When it comes to houses, bigger always seems better until it's time to decorate. Cavernous, high-ceilinged spaces can be daunting, and homeowners often are stumped when it comes to bringing a room down to more human proportions. Big Home, Big Challenge: Design Solutions for Larger Spaces (McGraw-Hill) by Kira Wilson Gould and Saxon Henry is a meaty reference for those who want to make a large home livable, as well as those wanting design tips for an average-size space. The authors spoke with industry experts to glean advice on a variety of topics, including landscaping, space planning, lighting, fabric, furniture, color, artwork and more. Throughout, highlighted text offers definitions, checklists and other pertinent, easy-to-read information. Also included are feng shui tips, as well as punch lists summarizing important points in each chapter. The book is packed with information and photographs that help the reader make bigger truly better. Phoenix Home / Garden 20040901 Home: Big or Small? SPECIAL EDITION By BARBARA MAYER For AP Special Edition Like Goldilocks, you may have trouble making yourself at home in places that seem too large or too small. But you're more likely to get advice on coping with too little rather than too much. Each January, House Beautiful magazine focuses on decorating small spaces. A lot of people don't live in 10,000-square-foot houses, and even those who do have large houses have small rooms to decorate, said Mark Mayfield, editor-in-chief of the magazine. New York City, a hotbed of stylish decorating, always has been a place of small rooms. And all over the country people are moving into downtown areas and smaller rooms as old buildings get turned into apartments, the editor said. The consensus is that it's easier to decorate a room that's a little too small than a room that's way too big, especially for the do-it-yourselfer. A small room is already intimate and the challenge is to make it feel a bit more spacious, while intimate is a real challenge for large rooms, said decorator Mariette Himes Gomez. The market is cooperating with those decorating smaller spaces. There is a trend away from over-large furniture, to pieces with smaller proportions. Now that eclectic mix-and-match interiors are popular and people buy one piece here and one there, manufacturers are offering plenty of pieces that stand on their own. There's also more furniture for multipurpose uses such as cocktail tables that can be raised to dining height. The rise of moderately priced fashionable merchandise in stores such as Target, Pottery Barn, Crate & Barrel and others is a godsend to those decorating small spaces on moderate budgets, said Mayfield. Yet statistics suggest that the typical new American house is getting bigger; so-called McMansions are famous for double-height foyers and living rooms and skating-rink sized kitchens. People are attracted to double-height rooms because it's like walking into a cathedral, said Kira Wilson Gould, author of Big Home, Big Challenge (McGraw Hill). Of course, she added, who wants to live in a cathedral? People soon discover they prefer to be cozy. Decorating a large space requires more furniture than most people are used to having, Gould said. For example, few would think of putting two sofas in a living room, but a really big room can take them and often needs them. Other decorating ploys include using several area rugs in different sizes to create various sections for different activities. Gould, who got the idea for her new book after furnishing a loft in Manhattan, turned her open plan loft living room measuring approximately 35 by 20 feet into a library, a television watching area and a separate seating area. She found it was good to have some large-scale pieces of furniture, such as an armoire or oversize bookcases. But a huge sofa can be a mistake if it's so deep that a short person sitting down finds his or her legs don't reach the floor. She advises looking at all that wall space as an opportunity to display large-scale art. It could be a single oversize canvas or a group of smaller art objects placed together. You can even display your collection of antique iron tractor seats, or whatever. To get ideas for handling big spaces, Gould suggests hanging out in hotel lobbies and visiting historic mansions open to the public. Even if these spaces are too formal and you wouldn't want to copy them exactly, you can learn from their approaches. Make a list of what activities you want to accomplish in a room, suggested Gould. Big rooms are made for multiple activities. Besides area rugs, you can delineate spaces by changing the floor level or a ceiling level, adding partial walls and architectural ornament such as moldings. Paint and wallpaper are less expensive ways to create the same kinds of changes visually. If you want to bring a room with tall ceilings down a bit, make the ceiling look lower by putting up a molding down a few feet from the top of the wall and painting the ceiling a different color from the walls. The bottom-line on too big or too small? With small rooms, use bigger furniture sparingly and allow the room to dictate what you do,Gomez said. With large rooms, you can't just sprinkle furniture all around. Start with a plan and create compartments that add up to a whole. Associated Press 20040209 Founding editor of To the Trade, a resource magazine for interior design professions, Gould here offers an overall planning guide on how to make large rooms more inviting and livable. She discusses the overall planning of new construction from how to work with architects and designers to landscaping, so that the proportions of the design elements will be right from the start, whether in an addition or a new construction. She then describes how to use color, floor coverings, wall coverings, furniture, and decorative accessories to make the space cozy, illustrating her points with color photographs. Advice from a number of interior designers and architects is included, along with sidebars on how to use feng shui. ...Recommended for libraries whose patrons are faced with the challenge of decorating McMansions. Library Journal 20040101 While the luxury of space to spare is a dream come true for many homeowners, big houses with soaring ceilings and fewer walls often produce unanticipated challenges. Helping homeowners to create spaces that are welcoming rather than overwhelming is the goal of Big Home, Big Challenge: Design Solutions for Larger Spaces, by Kira Wilson Gould with Saxon Henry (a frequent contributor to Distinction). You'll find advice on a variety of topics including architectural solutions, furniture, paint colors and wallpapers. With 200 photographs featuring the work of many of the country's top decorators and architects, Big Home, Big Challenge (McGraw-Hill, $29.95) offers a wealth of ideas for living large. Distinctions 20031201