed there...
It's like, OK, here's the door that we don't use... here's the only place for the TV, right across from te long couch, and the recliner ends up on the same wall.
Yikes!
I hate this house.

A. I can't really picture the room and it wouldn't help you anyway.

What you usually do with long narrow rooms is break up the space and use it for different things.

With a room that narrow, bring the furniture away from the walls to make what is called a conversational cluster around the TV with seating. Put the sofa at a 45 deg angle from any wall, facing the TV then put a tall table behind it...then allow a way into the seating group with a shorter piece to finish out the V. Does this make sense?

Then use other pieces, totally outside that grouping to make other arrangements. You might have 2 chairs with a table in between right in front of the pic window, if it offers a nice view.

These might be little isolated groupings, and against the walls but NOT in a row...kind of stagger anything like this, one across and down from the other, or whatever. You don't want to line them up trailer house style (with everything on one side and a passageway to everything on the other side).

You might place a bookshelf and one chair and table, make it a cozy reading area.

You might define a corner as a toy area.

You can use the area closest to the door as a launching pad...with a storage bench to hold mittens, backpacks, etc, sit down to put on and remove shoes, and a coat tree and a mirror for out the door. You do say you don't use this door, my question would be why not? This might enable you to MAKE use of the door, bring traffic into that space, and make it more user friendly.

You might have a small writing desk or a computer station.

You might be able to put a dinette set in there. Make the length of the table follow the length of the room so it doesn't obstruct traffic.

An alternative, might be able to put a card table in somewhere, with folding chairs and slipcovers to make it look nice...and set up a checker or chess board, etc. Keep a small shelf or cabinet nearby to keep games in. Make sure there is adequate lighting. Put the table at an angle for visual interest.

Use floor coverings to define spaces too. You can hold any of these arrangements together by using area rugs. And each area can have a slightly different color scheme than the others. You can also play with the color scheme in each area to define different spaces. If you have four colors through the whole space, use a different dominant color in each area, and round out with the other three to keep the space cohesive but slightly different.

Boy I hope I am making sense.

Do keep traffic patterns clean so you don't have to squiggle through the room to get from one end to the other. You don't want a completely straight line but you don't want an obstacle course either. Just a gentle, natural walkway.





Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar