12 ideas To keep Your Kids’ rooms tidy This Year (Finally!)

The myriad tiny pieces of Lego. The random socks that will never find a mate. The mysterious piles of paper that magically morph into missing homework. This is the stuff of kids’ rooms that requires remarkable wrangling skills on the part of parents and designers. here are some organized kids’ rooms that offer a master class in neatness.

Designer Emma Reddington skips the folding and hung a row of her son’s tee shirts so their checked patterns and colors are incorporated into the decor. It also makes them easy to get hold of in the morning, so getting dressed and out the door to school is less of a chore.

Photographer: Per Kristiansen

Source: house & home Makeovers 2011

Designer: Emma Reddington

Art projects and supplies take up a lot of room, but a large table lets siblings get creative at the same time. H&H senior editor Sally Armstrong gave her dining set a playful twist with color-blocked white and hot pink paint. artwork is taped to the wall with easy-to-remove washi tape, for a rotating gallery of masterpieces. An inexpensive Ikea bookshelf and trolley hold craft supplies.

Photographer: Virginia Macdonald

Source: house & home September 2013 issue

Designer: Sally Armstrong

Designer Grace Castaneda created this smart all-in-one solution for her daughter, which uses Ikea components such as a paper holder and cubbies. It keeps her child’s craft supplies organized and at her fingertips so she can work on projects happily for hours.

Editor’s tip: Hang the storage cubbies low so kids can reach their supplies, and put them away when finished with a project.

Photographer: Donna Griffith

Source: house & home November 2013 issue

Designer: Grace Castaneda

McCarthy Hinder interior design created this storage unit with painted-pink cubby holes to make the bed feel a lot more enclosed and create a spot to display collectibles for this B.C. family. The added benefit of this bunk bed shelving unit is that it also supplies a spot for a reading lamp on the top bunk.

Photographer: Janis Nicolay

Source: house & home may 2014 issue

Designer: McCarthy Hinder interior Design

Kids love to collect and show off their prized possessions, so create a spot just for them to style up favorite keepsakes — and change them up easily considering that passions are often fleeting as a child. picture rails and hanging boxes serve dual purpose as storage and display in the basement of Sarah Hartill’s home, where her kids change up what’s on show nearly daily.

Fotograf: Michael Graydon

Source: house & home August 2014

Designer: Sarah Hartill

This custom-made floating desk in the room of Annie, the daughter of H&H senior design editor Sally Armstrong, was inspired by a modern retail display unit, but doesn’t eat up floor space in a compact room. The return edges act as a book end to keep items from falling off, but the shelving unit still looks airy.

Designer Ashley Botten fitted the closet of 11-year-old Lucas with built-in cubbies and a dresser that are too good seeking to cover up, so no door is required. pale blue drawer fronts add a splash of color.

Photographer: Donna Griffith

Source: house & home August 2014 issue

Products: Bookshelf, rug, Klaus; Jielde task light, Hollace Cluny; wall colour, Oxford White (CC-30), Benjamin MooreDizajnér: Ashley Botten

Deti potrebujú priestor na hranie, takže dizajnérka Sarah Hartill umiestnila dvojité postele s koncom do konca, aby ich čítali ako jedna jednotka, takže na podlahe zostala veľa priestoru. Hračky sa dajú ľahko zastrčiť do zásuviek pod posteľami, keď je zábava skončená, a otvorené police naznačujú ľahký prístup k knihám v čase príbehu.

Fotograf: Michael Graydon

Zdroj: Dom a dom február 2014 Vydanie

Dizajnér: Sarah Hartill

Príťažlivosť košov je, že môžu pomôcť povzbudiť deti, aby zoskupovali podobné položky (nikdy nie je príliš skoro na skok na organizačné zručnosti). Ich prenosnosť uľahčuje vystrčenie z cesty.

Fotograf: Donna Griffith

Zdroj: Dom a domov január 2014 Vydanie

Dizajnér: Mazen El-Abdallah

Prečo sa zastaviť v jednom riadku? Dizajnérka Shirley Meisels zosilnila úložisko v izbe svojej dcéry stohovaním komody, čím vytvorila oveľa viac priestoru pre veci bez zmeny rozloženia miestnosti.

Fotograf: Kim Jeffery

Zdroj: House & Home Apríl 2016 Vydanie

Dizajnér: Shirley Meisels

V dome dizajnérov Cindy Bleeks sa v dome dizajnérov Cindy Bleeks počíta každý centimeter. V spálni zdieľaných jej dvoma deťmi postavila Cubbies do odkvapu a pridala malú výťahovú plochu pre svetlo.

Fotograf: Angus Fergusson

Zdroj: House & Home September 2010 Vydanie

Dizajnér: Cindy Bleeks

Čisté, ploché predné zásuvky vyrezávajú úložisko, ak tam nebolo. Vzhľadom na to, že zásuvky sú nízke k podlahe, preskočte hardvér v prospech základných ťahov prstov, takže pri prechádzaní okolo sa nedochádza k žiadnej projekcii, ktorá by zakopala deti.

Fotograf: Virginia MacDonald

Zdroj: Just For Kids 2016 Špeciálne vydanie

Dizajnér: Sally Armstrong

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *