Create a home theatre: some expert tips

August 28, 2015

Building a home theatre doesn't need to be a huge expense. In fact, almost any room can become a private cinema with just a few simple alterations. The key is knowing what makes for suitable room. Here are some expert tips you should consider when designing your home theatre.

Create a home theatre: some expert tips

Optimal sound

  • Sound is an important part of the cinematic experience.
  • You'll want it loud enough to create atmosphere but not so loud that it upsets your neighbours. For the best sound, choose a room with these four characteristics:

1. An Enclosed Space

  • Four walls and a door form the best home theatre room.
  • An enclosed room lets you nudge up the volume without disturbing others and limits the area that has to be filled with sound, so you'll get a more powerful effect from your system.
  • Positioning speakers is easier, too.

2. Rectangular shape

  • Shape influences how sound bounces around a room.
  • Perfectly square rooms or rooms that are twice as long as they are wide can create muddy sound patterns.
  • The perfect room is about 1½ times as long as it is wide, with the screen and front speakers placed against one of the short walls.

3. Enough space

  • You don't want a large screen in a small room.
  • In such a set up, if you sit too close to a large screen, you'll see the individual dots that make up the picture.
  • Ideally, the eye-to-screen distance is about three times the size of your screen (measured diagonally).

4. A centred seating area

  • You don't just need seating space; you need it in front of the screen.
  • An onscreen image is sharpest when viewed straight on.
  • The farther you move off centre, the dimmer it gets.
  • Most screens present a good picture within an arc of 60 to 90 degrees of their centre.

Furnish for sound and screen

  • When furnishing the room that will be your home theatre, keep lighting and sound in mind.
  • For a vibrant picture, you want very little light in the room.
  • For better acoustics, choose soft furnishings that absorb sound, not hard surfaces that reflect it.

Choose soft floor coverings

  • Wall-to-wall carpeting is ideal for a home theatre, but a large rug over wood or tile flooring is almost as good.
  • Decorate the walls with sound absorbers.
  • Heavy fabric wallpaper is an acoustical improvement over bare walls, and cloth wall hangings are even better.
  • A bookshelf against a wall is also an effective sound absorber.

Keep light to a minimum

  • Heavy curtains that completely cover windows are best (for both light and sound).
  • Window coverings that fit inside window openings, such as blinds or shutters, block light pretty well but sometimes allow shafts of light to pass around them.
  • Choose darker colours for your home theatre's walls, carpet, and other furnishing to subdue any light the does enter the room.

Don't let the light reflect

  • For picture clarity (and less eye strain), avoid reflective surfaces in the room, especially mirrors, picture glass, table tops or cabinet doors.
  • Even the sheen of your home theatre's paint can have a noticeable effect.
  • Choose a flat or semi-gloss paint instead of satin or gloss variety.

Remember these expert tips and you'll be able to transform a room in your house into a lovely home theatre.

The material on this website is provided for entertainment, informational and educational purposes only and should never act as a substitute to the advice of an applicable professional. Use of this website is subject to our terms of use and privacy policy.
Close menu