Begin by building a 2 x 2 room where the platform will be, add some flooring to the top. If you have ever built a house in sims 3, then it is probably a certainty that you would have used stairs at some point.
At this point, you can stay in the house and continue playing, add a new roommate or start a new household. I'm always adding to the list as i find new mods and removing the ones that don't work out for me, so check back frequently for updates.
Pin by Dairys White on Bloxburg house ideas in Home from i. Sims 2 House Building Tutorial. Posting Komentar. Senin, 10 Januari Kirimkan Ini lewat Email BlogThis! Berbagi ke Twitter Berbagi ke Facebook. Langganan: Posting Komentar Atom. Avoid placing rooms that can only be accessed by going outside and then back in again - this sort of design is rare in real homes, and especially in TS2 with Seasons, can result in a lot of silly clothes-changing during the winter.
Hallways between rooms should almost always be at least 2 tiles wide. Sims are notoriously bad about navigation and get stuck easily, especially if there are other sims or pets in the home. But, of course, it's a hallway, not a bowling alley - 2 tiles for a regular hallway and 3 for a large artery through the home is plenty.
You don't need a 6 tile wide hallway - even in a huge mansion. Placing furniture in a way that makes sense, is aesthetically pleasing, and playable, makes for a much better house than just plonking things down haphazardly. For most rooms, you want a mixture of furniture both up against the wall, and in the center of the room. Don't just shove everything up against the walls - but you also don't want everything floating on a furniture island in the middle of the room, either.
Walkways between pieces of furniture should only be about 1 to 2 tiles - you don't need six tiles between the couch and the tv. Likewise, your bookcases shouldn't be miles away from your nearest chair. If you're having to space things out too far to fill up the room, your room's too big - scale it down.
If you are iffy on something, go ask your mom if you can have one for real in your house. There are plenty of ways of doing decorating well, and there are just as many ways of doing it wrong.
Below are a few standard "right" ways that you can use until you feel comfortable branching out into more difficult color schemes. You can vary the exact walls used in particular rooms - for example, use one with baseboards and crown moldings in the living room, bedrooms, and hallways, one with a chair rail in the dining room, and one with beadboard in the bathroom.
Kitchens and bathrooms as well as porches should be tile, stone, or wood floors. Other areas can be wood or carpet. Bedrooms should usually be carpeted, or at least include rugs around the bed. For a very basic colour scheme, stick with neutral, lighter colours. Pale yellows, greens, whites, beiges, and light wood are easy to do and hard to mess up too badly, and usually fit most peoples' tastes.
It may be a bit dull, but it also won't be too garish, either. If you want to do something a bit more interesting with your colour scheme, make sure not to overdo it. One red wall and red cushions on the couch in an otherwise black and white room has a lot more interesting visual impact than everything cherry red. Likewise, if you want to do dark gothic, making everything black just makes your rooms look like shadowy blobs - shades of grey, brown, blue, even purple in varying lights and darks can create a similar effect without looking like a black hole from which no light escapes.
Monochromatic colour schemes can look nice and neutral - big word, but it means "one colour. Don't use too much colour - you don't want absolutely everything in the room to be green, but the actual colours you use apart from neutrals such as white and black and your wood colours can all be shades of the same colour for a nice effect.
You can also try using only warm colours red, orange, yellow, cream or only cool colours green, blue, purple, white.
If you're feeling adventurous, you can use complimentary colours - that is, red with green, blue with orange, or purple with yellow. Just don't do too highly bright or saturated versions of these or you'll end up with an eyesore. Another option is the popular "modern" colour scheme: white, black, and grey again, monochrome but sometimes punctuated with another colour. Try to have the style of your interior furnishings match the overall style of your house. A quaint Victorian shell would look very odd with ultra-modern interior furnishings, just as a sleek modern home would look strange with medieval type furnishings.
Using the wall tool, outline the physical shape of the house, leaving any decks and porches you want outside of the walls note that having a foundation requires steps to get into the house, so leave a small porch for the front door and any other doors!
Create rooms by adding walls inside the house. Using diagonal walls makes for an aesthetic structure, but remember most items cannot be places on a diagonal wall. Add windows and doors. Windows add "environment" to a Sim's mood. Make sure that you have a door to each room, as you can also use arcs in living rooms and kitchens.
Style your house with glass doors on study rooms or offices. Add paint to the walls and flooring. Try to choose colors that would match in real life, such as brown tile in the kitchen, wood deck outside, tan carpet in the living room, or just go wild and mix everything in one room!
Add furniture. Put couches, TVs, bookcases, or arcade machines in the living room, add a trash can, an oven, a fridge, counter tops, and a telephone in the kitchen, and put toilets, sinks, and showers in the bathroom.
Add a staircase if you want a second story. There are two ways to do this: you can use the full staircase tool to place a staircase, or you can use the mini staircase tool. To use that, go up a level and place floor squares where you want the staircase to reach on the second floor, and then go to the staircase tool, choose the type of stair you want to use, and place your cursor over the landing.
This will not work if there is not enough room to construct the staircase. Place the exterior walls for the second floor. Second floors can by dynamic, since you don't need them to match the first floor. You can also place decks on the second floor. Place the interior walls on the second floor, creating the rooms you wish to have. You will need to place floors in all of these rooms as well. You can place a simple wooden floor in the rooms you wish to have, then edit them later. Use the roof tool to create the style roof you'd like.
You can use the auto roof maker, or you can go in and customize your roof with different shape. You can always go back and change the color and shape later.
Create an outside environment. Lay out some tile or gravel, put out some nice chairs, buy some exercise equipment, and set up a garden or some trees. You may even want to build a greenhouse. If you have Seasons If so, build a room and put some gardens in there and maybe fruit trees.
Use the fence tool to create fences. Place barriers where necessary for decks and porches. You should also use the step tool to place staircases where they are needed. Dress up a garden using the flowerbed fencing. Get lights set up. Be creative with the lights considering what you want the theme of the room to be.
And stop with the boring ceiling lights. Deletion discussions Development discussions Admin discussions Admin's noticeboard. Explore Wikis Community Central. Register Don't have an account? Edit source History Talk Do you like this video? Play Sound. Cancel Save.
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