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Beatification Candidate |
Can you try centering the rug in the vertical orientation like the last pictures and then placing the piano angled so that your back would be to the bay? Use the carpet to determine how far back your bench could stay on the carpet and place the piano forward of that?
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Beatification Candidate |
Or perhaps the piano not on the carpet at all? Use the bay as much as possible and have the carpet horizontal as a statement closer to the entrance of the room?
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Minor Deity |
I like this arrangement because you'll have less dead space in the room. One possible drawback is if the curtain pulls are on the right, you'll have to contend with the narrow end of the piano. I'm assuming there's enough room on the left to walk past the piano? Other drawback is the lines of the rug unless you can turn the rug on an angle. But I also like Jodi's arrangement. I think it will make the room look less crowded. Big problem with chairs at the narrow end of grands in small rooms: If you're seated there you're lower than the top of the piano lid so you can't see anything past the piano, least of all the piano player. Also, it tends to be dark. Might be a good place for a desk, though.
Don't put it in the living room.
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(self-titled) semi-posting lurker Minor Deity |
I think if we put the carpet vertical, it will stick out in the doorway opening, which might look weird and possibly be a tripping hazard. Maybe not, but it's kind of hard to tell. I need to go back and measure because the left hand wall is over 11', whereas the bottom wall is 7'3", and the carpet it 8' wide... If having the carpet at the "top" of the room means we can keep the bottom left corner of the carpet out of the doorway, it could work... OTOH, having the carpet horizontal at the top of the room will probably be the best for utilizing the room, having chairs there etc. And if my measurements are right (they might not be!) even with the carpet placed horizontally, I can probably still get the piano on the carpet at an angle, with the bench on the carpet. I think...
Won't that be bad acoustically? This room is going to be pretty live, I expect.
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(self-titled) semi-posting lurker Minor Deity |
This is the direction I'm going right now. If it's just awful having the piano in the dining room, then I could pay to have it moved again...
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Won't the sound of the piano travel through the open doorway into the living room? Clearly, it won't be as loud as if it were in the living room, but would Mr SK be able to watch TV while you're playing? I'm tellin' ya...the lower level is the answer to all your problems...
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(self-titled) semi-posting lurker Minor Deity |
It's not so much the sound issue. Mr SK rarely watches TV by himself. It's more that he wants to relax on the sofa, usually he's reading or something. And I want to practice the piano without him in the same room. And these things tend to happen at the same time. In our old house, we had a family room and a piano room. The doorway into the family room didn't have a door, so obviously the piano sound was quite loud, but it worked fine. Somehow he's put up with the sound of my piano practice for 25 years now. But this last year, I've found it very hard to concentrate while practicing with my piano in our living room. I'm probably still self-conscious -- even though he can hear me if he's in the next room, I don't focus on it. But it's been hard when he's right next to me. But I don’t want to tell him not to come into the living room while I’m practicing. That's why I want a dedicated piano room.
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(self-titled) semi-posting lurker Minor Deity |
And the finished room on the lower level will be his studio. If we had the living room for entertaining, the dining room for dining, guest room #1 for my home office, guest room #2 for guests, and the lower level for my piano, he wouldn't have his own space at all!
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
I was thinking about his studio being in the unfinished space in the basement, but that's where the exercise equipment is going. My mistake. Clearly you need to build an addition! With that nice big lot it shouldn't be any problem at all..
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(self-titled) semi-posting lurker Minor Deity |
Now you're talking! We'll get right on that!
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Beatification Candidate |
BBe aware that an unducted hood will not eliminate humidity. It filters the air so it can trap some grease in the filter and, if it's a charcoal filter, also intercept some odor, but the air with its added humidity is simply recycled into the room. Big Al
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Your own practice room. Of course you should have your own practice room. Bob wants me to have a practice room, so long as it is in another state. He did not say that, but...
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(self-titled) semi-posting lurker Minor Deity |
Big Al, thanks for that! I'll take a look when we're there next.
Yes!
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Yes. This was why I asked if SK knows if the OTR microwave/hood in her kitchen is ducted. They often aren't. I should have mentioned why I was asking. Thanks for filling in the blanks....
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knitterati Beatification Candidate |
But what if the dining room was a cozy den for relaxing? TV could be in there, too. That’s how we’re set up; piano is in the living room. Although I don’t play it much, but that’s where I run through choir pieces. I used to have piano soirees in the living room/dining room. (We have another room for the den.)
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