Decorating ones bedroom can be a mighty task but thanks to useful bedroom interior design tips from the experts, you can create a lovely, pleasant and a welcoming space for yourself and your partner.
Bedroom is undoubtedly the most important room in your home; hence it requires a lot of thought and creativity for bedroom interior design. You should take extra care while decorating your bedroom. The right kind of furniture, color, painting, accessories and of course the bed will make your bedroom a place where you can truly relax and unwind and find solace when you most need it.
Furniture for bedroom is always given top priority in bedroom interior design. Choosing the right kind of bedroom furniture will help you create a pleasant atmosphere around the room. Your bedroom furniture should depend on the space available for your bedroom. The material for bedroom furniture should match or at least be similar to the rest of the furniture in your home. Matching home décor is very important to give your home a uniformed look.
Master bedroom in particular needs extra thought when bedroom interior design is concerned. It is your personal space but it is the heart and soul of your house, so it needs special bedroom interior design. You need to decorate this space with items that are comfortable as well as useful.
The number one rule in bedroom interior design is to avoid clutter. This space is to relax and cluttering gives a very negative effect to the room. You won’t get peace of mind with clutter around you. Plus it’s not good for passing positive energies.
Choose your bedroom furniture that suits the décor of your home. If you have a contemporary look throughout your home, then choose bedroom interior design that matches that look. Classic and traditional bedroom interior design is a great way to decorate one’s bedroom, provided you have the taste and budget for it. Your bedroom furniture should fit the style of your décor. Whether you go for traditional, modern, semi-classic, retro or rustic, make sure your bedroom interior design does justice to the theme.
You can also choose to mix and match styles for your home. You can use a modern look for your living room, a contemporary kitchen and a classic bedroom. These different styles should blend well though. Avoid being too out of the way. Complimenting styles always make a home look more beautiful.
Selecting bedroom furniture can be a overwhelming task, but nonetheless, it is also one of the most important task for any homeowner. Invest on a bed that suits your style as well as comfort. Go through as many bedroom interior design books and catalogues as possible to give you a better choice on bedroom furniture. Choose the right size of the bed. A bulky bed for a small bedroom will clog your space and clutter your surroundings.
Watch the video related to interior design
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What is the difference between Product Design, Interior Design and Graphic Design?Is a career in Product Design lucrative? I can draw visualize and am creative, starting from scratch, are there any institutes in Mumbai? Is free lancing an option? Any search engine leads me to Interior Design and Graphic Design, Is Product Design a general term for both? Is a graduation in Hotel Management sufficient or engineering is compulsory? Please help!
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Hallmark Interiors -
About the Author:
Hallmark Interiors, with Veena Arunkumar at the helm of affairs, offers top quality, pre-designed and customized, Interior Designing and Interior Design consulting services.
Tags: aesthetic bedroom, bedroom furniture, bedroom interior design, furniture for bedroom, Interior, Interior Design, interior designs, master bedroom, special bedroom interior design
Divide and conquer is the trick to making a large space cozy. Working to section it off sometimes something as simple as a folding screen at the bottom of your bed will do that for you. Or move the bed further into the room put the screen behind the bed and put your desk behind it. Large bold prints help – along with large scattered decorative pieces. Make one section with seating – love seat and sofa table or 2 rockers or easy chairs facing.
http://www.decorpad.com/photos/2008/09/22/ecf0267cbc78.jpg
Another suggestion is 1 long or 2 tall bookcases placed on the short walls as dividers. http://www.apartmenttherapy.com/la/inspiration/inspiration-using-a-bookcase-as-a-room-divider-080938 best to have them open back to allow light through.
interior designers can charge by the square foot or hourly the minimum hourly rate is around 65$ an hour for a first timer I would suggest hourly and they foot the bill for materials and supplies that way you still make a profit seeing as you dont know how much time you will be in there working…
Why not teach and do some interior design on the side? When you have your kids, you can always ask to become part-time for teaching. Take on Interior design jobs as you have the time for it, it'd be a great supplemental income.
As for how to become a teacher, you would need to check with a local college or university to see what the rules are for your particular state. In some states, you can teach in a particular area if you have your bachelor's in that area. In others, you need to take some education classes and pass a test first. Here in California, teacher credentialing is a 1 year program and a test. I took my classes at night while I worked as a substitute during the day. This took one semester and one summer, then my student teaching was the 2nd semester.
I have no experience with getting into the interior design field, so I can't answer that one.
Well…Why don't you code the plan (for instance, he bed is "1", and the pillows could be "1A", with the skirt as "1B" etc.). Then code the corresponding fabrics the same. The fabrics look neatest if you wrap them around a piece of mat board or foamcore and then adhere to your presentation board. You can mount the plan at one side and the fabrics and furniture pieces at the other side, or do some other kind of composition…whatever works for you.
As for the dimensioned floor plan…it's gonna look messy. It's the nature of the beast.
Good Luck!
I agree with previous answer- check out "Rate my Space"( HGTV). There's tons of pictures people have sent in when they redo a room and you can find an idea you like. Also, try pottery barn teen – pbteen.com (cute pictures to get ideas)
Whatever you choose, I would recommend you try to pick things that she will not grow out of. I would go with neutral colors on the walls. If you want to go with the East-Indian theme, use this as accent pieces, which will be easier to change out as her tastes may change. A great website for East-Indian/ethnic decor would be http://www.pier1imports.com . They have great pillows, mirrors,throws and TONS of accents pieces with East Indian flare.
Good luck!
Home Elixir Home Staging
http://www.homeelixir.com
Age: 47
General Occupation: Service industry
Type of home you reside in:
HOUSE
Do you own you own home:
YES
How many people reside at your home:
4 … self, husband, 2 teenage kids (ages 19 and 13)
Does each person have their own bedroom:
YES
How does your home effect how each occupant interacts: (eg. One bathroom creates arguments, central nature of kitchen creates conversation ect):
Big house, 2 floors, 3 (yes, 3!) bathrooms … plenty of space. We don't really have to cross paths unless we want to or choose to. Some families would probably consider this a drawback, but I like it. The floorplan is semi-open, which works better for us than totally open or all individual rooms. We can all be together if we want to in the "family areas" of the house (kitchen, living room, dining room) or spread out (library, master suite, upstairs loft, separate bedrooms) for more privacy.
Are conflicts created due to the location of certain rooms or spaces:
Two things … the first-floor master suite is off the living room. Usually not a problem, but it's kind of odd. Also, the kids (boy and girl) share the upstairs bathroom. Sometimes there's a bit of conflict over who gets to use it when, or which one left what where … but it's not a major problem.
Is there a particular addition to your home that makes it functional for the occupants:
Might sound strange, but everyone's favorite feature of the house is our huge wraparound porch. We spend a ton of time on that porch. We use it the way most families use a patio … we have a table and chairs out there (it's our summer dining room!) as well as comfortable adirondack chairs for relaxing. The master bedroom also can be accessed directly from the porch. We love it!
Also, my kitchen is at the front of the house, which makes it easy to serve meals on the porch … right through the window!
Do you feel that any particular design elements of your home effect the way you live:
The floorplan … again, with teenagers, everyone needs the option of privacy.
First-floor laundry is a dream-come-true for me. No more hauling laundry-baskets up and down the basement steps!
Garage is on the side of the house, just off the kitchen … SOOO convenient for bringing in groceries, etc.!
Are there any design elements that you dislike about your home, in relation to how it effects the interaction between you and the other occupants:
No.
Has any new technology made interaction easier/harder between you and other occupants of the home:
Not really, at least, not something specific to the house itself. We all have cellphones, so my kids will once in awhile CALL me from upstairs to ask or tell me something … kinda similar to when whole-house intercoms were all the rage?
Are there any additions you would add to your home if you could, explain:
I'd love to add a sunroom or 3-season room on the BACK of the house. The back of my house has southern exposure, and I wish I had more windows on the back … especially in the winter! I would also replace a few interior doors with pocket-doors (just to save space that swinging doors take up) and (this isn't possible) I wish my basement were a walkout rather than completely below grade.
Other comments relating to design and the behaviour and interaction between the occupants of your home:
My home works pretty well for my family. We had it built (semi-custom), based on a homeplan and modified by the builder and me. We were first-time homebuilders (what an adventure, and probably NEVER AGAIN!), so some features could have been planned a little better.
If I could do it over again, I'd pay more attention to the family-areas of the house. I'd have built the kitchen, dining area, and living areas a little bigger, and used better materials. We do have a fireplace, which should be a natural family gathering-area, but don't use that room much because the corner placement of the fireplace makes furniture arrangement awkward, and no one really likes that room!
Also, the first-floor master works well for us, but if my kids were young, I'm not sure I'd be comfortable sleeping on a different floor of the house than my kids.
These are very interesting questions! I never really thought about how the design of our house affects how our family-members interact with one another, but clearly it does!
Good luck in your design career!
All the colors are beautiful, pick one that best suits the light and size of your room. I would try to pick a color that is more to the neutral so as to not demand attention away from the mural.
The pale face powder almost pink poppy color would be my choice, light, feminine and very pretty. If the room can take a darker color, maybe one of the greens.
The other poppy colors could be used as accents, toss pillows, bed covering and window curtains.
The mural is very bright and graphic so try to keep everything else as simple as possible, you want the mural to be a focal point, so don't put in a lot of stuff that will detract from the mural.
OK, here goes…
First mount your drawings to matte board (found in any major craft store). Use a neutral color of board OR one that compliments your color scheme.
For your corresponding fabrics and textures, take a swatch and do 1 of 2 things. Either use pinking shears to cut the squares and mount them flat to the board OR wrap them around pieces of foam core (craft store again) to give the a 3D look. Place them around the drawing, not on the drawing.
Using spray adhesive works well, but be careful and practice first. That stuff and get onto everything if you aren't careful. When I did my boards, I always took my drawings to Kinkos and had copies made. This way I always had a back up should something go arwy.
Draw your measurement on the OUTSIDE of the walls. Use about a 1/4" space from the wall to your writings.
I hope this helps, good luck!!
Check out some magazines and hgtv.com for more inspiration. Can you even put up the rods for the canopy? You might have to have someone build the frame and attach the canopy frame to your bed. Use lights and candles for the intimacy and the colors you chose for the bedding for the relaxation. Hope this helps. Roxanne