Saturday, December 8, 2012

How should I decorate my boys room?

Q. I have a 8, 3 and 3 month old in the same bedroom. I want to move but the 3 bedroom apt are full and we can't afford a house right now.

A. A decorating theme is a great way to begin decorating a room for a child. If you're like most parents, you've probably spent lots of time thinking about decorating your new child's room even before he joined your family. While bunnies are cute and teddy bears are darling, you might want something different for the bedroom or playroom.

There are lots of great themes for boys' rooms. A special theme will provide both the focus and the inspiration for a special one-of-a-kind room and can be adapted as your child grows. Time to get started!

Bug's Life
From bees and ants to frogs and reptiles, creatures of nature often capture a child's attention. Browse theme ideas at Posh Tots including a Bug Off Table and Chair Set, Bug bed linens, and or frog lamp.

Favorite Animals
What boy wouldn't love a room focusing on his favorite pet? Whether it's a dog or cat, bird or snake, using this theme will make your son (and his pet) feel particularly at home. Be sure to put up lots of pictures with your son and his best friend around the room and make sure you have stuffed animals scattered everywhere.

Playhouse / Playtown
This theme will provide a wonderful scheme for decorating your son's room and provide lots of wonderful playtime possibilities as well. A whimsical or the cute playtown chest can be your starting point. Or, do a border in kids designs or paint a mural of a street scene on one or more walls. Name the storefronts for family members ("Katie's Groceries", "Ted's Puppet Theatre", "Todd's Bike Shop", "Anne's Pet Heaven", "Sara's Video Den", or Dennis' Book Nook").

Safari
For a safari look, find wonderful, colorful animal wallpaper borders and fabrics at any wallpaper store. Paint the walls blue, tan, ivory, or any of the colors in your wallpaper border. Make pillows and valances from coordinating leopard-print fabrics, and find some stuffed lions and tigers for the corner. Mount a butterfly net, binoculars, or straw hat on the walls. Use colorful matboard and frame some of your child's artwork to display. Maybe he'll draw some lions!

Rustic Cabin
Most every child loves spending time at camp or in the mountains. And what parent doesn't have happy childhood memories of hiking, boating, fishing, or just enjoying the outdoors. Birdhouses, bears, moose, and fish might show up in wallpaper borders, in fabrics, bedding, and accessories. For a rustic room you might also choose comfy plaid patterns, flannel fabrics, and log or pine beds. Accessories might use forest themes of animals, mountain scenes, or natural materials such as pine cones, leaves, and sticks. Take another cue from camp and use a sturdy trunk to store toys. With a room this nice, who needs a vacation?

Rain Forest
Choose a colorful jungle border, or try a jungle area rug. Soft fabric snakes and colorful stuffed birds or butterfly cutouts can add to the decor. Make pillows of animal or jungle prints and use themed accessories. Grrr!

Race Cars
With car racing, you think black and white checkered flags, and a finish line. Find an area rug with a car track design. A car bed might be fun, or decorate the walls with a car wall appliques. Add some framed calendar photos or posters of race cars, and put up narrow shelving to display car collections. Zoom!

Outer Space
Take a trip to the stars using a space theme. An Apollo bed set, outerspace border, or star-studded rocking chair might be just the items that inspires your child to reach for the stars. Paint reflective planets or stars on the ceiling in arrangements of the constellations.

Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines
If Dad is in the service, you might let your boy feel patriotic with a room painted in camouflage and outfitted with tanks and desert colors.

Sports
From soccer to baseball to football, sports is a theme that spans the generations. To use a baseball theme for example, use a headboard made from bats, hang curtains from bats used as curtain rods, make a baseball lamp, or hang shelving to display gloves, pennants, and trophies. Paint the room in the colors of your son's favorite team. Sports themed rugs, furniture, and beds are another possibility. Create similar looks for other sports, and you'll have a room that is a big "hit" with sports fans. Play ball!

Wild Colors
Go wild by starting with a lively area rug designed in fun colors for a child. Take your cue from the rug for colors and designs for the rest of the room. Use color everywhere! Paint every surface of a bookcase a different color, and do the same with headboard slats, drawer fronts, and chair legs. This is a great way to help your little one learn his colors! Find a fabric to compliment the rug and use it to tie the room together with window valances or floor pillows.

Movie or Cartoon Characters
There's something for everyone in this theme! Whether your son has been captivated by Mickey Mouse, Alladin, Lion King, Toy Story, or Scooby Doo -- you'll probably be able to find bedding, lamps, and other decorative items that use these themes. Towels for the bathroom and toys will be easy to add.

Pirates
The story of Peter Pan can inspire creative parents to design a wonderful room. Boys intrigued by the notion of pirates will love a room using blue ocean themes, ship masts, portholes, netting, treasure boxes, and secret play hideaways.

Knights and Castles
Artistic parents can faux paint castle walls, murals, and blue skies for a truly memorable room. Use the theme of "A Sword in the Stone" or "Camelot" for inspiration. Find another take on this theme offered by for Mercy's Sake in their Galahad collection.

Trains, Planes, and Automobiles
There are lots of colorful choices in bedding, fabrics, and wallpaper that feature transportation themes. Make a train track border around the room, hang airplanes from the ceiling, or go wild with a car-shaped bed.

Cowboy Kids
This is a fun theme where you can let your imagination run wild. Think bandana valances, chaps wall hangings, tin stars, horses, rope borders, and more. The baby dude designs offered by for Mercy's Sake offer some fun possibilities. Or check out OliveKids.com Camp Wilderness or the Wild West theme designs from PoshTots.com for more creative examples of this theme and products to add to your decor.

Dinosaurs
From cute and stylized to realistic and ferocious -- dinosaurs themes are still popular. If you suspect this is a passing phase for your little one, then opt for solid color bedding and walls, using theme elements in borders, sheets, valances, and posters.


I really prefer a townhouse over a single family home, but i'm concerned about space?
Q. Does it makes sense to raise a family of 4 in a townhouse instead of a single family home. A single family home doesnt really appeal to me and it is cheaper. I'm looking in a nice area, so a single family home that is of the same age will be around 1 million, plus I want private schools for the 2 kids. I am just concerned with space. Opinions are appreciated!

A. I have one of each. I live in the house with my father, since my mother died and my son and his wife live in my townhouse. Both have 3 bedrooms, the house has 2 full baths, and the townhouse has a full bath upstairs and a half bath down. Both have full basements. The house has a long skinny kitchen/breakfast nook and a separate dining room. The townhouse has a big kitchen with a breakfast bar between it and the dining room, so it's all pretty open. The living rooms are pretty much the same size, and the bedrooms are comparable. The house has a huge yard which requires way too much work, and a 2 car garage. The townhouse has a very small yard, but there's a pool and clubhouse, and sadly no garage. I can't manage the steps in the town house anymore, although I could probably do it if I put the laundry room upstairs. The laundry is in the basement at the house too, and I'm happy I have a lot of clothes and only have to go down there once in a great while. The townhouse actually has more living space than the house, but basically they are very comparable. If it wasn't for the steps, I would really prefer the townhouse. They were both built in 1965.

A million dollars! That should make up your mind for you.


What do you do for a roach problem?
Q. I went to look at this two bedroom apartment today. I like it alot the manager is also going to put down brand new carpet all over the apartment, it's really nice the thing that got me was I saw roaches in the dining area on the floor by the door some were dead some were crawling. I like this place alot. The manager said that this problem will be taken care of,I truly hope so I would just die if I moved in and started to see roaches. What can I do on my own for back up incase she does not get rid of them all? I don't have kids so putting down some kind of chemical would not be a problem.

A. Even if she does spray for roaches, because it's an apartment, there is a chance that your unit is the problem. If one of your neighbors keeps a nasty house, chances are the roaches will continue to come back. If you must take the place because you can't afford to live someplace else, i remember my mom using boric acid; she lined the baseboards, cracks, nooks and crannies with it. It killed the roaches when we moved in and they didn't come back.


What is a kids nook in a house plan?
Q. I was looking at house plans and it shows a kids nook. What is it, and whats the purpose of it?

A. I have always thought that "kids nook" is a nice description for what amounts to a "very very small space that is awkward and not functional for anything".....hence, let's call it a kid's nook.

Usually the space is so small that grown up furniture would not fit in the space, and perhaps a grown up is too tall to stand in the space. Basically, you could probably fit a little kids chair and table or a desk for a kid, perhaps just the dog crate/bed.

It's not a room. There is no door or window, no closet. It's just a weird little space for ?

While the small space may be useful for something, if it was an actual room then it would be called a "den", or a "family room", or "game room", or a "media room". Anything other than a "nook", in order to make their home more valuable for sale/resale. Have you ever noticed a room is given a name of "office", just because they did not build a closet. They say its a possible extra bedroom, but it's a bedroom without a closet. Who wants that? It affects the pricing too, but I digress.





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