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Fantasy Rooms for Kids Under $50
by Kathleen Wilson
Description: Fun, creative tips for decorating kids' bedrooms on a budget.
Decorating kids rooms on a budget can be challenging, to say
the
least. However, there are plenty of ways to create that
dream domain
for your little (or big) one, without sacrificing the
college fund.
My first suggestion when decorating for children is, DON'T
DO IT
WITHOUT THEM. So many parents decorate for the way they
envision the
perfect room, only to have it backfire on them during the
unveiling.
Let the child become part of the process, and they will not
only love
the room they helped to create, they will have learned some
valuable
life tools as a bonus.
The next step is to organize. Kids are much more likely to
keep their
rooms picked up if there is a little bit of order. Cardboard
boxes
covered with contact paper, fabric drawstring bags made from
scrap
fabric, and zipper style bags (not with babies or toddlers),
can all
go a long way toward keeping things in their place. It's
also not a
bad idea to label drawers and storage areas for the little
ones. It
helps them to remember what goes where. If they are too
young for
reading, draw pictures.
To start the decorating process, the first thing to do is to
come up
with a theme. Even if it is just a color scheme (although
with kids,
it seldom is) it gives you a blueprint. Remember to ask for
your
children's ideas here. Give them your guidelines, and then
let their
imaginations flow. You can then narrow it down to two
selections, and
help them decide which is best.
Some great themes for kids rooms include garden, jungle,
space,
cowboy, trucks and trains, fairies, teddies, favorite
animal, letters
and numbers, cityscape, farmyard. Okay, I could be here all
day. You
get the idea, try to use your child's natural personality to
direct
you.
How to do this all on a budget?
Apply your chosen theme, then try these ideas:
1. Paint. If you can't afford to or don't want to paint the
whole
room, add a colorful painted border, use foam stamps to
stamp a theme
design, or stencil around windows and doorways. Painted
murals are the
way to a fantasy room on a budget. Huge impact, and they are
much
easier than you think! You can buy stencils or patterns
online, or use
a coloring book to copy designs onto the wall with pencil,
then paint
with craft paint. Think kid here, it doesn't have to be
Divinci!
2. Add depth to your wall design. This gives a fantasy feel
to the
room. Use contact paper or craft foam cutouts, paint a
simple mural
over the wall, tack felt flowers in your "garden," decoupage
computer
cutouts onto the wall. Cut out a fairy castle out of
plywood(or
cardboard, or foam core), paint, and create a headboard. Use
ribbon
and glue or tacks to create a chair rail. Glue hot wheels to
the wall
end to end all the way around the room, use your
imagination! Use
chalkboard paint and a box of colored chalk to inspire their
artistic
side. Use magnetic paint and create "game boards" around the
room,
pick up magnetic alphabets to play hangman, or glue magnetic
strips to
checkers to make game pieces. You get the idea.
3. If you can't afford to buy new bedding for the whole
room, consider
using sheets to make some pretty easy changes. Flat sheets
can be
purchased at discount stores for just a few dollars in
several great
colors, and can be used to easily create duvets for existing
comforters, simple curtains, and custom pillowcases. If you
don't sew,
you can use iron on fusible tape. Purchase the heavy duty
variety.
Leave one end open to insert the old comforter, then secure
with
Velcro, or sew ribbon to each side and tie closed. Forget
paying $20 a
piece for pillow shams, they are easy to make for just $1 or
2.
4. Finally, add some personal touches. Make a simple throw
pillow with
their name in fabric marker, create a sign for them to hang
on their
door, or simply pick up some dollar shop frames and let them
hold
family memories close to their heart.
A word about teen rooms. This is one of the most common
questions I
hear from parents, "How do I decorate a teen's room?" The
answer is
simple. However they want. Okay, within reason folks. I
still feel
parents should place conditions on how a room is decorated,
it is your
house, after all. For instance,
my rule was no black walls. (And no permanent anything
without
approval!) But the fact of the matter is, teens either want
a very
adult room, or a room that is totally not what any adult
would want.
And they won't be happy with anything less.
So within reason, let them call the shots. Just make sure
you can
close the door when company arrives.
5. Organizing - You don't have to buy expensive storage cubes
for your
kids' rooms. Covered boxes, sewn drawstring bags from extra
material,
even an old suitcase under the bed make good storage. A wall
of simple
metal-strip utility shelving (they sell it in white, as
well) can
accommodate a large amount of stuff, especially for the
older kids,
and is relatively cheap at home improvement stores. I save
old
baby-wipe containers to store crayons, hot wheels, and that
endless
supply of useless toys from the fast food joints! You can
cover them
with contact paper. Try labeling what goes where, even for
the older
kids, so there is no arguing about what "putting it away"
really
means! Sturdy cardboard boxes covered with contact paper,
fabric, or
giftwrap from the dollar shop can be set on their sides,
stacked and
even attached together to make cubbies.
Finally, remember that you are making memories for your
kids…not
The neighbors. Bedrooms should be very personal affairs, so
let your child
feel his/her hearts desire in their special place, and not
have to
worry about what people will say if its not the Barbie or
Hot Wheels
room like the kid down the street. Enjoy yourself, and give
them the
fantasy room of their dreams with your heart, not your
wallet.
Kathleen Wilson is an author, national columnist, and editor
of The Budget Decorator. For more free decorating ideas on a
budget, visit her at http://www.TheBudgetDecorator.com.
Don't forget to sign up for her free email newsletter while
you're there!