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      • Instead of hiding your TV behind a panel, you can instead choose to pop your TV on top of a panel. By using something like a stunning piece of wood that's just slightly larger than the television, the background can catch your eye and help to visually anchor the TV to the wall.
      www.housedigest.com/927323/brilliant-ways-to-hide-your-tv-like-a-professional-designer/
  1. Sep 25, 2024 · Check out these 23 clever ways to hide your TV, according to designers. Enjoy a serene, screen-free environment with easy access to your streaming services.

    • Hide It Behind a Painting. “I think of a TV as an appliance, something to be put away when not in use. In this room, I hid the TV behind a painting. With a touch of a switch, the painting slides up, revealing the TV.”—
    • Install a Motorized Lift. “To hide the TV in this living room, I installed a motorized lift over the fireplace and covered the flat screen with a beautiful Milton Avery painting.
    • Camouflage It. “One way to hide a television is by camouflaging it with a piece of soothing art, operated by a lift to make it accessible. This Japanese screen creates a calming presence within the room.”
    • Use a Grouping of Prints. “I love how these eight framed antique portraits of birds in various positions over the TV create a piece of art on top of this fireplace.”
    • Lift hidden in millwork. Whether or not to have a TV in the bedroom has been a hot debate on Houzz. This solution is a good compromise. “The 49-inch TV and TV lift are hidden behind the panels under the window bay,” says architect Douglas VanderHorn.
    • Lift hidden in a kitchen island. “Clients struggle over where to put a TV in their kitchen. Most do not want to see it but admit they would use it all the time if it were there,” says Sven Gustafson, founder of boutique building firm Stonewood.
    • Sliding cover. In this kitchen, a shiplap panel slides across to cover the TV when it’s not in use. “I wish I could take credit for this, but the homeowner wanted to have a TV near the kitchen but did not want to see it,” says designer Linda Cloutier.
    • Sliding art panel. This living room design employs a similar solution on a larger scale. A large panel slides across a track over the TV to hide it. Art is mounted on the panel so it’s not just an expanse of white.
    • Design a Custom Cabinet. Ashley Hanley, founder and interior designer at Ashley Hanley, explains that her clients wanted their living room to function both as a space for more formal get-togethers as well as a spot to relax in front of the TV.
    • Cover a TV With a Custom Panel Screen. Chad Graci, an interior designer and founder of Graci Interiors, also chose to incorporate a TV into a formal living room, opting for a custom panel screen with art hanging over it to hide the screen.
    • Hang a Quilt Over the Television. Take a cue from Melissa Benham, the founder of Studio Gild, and hang a quilt overtop the TV to keep it concealed when not in use.
    • Conceal Your TV Using Curtains. Content creator Brigette Muller installed striped curtains on a small rod to hide her television so that she doesn't have to view the screen when it isn't in use.
  2. Jul 14, 2022 · Instead of hiding your TV behind a panel, you can instead choose to pop your TV on top of a panel. By using something like a stunning piece of wood that's just slightly larger than the television, the background can catch your eye and help to visually anchor the TV to the wall.

    • Should you hide your TV behind a panel?1
    • Should you hide your TV behind a panel?2
    • Should you hide your TV behind a panel?3
    • Should you hide your TV behind a panel?4
    • Should you hide your TV behind a panel?5
  3. Feb 24, 2020 · Looking for unique and practical ways to hide your TV set and its cords, cables, and other accessories? We've got you covered. Read on to discover 15 ingenious hacks that can redirect the focus of your room and redefine your interior style.

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  5. Dec 18, 2023 · Designers Ashe Leandro have cleverly devised their own ways to conceal TVs—in the Park Avenue living room in the photo above, the tech eyesore sits covertly behind a custom mirror with a hinged panel that rotates open.