Before we get started, we need to set a few things straight. Not all wall-to-wall carpet is created equal. Some are more offensive than others, and some aren't offensive at all. While we all have our own preferences, I find that the more texture and the more pattern, the higher the appeal. Sisal, some shags, and most tone-on-tone patterns or raised patterned carpets do not bear the same stigma in my book as run of the mill renter's-grade beige. What about you?
• First things first, clean them or have them cleaned. Check your landlord's policy on how often cleaning is done. Most will guarantee that they are cleaned between tenants, and some have an additional every two year policy. So if you're just moving in, do a sight and smell check (as in get down on your hands and knees and sniff!) to make sure they are in decent condition before unpacking all your gear. If your landlord refuses to step up to the cleaning plate, it's worth shelling out the money to have it done yourself. If smells persist try back peeling back the carpet in an inconspicuous spot to check the carpet pad, which is often the source of the problem since it can't be cleaned. If there is a serious layer of dirt-like substance, it might be the case that the carpet pad has broken down, in which case it's back to the landlord.
• Area rugs, area rugs! It really can be that simple. Use them to anchor a dining spot, living room seating area (picture 1 of Sally Steponkus's apartment), or at the end of the bed (picture 2). Pick one with a strong pattern, color variations, or textures that pick up on other elements already present in your decor. It will take the focus off the expanse of carpet and place it on the decorative elements of the room. Just make sure it's really an area rug, not one that could pass as a dinky bath mat, which would only draw more attention to the carpet. Don't be afraid to use multiple rugs in the same room to define separate spaces (picture 3). The key is using the right type of area rug. Most cotton ones will bunch up even with a rug pad, so go for sturdier natural fibers like sisal or seagrass, or thicker rugs with rubber backing that will add traction.
• Distract with interesting focal points around the room. Take a few cues from Grace and Brian, who outfitted their 70s garden level home to suit their traditional tastes by creating a series of interesting vignettes throughout their home (picture 5). With so many point of interest, you hardly focus on the standard issue wall-to-wall below foot.
• Create a strong color scheme throughout the rest of the room. If you can paint, do it! Take the focus off the floor and put it on the walls and accessories where you have more control. Use a few consistent accent colors around the room to keep the eye distracted.
• Give it friends and make it look intentional. If your carpet is hopelessly ugly an unusual shade, don't ignore it, play it up even if it's not your favorite color. An avocado green rug stands a good chance if it has good company in the form of green throw blankets, toss pillows, picture mats, artwork, wallpaper etc. Even a relatively neutral rug can be made to look even more intentional when its shade is picked up elsewhere as in picture 8, where designer Phoebe Howard repeated the natural golden hue in picture mats, artwork, window shades, and upholstery. The very best way to draw negative attention to it is to make it the odd man out.
• Go for texture. Play up the texture in other parts of the room such as in chunky throw blankets, rough wood furniture, patterned wallpaper, drapes, etc. A room full of sleek glass, polished metal, and glass will draw attention to the carpet's texture making it more noticeable.
What other tricks have you used to deal with wall-to-wall in style?
Images: 1: Southern Living, 2: Point Click Home, 3: Jonathan Adler via Attic Mag, 4: jones design company for Ohdeedoh, 5: Leah Moss for Apartment Therapy DC,6: Kiki Dennis, 7, 8: Phoebe Howard









Shaw's Original Fir...
I love my wall-to-wall carpet. Its soft on my feet and I get to vacuum a lot.
I love mine too! We have a big, soft fleece rug on top of it so you can choose soft or softer.
I would happily take any of those carpets over our deep emerald green colored carpets. To make matters worse, this green carpet is in the study, and in our master bedroom with standard beige in between the two rooms for the hall, and beige/pink toned berber in the guest bedroom. I've been trying to 'go with it' but it's tough.
I hate the wall-to-wall shag in our bedrooms, even if it is new and fashionable. I think only an idiot can believe that shag will continue to look appealing after it's been walked on. There's nothing to be done about it but wait until I can afford to replace it.
There's not a snowball's chance in hell that I'm going to invest in decorating around it. The best I can do is ignore it until such time that I can rip it and replace it.... with wall-to-wall wool berber.
I don't hate carpet, after all. And I love the effect of layering persian rugs on low-pile tightly woven berber.
The dark green and dark purple carpets in a couple of our bedrooms were torn out of our house immediately after purchase. They would have been awfully hard to work with. I think the idea of layering with area rugs is probably the best option for most situations.
If you own a place, re-finishing the wood floor underneath the carpet isn't as cost-prohibitive as you might think. (I think it was about $2-2.50 per sq foot for my floor in New Jersey).
I love the wall-to-wall carpet I had installed in my bedroom two years ago, and it was indeed high up on my dream decor list (okay, higher on the dream list was real wool, but the nylon I could afford was what I got). It keeps my bedroom warm (saving on oil heating bills), and is lovely on my toes in the morning.
I have an apartment with low-pile beige wall-to-wall in every room but the bathroom and kitchen. I finally broke down last week and had it professionally cleaned and I now wish I'd done it years ago. It made SUCH a difference and wasn't expensive at all. I was so pleasantly surprised by what a difference it made.
I don't mind the way w-t-w looks but I have always that that in a rental unit it's a weird choice. It gets so grubby and dated. I think really even linoleum makes more sense. Who wants to live with years of someone else's dust and dirt? Because really, even after a carpet has been professionally cleaned, how clean is it?
I am moving into my second apartment, and so far I am continuing to deal with wall-to-wall carpeting. I am a hardwood kind of girl, and for the first two months I lived on carpet, I had to wear socks inside. All I can picture is little mites crawling around down there. Ugh. Someday, I will not have to live with wtw carpet. Right now I deal with it by using area rugs everywhere and vacuuming sometimes three times a day (yes, I'm a bit of a germaphobe).
In the apartment I am currently leaving, the carpet is was filthy. It had permanent stains that would disappear when I scrubbed them, but showed up again in a few weeks (my apartment is a no-shoes apartment, so I know it wasn't that). The carpet has gotten to the point now where the spots I clean religiously are lighter than the rest of the carpet, because they're the only parts that are actually clean! It's so gross.
The photos above are so pretty and almost make me think the carpet isn't so bad, but then I look down at the floor and I am sad.
love all those rooms. well done!
I'm lucky that my landlord actually changes the wall to wall carpeting between each tenant. (or so he says) And it sure smelled like brand new carpet when i moved in for a few weeks! Ugh but now I've got a couple of area rugs down with a few more to come so its nto so bad and getting better but... man, every day I wish they were hardwoods. :( However if I had those lovely ones above, I would jump for joy daily! :)
I think you're overstating the disdain for wall-to-wall carpeting. I have a feeling way more people prefer it to hardwood floors.
Thank you for this post! I'm bookmarking it. I'm sure I was just one of many who wrote in asking about just this issue. My new apartment is, in every way, fantastic, except for the beige w-t-w carpet the building manager won't take out (they actually looked under it for me, but said that the concrete underneath was too cracked and patchy to be stainable).
Now I have reassurance that my new place can be as nice as I'd hoped it would be, and some ideas on how to get there. Thankyou!
I also love wall to wall carpeting. I don't have to sweep every day or look at tufts of dust, I rather enjoy the weekly vacuum, it's warm on my bare feet in the winter (yet not hot in summer), and best of all, I can lie on it. I'd never lie down on a hardwood floor, no matter how clean it is.
Hardwood floors are beautiful and I have them myself, but there I'll never understand why there is such an air of snobbery against carpeting. i can understand if it's dirty or some heinous shade, but otherwise, it don't see why it's so egregious. We put down rugs, anyways!
We could have any flooring we wanted (that we could pay for) in our new house. We chose hardwood for the living and dining rooms and the hall between them. Vinyl tile that resembles slate (but is softer to stand on and easier to clean) for the kitchen. And carpeting everywhere else except the bathrooms. Berber for many areas, sculptured pile in my bedroom, and regular pile for the rest. (Berber wasn't the best choice when we adopted a new cat, though -- we had to pay for a couple of clawed areas to be profseeionally restored.)
Wall to wall carpeting insulates for sound, it's warm underfoot here in New England in the winter, it's attractive, and it's affordable. Think of it as a large area rug!!
Speaking of area rugs, we tried layering a couple of small "oriental" rugs on one of the plain pile carpets, just for some variation, and we had a lot of problems with them "crawling" across the floor when we walked on them. They weren't anchored with furniture, and we never solved the problem. The rugs were donated to charity. IS there a solution??
"i can understand if it's dirty or some heinous shade, but otherwise, it don't see why it's so egregious."
And that's the problem: Despite all the vacuuming in the world, dirt tends to sift down through the rug into the padding and it's impossible to pull up W2W and send to the cleaners.
"we tried layering a couple of small "oriental" rugs on one of the plain pile carpets, just for some variation, and we had a lot of problems with them "crawling" across the floor when we walked on them. They weren't anchored with furniture, and we never solved the problem."
There are certain rug pads that act like velcro to keep layered rugs from doing that. A good flooring/rug retailer (not a big-box/lifestyle furnishing) would have been able to solve that for you.
@SherryBinNH
These are the kind of rug over carpet pads you needed:
http://www.rugpadcorner.com/ultra-premium-felt-and-rubber-rug-pads.aspx
Oops - I meant this one:
http://www.rugpadcorner.com/rug-pads-for-rugs-on-carpet.aspx
The wtw featured in the pictures looks like really high quality stuff for the most part- no offensive or dated colors to be seen.
Also I have hardwoods in most of my house and I love laying down on the rugs I have bought to put on top of them. Our family room and den have a very low pile wall-to-wall (which is very uncomfortable to lay on and I would rather let my infant scoot on our hardwoods) I hate it, but it's in decent shape, relatively neutral and I don't see the point in replacing it since we have plans to expand the room.
I have orange muppet colored WTW in my rental living room. It is (closet aside) the only carpeting in my home. I have picked up on the orange tones in a jute area rug with other earth tones, which link to the brown leather of my furniture. I also have a tabby cat that matches my living room decor to a T. She's the perfect accessory because she looks great no matter where she ends up-- carpet, rug, couch, chair.
This has been my biggest decorating challenge as it is truly hideous but I feel like I've come to terms with it and accept it since I can't pull it out. The rest of my apartment has painted wood floors.
Thanks for this post! Let's see more house tours and calls with w2w, which I consider the renter's ultimate decor dilemma! :)
You make carpeting sound like West Nile Virus or something. Sure, I wouldn't want it in EVERY room, but I shudder at the thought of having wood/tile in a bedroom - it just doesn't have that "comfort factor" for me personally. And I don't understand how it could be considered "dated" unless it was a dated color/texture or something. If you don't like it, that's fine, but don't assume everyone hates it as well.
Such a timely post for me as we are in the process of buying a house that has the beige w-t-w everywhere except the tiny kitchen, bathroom and garage!
For us, the biggest problem of having w-t-w carpet is that our youngest is allergic to dust mites. We will not have the funds for a long time to replace any of it though we may pull up the carpet in our youngest's room and just paint the subfloor. I really enjoyed looking at the pix here to get ideas of what to do with all that carpet.
My condo had carpets and I was really excited to move to my new home with all wood floors- I have never lived in a house with wood floors. Then I realize I prefer carpets, hardwood is too hard on my feet! Hardwood looks great, but carpet looks comfortable.
I think this is in response to the horribly ugly forest green carpet picture that I sent in of my new apartment. And it's sort of helpful, anyone else have any suggestions on how to deal (I'm a renter so tearing it up is not an option)?
This is such a great post. We have a lot of wood floors in our house (kitchen , DR, LR, halls) but the playroom, TV room and most of the bedrooms are W2W carpeted. And I must say, I sorta love it! Never see it as a hinderance. Granted, the previous owners did choose some amazing, high quality wool carpeting in great colors, all muted but rich.
Cozy, warm and attractive. Honestly i dont think i would remove.
Moved into a white box, run of the mill, old apartment building in July. I grew up with carpet, so the w-t-w standard beige low pile we have isn't as offensive as it could be. I do my best to distract from it with wall color and great furniture.... but man, I cannot wait for my hardwoods. I miss the gorgeous floors my last apartment had!
i just moved into an apartment with blue carpeting in the livingroom and i hate it! i got a nearly room-sized sisal area rug and layered my giant flotaki on top. there's still some blue peeking out and i plan to get one more sisal rug to completely hide it but, for now, it's actually not too bad. the focus has been taken off the carpeting and the room looks fresh and modern.
I spent my first 10 years in a Victorian rowhouse with hardwood floors in every bedroom and I was never so happy as when we moved into a surban house with carpeted bedrooms. As a kid growing up in the east coast, I never wanted to get out of bed in the morning and be confronted with cold wood underneath your feet. My feet! The area rugs and slippers do nothing!
I'm fine with wood and tile in the kitchen, the entryway, bathrooms, the dining and living rooms, but in the bedroom I'll always want wall to wall carpeting.
To each their own.
None of these W2W look bad at all!!!
I love hardwood floors, which is a good thing because I have allergies and can't have carpet or rugs. But I can't see, short of getting new carpet and then NEVER wearing shoes inside the house, how a carpet can ever really be clean.
I grew up in a house with beautiful hardwood floors, and a large curved staircase with beautiful wood risers. I came home from school one day, and my Mother had had the house and stairs carpeted, including my room.
I have sought out homes with beautiful wood floors since.
I've been a renter for ten years, and it'll probably be another ten before I can start to think about buying. My one firm rule is NO carpeting - I've paid ~$50 more per month in a couple of rental markets because of this, which is completely fine with me.
I am not a compulsively clean person, but the thought of not being able to clean what is easily the dirtiest surface in any living space on a weekly basis completely freaks me out.
I've seen sisal matting (the kind that comes in detachable 1' squares) layed over wtw carpet, which I find slightly more attractive, though it doesn't solve any of wtw's multitude sins.
All-
Wow, divisive issue! I sincerely did not mean to offend all the carpet lovers out there. This article was born in part from my own current carpet issues.
I'm in the middle of ripping up carpet in my own home, and I've been completely disgusted with what's underneath (and we have them professionally cleaned regularly plus regular vacuuming!). Our whole home feels and smells so much cleaner without them even though they were only in 2 rooms.
As I mentioned though, not all carpets are offensive looking, even to most carpet haters like myself. BUT some of the most frequent complaints/good questions we get from readers are about w2w carpet. So, this is my response.
On second thought, I suppose I should have titled the article something along the lines of Wall-to-wall carpet done right, since that's what this article is supposed to illustrate. The images above were chosen because I though they were some of the most successful applications of w2w that I've seen.
Ugh. Carpet is FILTHY, no matter how much you vacuum and/or clean. Five years after I moved into a newly constructed home with builder beige carpet, I ripped it out. Myself. And I was absolutely disgusted by the amount of dirt in the carpet, pad, and on the sub-floor. My current residence, a condo, also has builder carpet. I am about to rip that out and stain the concrete underneath. It may not be perfect, but being able to keep clean while I wait to be able to install wood is worth it.
Those pics are certainly w2w carpet done right. You should see our rental!
We have super matted brown carpet downstairs and very thin cheap dark blue carpet upstairs. The only way to make things better was to first clean it, and then layer carpets on top to try to impose our own color scheme and cover the very worn high traffic areas.
Also, adding white and cream items such as throw pillows and shelves has helped tone down the dark carpet.
Thanks for the helpful suggestions on painting walls and adding accessories! Very spot on.
I guess the main reason I hate wall to wall so much is I associate it with low-end, cheap track homes with no architectural integrity. It feels instant and disposable, and it's a real turn off. I live in a 100-year-old building with its original hardwood floors, and I admire the era when things were built for the long-term. Unlike those who complain about the cold, hardness of wood, I find it warm, practical and inviting.
I hate carpet with a passion. We bought this house, a nice house we got a really good deal, we plan to change to carpet and floor out next year.. It's diffiuclt with a puppy I'm trying to potty train, there will be accidents, it takes me at least 20 min each time, to soak up the pee then scrub/dry ect. vs a floor, 1 swipe bam it's clean. not to mention the dirt stains.. just yuck
I wonder what the laws are on renters replacing carpet with DIY snap tile?
awesome ideas. moving into a great rental other than a sad, sad carpet, and now i'm looking forward to it.