Live With It First
Most people make decisions about their homes too quickly. They buy, place, adjust, and finalize in one continuous motion, as if the room needs to prove itself immediately. It’s efficient. It’s decisive. And it almost always leads to something that looks right but feels thin. A room needs time. Not passive time. Lived time. You don’t understand a space the day you set it up. You understand it after mornings, after late nights, after distractions, after silence. You understand it when you stop looking at it as a project and start moving through it without thinking. That’s when the room starts telling you what works and what doesn’t. Living with something before you decide is not hesitation. It’s a method. You bring a chair into a room and place it where it seems obvious. It fills the gap. It balances the layout. It photographs well. But then you live with it. You walk past it ten times a day. You sit in it once. You notice that it blocks a line of movement, or that it never quite feels l...