Coronavirus Changed the Way We Live
Homebuyers Seek Luxury Living for Mental Health

Perhaps you love staying home because your home provides shelter, serenity, and seclusion. On the other hand, you may hate your cramped, unpleasant, and messy house. Whatever your situation, you can make changes to improve your day to day living.

Comfort features folks seek today are changing our housing desires. Instead of all open spaces, many homebuyers pursue privacy walls, home offices, and nooks to meditate or read. Garden space and land to roam the great outdoors became a housing premium. More substantial homes offer space for families to live together harmoniously.

Living in luxury means living a life conducive to comfort and pleasure without the extra stressors of hunger, physical discomfort, and worry about meeting your basic needs. You don’t need to be extravagant to live a luxurious life. Forget wasting money on expensive clothes, jewelry, restaurants, cars, trips, yachts, and mansions. Create a beautiful home for serenity, comfort, and ease. 

Luxury Dream Home Venues
This San Diego home for sale offers unique spaces scaled for comfort instead of prestige. Upscale lighting adds touches of glamour.

 

Start with these 10 Luxurious Living Details

  1. Add multiple layers of lighting. 
  2. Use dimmers everywhere.
  3. Add thick moldings. Out of date! NO MOLDING!
  4. Forget the pillows! Reduce messy clutter. 
  5. Provide a few warm, soft throws. Even in summer, some like to snuggle in air-conditioned rooms.
  6. Invest in seasonal window coverings, not the hardware. Use silk or soft, light fabric during hot weather and velvet, heavy fabric during cold weather.
  7. Hang one large artwork instead of many little framed pictures and paintings that clutter the space. A statement piece doesn’t need to cost a lot.
  8. Forget matching furniture and go for eclectic mix and match. 
  9. Layer textures! Touch is key. You don’t have to feel silk or fur to feel the emotional softness and richness. Mix wool, linen, silk, leather, and metallics for contrast to add interest.
  10. Go big on area rugs! Too many small area rugs, like small pieces of artwork on walls, visually clutter the space and look cheap.