Furniture – such as desks or tables, chairs, and various storage pieces – is often made of wood, metal or plastic. Those materials aren’t ideal for reducing echo. So, the second thing to do while fighting echo is to add porous or fluffy materials. Soft materials, like couch cushions, are much better at absorbing sound than hard ones.
Adding plants to a room is another way to make your décor echo-canceling. While some other methods may only make an area seem cozy, plants are fairly versatile. So, you can have them in homes as well as offices. Small potted plants would even work to fill out some of the space in larger rooms, which will reduce echo.
Before diving straight for the more drastic measures, though, I would suggest that you add a potted plant or two first. Actually, all of these suggestions reduce echo at least a little, but it’s also important to remember that every room will be different.
So, every room will need individual adjustments and some furniture rearranging before you find the winning combination of steps to completely stop all echoing. With that in mind, I’m confident that every room you end up working on can achieve a blissfully echo-free state
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