Katxaxa
New Member
Thanks !
On a separate note, I'm incredibly tired of marketing plans shrinking living room and dining room furniture to basically half of its actual size. It's ridiculous, almost comical looking..
These ones aren't the worst I've seen. If you want to see straight-up criminally misleading furniture shrinkage, check out the marketing docs for the King Highline. When the sales rep showed them to me it took everything in me to not go full Zoolander on her and say "What is this, a bedroom for ants??"On a separate note, I'm incredibly tired of marketing plans shrinking living room and dining room furniture to basically half of its actual size. It's ridiculous, almost comical looking..
Oh my, you weren't kidding. The "queen bed" is basically the size of the tub..These ones aren't the worst I've seen. If you want to see straight-up criminally misleading furniture shrinkage, check out the marketing docs for the King Highline. When the sales rep showed them to me it took everything in me to not go full Zoolander on her and say "What is this, a bedroom for ants??"
I don't know... over 35 feet by almost 14 feet feels pretty big for a living room and dining room....On a separate note, I'm incredibly tired of marketing plans shrinking living room and dining room furniture to basically half of its actual size. It's ridiculous, almost comical looking..
Absolutely, it is bigger than typical. And the shrinkage isn't as substantial in this floor plan as it may be in others out there, but it's there. If you do the true test of taking multiple floor plans from different buildings, redrawing them in CAD per their noted dimensions and placing average sized furniture within (as I had to do back in thesis prep research), you'll see the unfortunate trend.I don't know... over 35 feet by almost 14 feet feels pretty big for a living room and dining room....
100%, totally agree with you on the overall trend, but I don't see that here for this 2,226 sq ft unit.Absolutely, it is bigger than typical. And the shrinkage isn't as substantial in this floor plan as it may be in others out there, but it's there. If you do the true test of taking multiple floor plans from different buildings, redrawing them in CAD per their noted dimensions and placing average sized furniture within (as I had to do back in thesis prep research), you'll see the unfortunate trend.
Taller tower at Daniels Waterfront looking like it's assimilating FCP ?