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Starting with the basic furniture, set decorators then add "layers" of dressing. Half-read newspapers, stacks of mail, pet leashes, half-burned candles, a knitting basket, remotes and phones, well-scrunched cushions, a full wastebasket, even a plant with leaves on the floor. Juliann Getman, who designs sets for NBC's "Parenthood," thinks about her own home. "Not everything's in its place. Laundry might be folded but on the sofa because I got distracted by a phone call." This nuanced approach makes it easier for viewers to imagine lives in progress. Characters' social or economic status can also be telegraphed through the quality of furniture, accessories and art. Bright, clean rooms say one thing, while a timeworn or messy space says something else. Richarz recalls working on the "Three's Company" set: "Three single people living in a rental in Santa Monica. The mismatched pieces conveyed the idea of roommates without much money, throwing together stuff they'd found to fill the space. Wicker was inexpensive back in the early `70s so there were several pieces of that. The dishes were brightly colored plastic
-- certainly not mother's china." In "All in the Family," Richarz notes, "we know before we see any characters that this is a working-class, traditional family." The furniture and decor are from a different era, the walls dingy. The furniture is worn, the art is traditional. "Things have been added over the years, but nothing has been taken away. It looks real," she says. Beth Kushnik, set decorator on CBS' "The Good Wife," notes that while the main character's world was downsized after a divorce, "she still had a comfortable degree of wealth. Her apartment was created as if she'd hired a decorator to give her and her two teenagers a relaxed haven. I used lush fabrics, silk lamp shades and beautiful linens." Kushnik started a blog called "The Good Look of the Good Wife" on CBS.com, in part because she was getting so many questions from viewers about the sets. She shares the provenance of room details, including paint colors and furniture sources.
[Associated
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