T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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512.1 | Just some ideas | LEZAH::MINER | he who laughs - lasts. | Mon Nov 19 1990 12:44 | 33 |
|
There is a new product out that is similar to the Post-Its memo pads in
it's stickability and removability. It consists of a border background and
you apply characters and scenery to the border, all of which are removable
and reapplicable. They have scenes involving cowboys, balloons, under-
the-sea, teddy bears, etc. I've been eyeing it for a few months now and
might buy it for 2 of my guys who share a room (4 1/2 and 26 months).
In the past I have put new curtains in their rooms, made throw pillows
with really bright fabric with characters on it, for example, zoo
animals or birds or teddy bears. I also have a series of mobiles
that I have put up, airplanes, or an unusually shaped mobile with
bright colored disks (not necessarily a child one, but interesting
to them just the same). You might even hang a kite from the ceiling,
tacking its tail up along the ceiling.
If he likes Winnie the Pooh, as does my son, you might consider putting
up pictures from the stories. I bought a copy of the Shepard color
illustrations from the original World of Pooh (6 in all). They are
13 x 15 or so and I matted and framed them and put them up. These
seem to have been a favorite with my oldest and have lasted 2 years so
far.
Singular themes when the children are this age can be risky. They
are changing so quickly that they can soon tire of a particular sub-
ject. THAT's why I made the pillows "throw" pillows! :-)
Good luck and enjoy yourself!
dorothy
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512.2 | | RANGER::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Mon Nov 19 1990 12:44 | 15 |
| I have no experience with an almost 3yr old yet, so maybe someone
else can comment on that part, but are you sure that he's too young
to help pick? Maybe not directly in the store, but what about
picking colors and/or a general theme from a small sample that you
pre-selected?
Instead of specific characters, how about some other type of theme?
Maybe balloons, or trains, or .... almost anything, actually. Does
he show any special interest in a particular occupation or other
non character theme?
Good luck... keep us posted..
- Tom
|
512.3 | Oh well, we'll never win! | BRAT::DISMUKE | | Mon Nov 19 1990 14:36 | 11 |
| Our plan was to wallpaper in a print paper (white with primary color
lines) and we could change the border as their taste changed. Curtains
with bold prints can easily be changed as well. Clowns/circus prints
one year, trains/palnes, etc. Unfortunately, we moved before we
finished the decorating.
Now they each have their own room and they are old enough to decide.
My problem now is that they both want the same thing!
-sandy
|
512.4 | | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Mon Nov 19 1990 14:56 | 7 |
| Andrea,
I don't have any suggestions, but I just have to know....how did
you decorate his first room that "made everyone just giggle"?
Inquiring minds want to know :-)
Carol
|
512.5 | | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Tue Nov 20 1990 05:00 | 29 |
| Carol,
I had the Boynton characters border - the famous "Chocoholic"
characters; you'll see them in the Hallmark stores. Most of them have
the stupidest expressions on their faces. They were all holding balloons.
I had a coordinating striped wallpaper. The wallpaper and border stopped
at mid-window level. I had balloons hanging as well as kites. We got some
of those giant crayons and some of the Boynton character stuffed
animals for the wicker chair. I also had a few plants in colored
baskets with bows. I found some cute framed pictures with characters
with balloons or kites. I had a real cute growth chart hanging on his
closet door.
I think it was the wallpaper that did it (for the price I paid, if I
didn't laugh, I'd cry). The place I bought it from (actually the folks
who did all our draperies in the house) has used it a number of times
when contracted to do total decorating. The woman calls me occasionally
to ask where I inquired about some of the Boynton accent pieces
(bumper pads, comforters, etc) it has been such a hit. Unfortunately,
the accent pieces were all primary colors and we were using the
semi-pastel colored wallpaper (dark peach, yellow-gold, sea foam green,
colonial blue) so I never got any of the accent pieces.
If you are looking to redo a bathroom, they have a hysterical
wallpaper with the Boynton hippo characters in bathroom scenes
(brushing their teeth, with shower caps on, on the scale, etc). I would
probably make my morning!!!
Andrea
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512.6 | Stenciling | TRADE::HADFIELD | | Tue Nov 20 1990 09:20 | 8 |
| An inexpensive alternative for decorating is stenciling. When my son
was born, I had purchased a crib set and wall hanging with a cute bear
motif, then just made a stencil (traced the bear in the wall hanging),
and stenciled a border around the room. It's a tremendous savings over
wallpaper, and you can just paint over it when it's time to redecorate.
Have fun!
/michele
|
512.7 | inexpensive but fun | CIVIC::JANEB | See it happen => Make it happen | Tue Nov 20 1990 13:59 | 15 |
| I like to change the entire look of the room often (like every 1-2
years) without spending much money, so this is what I do:
- buy solid color curtains/drapes, dust ruffle, and rug
- pick a sheet set or let the child pick it - one that goes well
with the solid colors in the room
- make a new cover for the down comforter out of the top sheet from
the set + a solid color sheet ("duvet" style, this serves as top
sheet, blanket, and bedcover (instead of a bedspread))
For example, Sally's dust ruffle and curtains are light blue. Her
first set was Sesame Street characters on light blue letters. Her
current set is a giant dollhouse pattern that she plays on and the
pillowcase has a sun/moon on it.
|
512.8 | | 32FAR::JBOUCHER | | Tue Nov 20 1990 16:08 | 27 |
|
I'd like to share what my sister-in-law just did to redecorate her four year
old daughters room.
She painted it a light pink and plans to stencil the walls too. The border
pieces are painted white. Inexpensive but fancy, she used pillow cases
that can be draped or gathered over a rod for curtains. She picked white
with a lace border.
Half of the room contains the bed and bureaus. Since childrens clothes are
small, she used a closet organizer (closet maid, I think) that gave her
additional shelf space. The other half is set up as a play area. On one
wall is a four shelf, wide bookcase that has everything from books to
favorite toys. There is her doll house, kitchen play area, and table and
chairs. Her daughter loves to draw so she also has plenty of crayons,
paints, and paper to do so. She is setting up a rack with wooden hooks
to hang up her daughters favorite dress up costumes keeping them easily
in her reach. She'll have a mirror on the back of the bedroom door too.
She plans to put up some track lighting on this side of the room too.
For decorating the walls, she is framing in wooden frames, some of her
daughters better art work.
The room is very very cute and quite fun for a girl at this age. The verdict,
Kailyn loves it and is very proud of her paintings. Plus she enjoys spending
time in it with or without her friends.
|
512.9 | Colorform, Post-It stickons | FRECKL::AROIAN | | Wed Nov 21 1990 16:48 | 31 |
| FYI... Just saw the Colorforms, Post-IT and "?" (Sesame Street, Mickey
Mouse, etc) decorator stick-ons at "Wallpaper to Go" on Route 9 in
Framingham.
I decided to buy 2 packages of the Sesame Street ones to decorate my
basement playroom. The room is four walls, no windows, with blue
commercial tile -- a "real" playroom filled with ride-on toys,
chalkboard/paint easel, slide, toddler activity gym, table & chairs,
etc... No adult furniture - yet - other than folding chairs!!
The Bird Bird package contained a four foot Big-Bird, a 10 inch "Baby
Bird", and all the letters of the alphabet (approx 5 inches tall).
The Bert and Ernie package (not opened yet) I think contains a 3 foot
Bert and Ernie, a ruler, chalk package and two pieces of chalk
(stick-ons, not real!), a chalkboard (actually works with real chalk)
and a globe. There may be other items....
You simply cut out the figures and stick them on the walls. They
easily remove and can me used again and/or moved around.
They are really bright, fun and cute at only $14.98 a package.
The Colorforms and Post-It products come with a 15 foot border that you
have to paste on your wall and little figures that you stick on/off the
border -- basically a huge Colorform scene.
I chose the other because the Colorform and Post-It products were
not recommended for children under 3.
-- Laurel
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512.10 | You-color-it wallpaper | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Fri Nov 23 1990 05:55 | 15 |
| Laurel,
Those sound real cute - plus you can put them where you want them.
I really like the alphabet one.
Something else I have seen which was great a first sight was a wall
mural wallpaper with all the characters (abstract drawings of children
around the world) just outlined in black. The idea was that either you
or the children could color it in. Sounds like fun but when you think
about what it actually teaches the children, I don't know if I'm real
thrilled with it. I can imagine chilren grabbing their crayons anytime
they see black and white wallpaper and "helping" to color it in. It
does also come pre-colored as well.
Andrea
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512.11 | | CNTROL::STOLICNY | | Mon Nov 26 1990 09:12 | 17 |
| Andrea,
I received a catlog this weekend (Ultimate Outlet from Spiegel) that
had some children's bedding in it that I absolutely adore. In fact,
I'm trying to talk myself out of ordering it, since Jason won't be
ready for a real bed for probably at least another year!!
The comforter and drapes are a very bright jungle print with dinosaurs,
hippos, alligators, and elephants in red, yellow, green, blue, and
*plum/purple* (I thought of this note when I saw them). The line is
complete with stuffed pillows in the animal shapes. I think it would
be adorable in a young boy's room. I would finish the room by
stealing an idea from a friend's son's room...she had hung some stuffed
dinosaurs and kites with dinosaurs on them from the ceiling. It was
just great!
Carol
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512.12 | Colorforms on the wall? | CIVIC::JANEB | See it happen => Make it happen | Thu Dec 06 1990 10:04 | 12 |
| Last weekend I saw a GREAT idea for decorating a kids room.
Colorforms makes wall borders in at least two patterns: a dollhouse
with lots of rooms and a town with lots of lots of shops, firehouse,
etc. They are about two feet wide and have a smooth surface. Then
they come with people and furniture or vehicles and other things to
stick on them and move around!
The box showed these placed at floor level and a few feet up, where a
kid could get at them while standing.
I saw them at Montgomery Ward in Bedford, NH.
|
512.13 | Yeh on colorforms! | USCTR1::JTRAVERS | | Thu Dec 06 1990 14:31 | 5 |
| A member of my family recently covered one wall of their play room with
colorforms - actually two horizontal strips - one with a City
and below it (closer to the floor for smaller kids) a Farm. It's great!
|