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On The Farm Fun With A Barnyard Style Kids Bedroom Design

Few things can get a home stylist as pumped up as a fully-themed room design. Especially when that room is being designed for the ones you love the most – your kids. Kids love themed rooms and laying out a room in a fun design provides a sense of uniqueness that tells a child that the room is all their own. Every child is different and they will all have their own likes and dislikes. One thing that many younger kids, in the 2-8 year old range, love is farm animals. We read a lot of books and sing a lot of songs about the farm to our kids. A barnyard themed room can be a fun idea for your little ones.

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Do You Have A Child That Loves Art? Here Are Some Great Tips For A Fun, Art-Themed Room

The most creative people in the world are children. Their little minds and hands are always busy creating something new. If you have children that love art and spend more time finger-painting than watching television or playing video games, and art-themed bedroom may be the perfect idea. There are a lot of fun ways to pull off a colourful, creative room that your little artists will love.

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Sports-Themed Room Design Tips

If you spend a lot of time doing home re-decoration projects, you know that interior decorating is a reflection of your personality. If you have kids, they may want their bedroom to do the same for them. Kids love having a bedroom that really expresses something about their personalities. You can work with your child to develop a themed bedroom to help them have a space that is uniquely their own. One popular type of bedroom for kids is the sports theme. For most kids the sports that they watch and play are a big part of who they are. A sports-themed room decoration project can really help your son or daughter feel involved in the home décor as well as provide some quality time with them.

What Sport Do They Like Best?

You may have a little athlete that excels in a few sports. If so, you can incorporate several types of sports into the bedroom design, but it is important to try and pick one that is the dominant theme. For this example we’ll use baseball as the dominant sport theme. Talk to your child about doing a baseball themed room and get some ideas from them. A good tip is to ask them to come up with three to five words or phrases that sum up what they like best about baseball. An example list might look like this.

  1. Their favourite player/team
  2. Balls
  3. Bats
  4. Gloves
  5. Summer-Time

Design Around These 5 Words

Once you have five good words, get to work. Start off by picking colours. In this example, your child’s favourite team was the number one pick. Find out the team’s home colours, if you don’t already know them, and begin painting the room in those colours. Choose the primary colour as the main color for the walls, and use the secondary colour for trims, doors and furnishings. This step alone will do wonders for the bedroom.

Work Down The List

Once you have the colours on the wall, start adding the extras. There are some cool life-sized player decals available online at stores, like FatHead, that can go up on the walls. You can also order team logos, or you can paint one by hand if you have the skill. A baseball bat rack can be easily attached to the wall. Put some team memorabilia and some books on a bookshelf and use baseball mitts as the book ends.

You can let yours and your child’s imagination run wild on this project. Start off basic and add as you go. There is so much sports memorabilia available, so you should have no problems finding the right extras to add to the room. A favourite for most kids is to get a jersey with their name on the back of it. Buy two, one for them to wear, and one to display in their room in a shadow box. You’ll love the reaction that you get from your child and they will love the effort and time spent together with you on the project. Have fun together!

Kid’s Furniture For The Little Brain

A child’s formative years –from birth up to the age of five –are crucial to their development.  Parents invest in educational games and toys to promote their child’s brain activity. Recently though, pediatricians have emphasized just how important a child’s free play and unscheduled activities are as well.  This means that the things a child sees and touches while on his or her own are very important to his or her learning progress. This means that devoted parents now have something else to keep in mind: furniture.   The idea is to fill a child’s room with interactive furniture that will encourage the child to explore its shapes and textures or replacing typical shapes with abnormal or unusual ones to spark creativity and help a child think outside the box.

PLAY +, an Italian furniture line has focused on “…the conviction that an environment for children should not be considered merely a ‘backdrop’ to a series of activities…but, rather, a protagonist in the construction of the identity of each child…” (ZPZ Partners, www.playpiu.it). They include everything from chairs to hiding spots for growing minds.

The designers’ strategies are aimed at fortifying the learning of essential functions in the child, and most importantly, doing this in a way that engages the child. In other words, your tiny tot has fun while learning.

Armed with these visual and conceptual pointers, inspiration can be drawn from these designers while implementing two of the things the modern parent can’t overlook: accessibility and budget.

IKEA, not surprisingly, offers some interesting additions for children of all ages.  Kids love swinging and hanging off things, and the joy from playing with gravity is something most adults can remember even years after they’ve outgrown the tire swings!  IKEA offers two hanging seats – an obvious luxury in a child’s world – to expand the child’s motor skills while being, well, just plain fun. The EKKORE (light grey polyester) swing provides some privacy, while the IKEA PS SWINGA (blue weaving) is recommended for older children, and has a more sleek design perfect even for little fashionistas. (ikea.com)

Rocking chairs also improve motor skills and general coordination. So, if your little one isn’t tempted by a swinging seat, the bear themed rocking chair from Kids Chair World (kidschairworld.com) should pique their interest! The chair even comes with a detachable cushion secured with Velcro.  Kids Chair World also offers the standard rocking chair by Kidkraft in bright red, adding exciting vibrancy to any child’s bedroom.

When it comes to covering the floor, why not combine practicality with fun? This 100% wool soccer rug from A Kids Corner (akidscorner.com) includes finger puppets, goal nets and a mini soccer ball that promotes interaction while developing hand-eye coordination.

Even simple furniture additions like coat hangers can be made more interesting and eye-catching.  A deer coat hanger from IKEA also serves the purpose of introducing a young child to new shapes and curves as well as the concept of asymmetry.

Finally, organization shouldn’t be overlooked when creating an original space.  A toy treasure chest from IKEA (ikea.com) is a roomy storage solution with a soft felt lock the little hands will need to unhook to open.  The book case carousel by Guidecraft (allchildrensfurniture.com) can be fully spun for easier access to books and its novel shape and rotating concept are another way to add pizzazz to the every day necessities.

Finally, for the DIY savvy parents there’s a way to literally transform a room into an interactive experience.  Dornob (dornob.com) recently featured an indoor tree house that is inarguably the coolest room a kid could have, and the best part (aside from the actual tree house) is that your child can help make it, picking and painting the colours onto the walls.

Finding something creative within each furniture piece will keep a child interested in the item longer, making it a wonderful investment both for the pocketbook and the mind!