Good points Chadnliz.
Ebonyvette, what you do with the room depends somewhat on what kind of speakers you want; and what kind of speakers will work well depends somewhat on what you can do with the room. So I don't think either decision can be made in a vacuum.
But I think the real question is, "What do I really want to do, and what's the best practical way to do it?"
In audio as in life, many fruitless paths are avoided (and many less dealers enriched - alas!) if you first come to know yourself. So, what kind of presentation do you really want? Identify that and you're halfway there. Then just proceed accordingly, or research what it takes to proceed accordingly. Unfortunately tradeoffs exist - for example among imaging, ambience, liveliness, clarity, timbre, and sweet spot size. Speaker characteristics and room acoustics both play a part in each of these areas.
For instance, I like a lively, rich (in ambience and timbre) presentation over a large sweet spot. I'm willing to trade off some imaging and clarity to get what I most want.
This inclines me towards a fairly live-sounding room - wooden or leather furnishings, a few throw rugs instead of thick carpeting, lots of objects in the room to diffuse the reflected energy. I've had good results using fake ficus trees (and occasionally even real ficus trees) in the first reflection zones as incognito room treatment. Any bushy plant will work well with most speakers; the height of my big electrostats pointed to indoor trees.
Now in speakers, my preferences incline me towards models with a fairly wide but most importantly uniform radiation pattern along with fairly low power compression. Such speakers can be used in a well-damped room, but that would work against some of my priorities. And if the radiation patten was quite non-uniform, we might well want to absorb as much of that reverberant energy as possible. So you see how the speaker characteristics and room acoustics can work together?
Finally, your room is pretty close to square - in the back of your mind you might take note of the possibility of diagonal placement. I keep that trick up my sleeve for squarish rooms, and when it's practical to try it can "save the day".
Best of luck to you!
Duke (a dealer)
Ebonyvette, what you do with the room depends somewhat on what kind of speakers you want; and what kind of speakers will work well depends somewhat on what you can do with the room. So I don't think either decision can be made in a vacuum.
But I think the real question is, "What do I really want to do, and what's the best practical way to do it?"
In audio as in life, many fruitless paths are avoided (and many less dealers enriched - alas!) if you first come to know yourself. So, what kind of presentation do you really want? Identify that and you're halfway there. Then just proceed accordingly, or research what it takes to proceed accordingly. Unfortunately tradeoffs exist - for example among imaging, ambience, liveliness, clarity, timbre, and sweet spot size. Speaker characteristics and room acoustics both play a part in each of these areas.
For instance, I like a lively, rich (in ambience and timbre) presentation over a large sweet spot. I'm willing to trade off some imaging and clarity to get what I most want.
This inclines me towards a fairly live-sounding room - wooden or leather furnishings, a few throw rugs instead of thick carpeting, lots of objects in the room to diffuse the reflected energy. I've had good results using fake ficus trees (and occasionally even real ficus trees) in the first reflection zones as incognito room treatment. Any bushy plant will work well with most speakers; the height of my big electrostats pointed to indoor trees.
Now in speakers, my preferences incline me towards models with a fairly wide but most importantly uniform radiation pattern along with fairly low power compression. Such speakers can be used in a well-damped room, but that would work against some of my priorities. And if the radiation patten was quite non-uniform, we might well want to absorb as much of that reverberant energy as possible. So you see how the speaker characteristics and room acoustics can work together?
Finally, your room is pretty close to square - in the back of your mind you might take note of the possibility of diagonal placement. I keep that trick up my sleeve for squarish rooms, and when it's practical to try it can "save the day".
Best of luck to you!
Duke (a dealer)