Walk into a room and something feels off. Not messy, not dirty, but somehow overwhelming. The surfaces may be clean, the floor visible, and yet the space feels crowded. The truth is, most homes donโt suffer from too much stuff. They suffer from one quiet, common mistake: poor visual grouping.
Interior designers often point out that clutter is not just about quantity. Itโs about how the eye reads a space. As designer William Morris once said, โHave nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful.โ But even beautiful things, when scattered without intention, can turn against a room.