How To Bring creative ambiance to your home office - WellBeingGrow
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How To Bring creative ambiance to your home office

How To Bring creative ambiance to your home office

Hutomo Abrianto 580434 Unsplash

 

Stephanie Osfield / Words

Though we spend at least one-third of our lives working, we often pay little attention to the ambiance of our office space. This is particularly true of SoHos (Small office Home offices). Yet in your home office you expect to be productive, energised, creative and articulate. To help you reach those zones, a home office really needs some planning and personality.

Whether you telecommute a few days a week, would like to make over your SoHo or are planning to go freelance, it’s important to think about the features that every good home office space needs.

Consider design choices that help to:

  • Look after your body. That means choosing ergonomically sound furniture.
  • Stimulate creativity. Spice up your SoHo with visual touches such as polka-dotted chair upholstery, a colourful mouse mat, paisley or silk curtains or an eye-catching room divider behind your desk featuring tree or leaf silhouettes, geometric designs or Japanese cherry blossoms.
  • Calm yourself. Set up a decent sound system so you can play some classical music or natural forest sounds while you work. Burn some incense and put a forest scene on your screen saver. Add some found objects like seedpods and shells to bring more of the natural world inside.
  • Create several thinking spaces. Even if you have a poky little office you can usually squeeze another thinking space in a corner or against a wall. Add a futon chair, stack of large and small cushions, a feature armchair with a throw rug and scatter pillow or a small daybed or chaise lounge. Use this thinking area when you are stuck on a problem or need to come up with new ideas. Sometimes just moving away from your desk to a little office nook can get your creative juices flowing.

Create an office with atmosphere.

Choosing a basic decor style can help make your SoHo feel more welcoming and stimulating. You can carry this through with furniture and knick-knacks or by displaying a few well-chosen items.

Consider making your office:

  • Vintage
  • Tranquil with Zen undertones
  • Stylish 60s
  • Minimalist
  • Kitsch with fun 50s novelty items, comic book covers in frames and flying porcelain geese on the wall
  • Coastal with homage to the sea in shells, starfish and watercolours of seascapes or mermaids
  • Cottage or country
  • Crisp and contemporary
  • Monochrome — go for black and white with accents of red
  • Rustic
  • Artsy with Japanese woodblock prints or reproductions of Warhol, Van Gogh, Toulouse Lautrec or a mix of artists you like
  • Monocultural with feature objects from a culture you love, such as a beautiful tea set and hanging kimono from Japan or set of small glass vases from Egypt

Choosing your office colour palette

Just as ultraviolet light, which causes sunburn, can impact on your skin, all the colours of the spectrum emit different energy frequencies that alter everything from your brain activity to blood pressure. You don’t have to splash colour all over your SoHo; go for neutral tones and a feature wall in bolder or contrasting colour. Pick out a dominant colour in the upholstery of your work chair, a rug or feature picture in the room and make that shade the colour on a feature wall.

Different colours create different energy:

  • Red is very stimulating and energetic, but it can be overpowering so don’t overdo it.
  • Orange or terracotta is linked to emotions such as reassurance, constancy and warmth.
  • Green promotes a sense of balance, nature and stability. It’s also thought to aid digestion.
  • Blue can help stimulate intellectual thought and contemplation; it’s also soothing, serene and de-stressing.
  • Purple is linked to creativity and spirituality.
  • Yellow is cheerful and invigorating.
  • Black absorbs light but reflects nothing back, so it can be seen as quite “hard”. It’s also dramatic and classic, though, particularly if you jazz it up with some bright colours or metallic shades like silver, copper and gold.
  • White evokes purity, cleanliness, tranquillity, harmony and peace.

Take the floor

An attractive floor material creates the foundation for an appealing office. So consider a floor surface covered in: bamboo, matte wooden floorboards, whitewashed pine, feature rugs.

Leading light

Installing soft lampshades — even in a simple Japanese paper lantern style — can help to soften harsh overhead office lighting that can tire eyes that are often already strained by hours at a computer. A desk lamp that provides a soft but sufficient glow is a good addition to help you avoid harsh overhead lights on overcast days.  If your office doesn’t have a lot of natural light, consider putting in one or two small windows, which will also allow you a glimpse of trees or your garden or the world outside. A well-placed skylight can also change the whole feel of your workspace.

Desk details

When you’re choosing a desk, focus on function as well as form. That gorgeous old antique desk may have loads of character but it may do your back no favours. You might be better to choose an ergonomically designed desk made of recycled timber or a simple wooden desk that you make over with a rustic lime wash or appealing colour. Alternatively, you might want to invest in an adjustable stand-up desk so you can mix up standing and sitting while you work.

Meanwhile, make sure you:

  • Invest in a good-quality chair that has an adjustable seat pan, backrest and chair height. Resist the temptation to just use a dining chair at your desk or you will pay for it in the long run.
  • Find a nice wooden footstool and keep it under your desk to help keep your posture upright when doing computer work. Or put your feet flat on the ground under your desk — your knees should be level with your hips or a little lower.
  • Adjust your backrest to a slight tilt so it supports the inward curve of your lower back.
  • Install an anti-glare screen and ask your optometrist about anti-glare lenses for glasses.
  • Also clean your monitor regularly to reduce dust and smears and increase screen sharpness.

Featured frames

A feature wall showcasing different-sized coloured and “distressed” photo frames can create visual interest at little cost. Shop around for a range of frames to display:

  • A series of black-and-white or sepia versions of your favourite photos of family and friends. Change them from time to time.
  • Landscape shots taken from happy holidays or scenic walks, depicting everything from sunsets, seascapes and forest scenes to close-ups of moss on trees and flowers in your garden.
  • Beautiful cards. Pick them up in your travels — choose a mix including handmade and printed cards.
  • Postcards from art galleries. Frame them and enjoy an instant eye-catching collection of artworks and art styles you love.

Functional finishing touches

Forget old grey metal filing cabinets and plastic bins. Make your office an appealing space by choosing eye-catching office storage supplies and storage strategies such as:

  • Appealing boxes and folders. Look for office storage boxes, organisers and upright files in bright colours or pretty designs.
  • Go for colourful staples, tape dispensers, paper clips, penholders and display or storage folders.
  • Message boards. Blackboards with colourful chalk, whiteboards with colourful felt pens and corkboards with colourful drawing pins can be great for brainstorming ideas, listing important upcoming dates/events and displaying the month or day ahead.
  • Small baskets, pouches or mesh storage boxes fastened to the inside back of under-desk cupboards or walls to save space.

Contributor

author

Stephanie Osfield is an award-winning freelance health journalist. She is an advocate of nutritional medicine and specialises in all aspects of health, from exercise and disease prevention to stress, depression and women’s health issues.

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