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How To Design A Children’s Toy Room

Play is the child’s nature, Every child need a single room to play, it must be soft, comfort, safe and helpful to intelligence.

There are some considerations for a toy room decorating.

Simple decor – Keep it simple. Too much color, too many toys or too many designs can overstimulate your child.
Color – Go with a neutral wall color if you plan to add murals or brightly-colored furniture. For added color punch you can always paint one wall a bright color like red, hot pink or ocean blue. Encourage creativity by painting one wall (or the bottom third of all walls) with blackboard paint

Decorate at eyelevel – Furniture that is too tall can be unsafe. You don’t want your child climbing up on a bookcase to get their favorite toy off the top shelf.

Furniture – Every toy room needs great seating and work surfaces. Soft cubed ottomans, benches, art easels, tables and chairs sized to fit the occupants – each can provide a fun and comfortable to play. Look for practical, sturdy furniture. You can maximize floor space in small rooms with multi-function furniture such as storage cubes used as the base for a play table like Ikea’s Trofast frames and storage boxes and Wish Room’s storage units. Don’t forget to include some seating for adults too! Unfinished furniture is a great start for brightly colored chests, tables and chairs. Use small toys for knobs.

Storage – Shelves, tubs, baskets, wall cubes are all critical elements to store and display toys, games, puzzles, books, art supplies and projects. You can buy wall-to-wall bookshelves and bin storage sets from Target or Pottery Barn Kids. Storage units should be easy access for the child to add and remove toys.

Window Treatments – Dress the windows with colorful curtains made from bed sheets. For added privacy or light control you can add blinds and shades in a contrasting color. Printed blinds made in various Disney themes are always a hit with kids. If the room doesn’t have windows, add framed pieces of mural scenes or cloud-printed wallpaper.
Carpet – Even if your room has wall-to-wall carpeting, you should consider adding an area rug to your toyroom area. The rug provides extra warmth and protection for little occupants – as well protection against stains to floors and carpet from wayward paints and snacks. The rug could be anything from an inexpensive carpet remnant in a bright color to a fun kid’s rug in a game or map design.

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