On Jul 2, 1:37=C2=A0pm, meatnub <meat...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> On Jul 2, 1:00=C2=A0pm, Chris <chrissype...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
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> > On Jul 1, 11:27=EF=BF=BDam, meatnub <meat...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
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> > > Since our son has been cosleeping with us, we haven't done anything
> > > with his room. He doesn't even go in there except to maybe pull a
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> > > or toy out of a box (he spends most time downstairs, outside, etc.)
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> > > So we're thinking of moving him to his own bed in his room
> > > (eventually) and would like to decorate it.
>
> > > I'd love to paint it like the jungle, under the sea, a castle.. but
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> > > can't paint. I mean, we can, i can draw a little, but it would be
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> > > amateurish and probably crappy looking. And then if he grows bored
of
> > > it? or doesn't like it? lol
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> > > So we could just do plain paint.. blue.. or some color.. maybe half
> > > color up top and different below but there's painting...
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> > > wallpaper...
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> > > murals, but they are expensive.
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> > > just wondering what other ideas are out there or are painting and
> > > wallpaper pretty much tried and true?
>
> > Borders and paint are as far as I will go due to the nastiness of
> > wallpaper removal. lol. You can actually create a really nice themed
> > room just with the beds, comfortors, curtains, and accessories you
> > place in the room. Places like paint stores, such as Home Depot or
> > Lowe's, have decorating books you can glance through and they have
> > some really awesome kid room ideas in them.
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> > We are currently working on a train-themed room for our 2 1/2-y/o, as
> > he adores trains. I've so far bought a train luggage rack and a train-
> > station-style clock to hang in the corner. He already has a gazillion
> > trains. At this age, the age-appropriate decor can be outgrown by the
> > time they are in kindergarten though too. I'm contemplating what to
> > put on the walls still. There is a really neat mural he would love,
> > but I dunno about how it goes on and it is expensive. I've also tossed
> > around painting his room to look like the inside of the Polar Express
> > passenger car too - not sure if all of that effort would be worth a
> > few years, but I do love to see them thrilled and happy about "their"
> > spaces.
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> > My oldest currently has an army plane themed room with the photo/plane
> > border in the center, below that painted army green, above that
> > painted khaki (sp?). He has a plane-themed duvet cover and blue
> > camouflage bedskirt and sheets because the border has a blue border.
> > We bought plane-themed pics and statue-of-liberty with some red
> > throughout to bring out the red decals on some of those planes on the
> > border. We bought a huge wooden plane propeller that is hung on the
> > wall as well - about 6' in length. I also went to an army surplus
> > store and bought some of that camouflaging netting they place over
> > things to hide things from aerial view and made them curtains and
> > bought a pair of silver plane-shaped tiebacks from Pottery Barn to
> > hang them.
>
> > My daughter's room was initially our nursery and I used the Woolie
> > (sp?) to paint combination colors in there that turned out to match
> > her new theme so I only changed the border in her room. She has
> > flowers, butterflies, and dragonflies, cute bugs, as her theme. I
> > bought canvas pictures and created the art in there myself. I bought
> > some bug-shaped art figures that were meant to hang themselves and
> > glued them onto the canvas after painting a base them for each. I also
> > bought some clay and made some shapes myself that I painted and glued
> > on also. I also bought some pieces from a store made out of metal or
> > brown cast iron of some sort - they looked rusty and looked like they
> > were probalby meant to be outdoors, but they went with our theme, so I
> > bought them and bought about 6 colors of spray paint. I spray painted
> > them with all 6 colors to match the room. You can find all sorts of
> > things to run with.- Hide quoted text -
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> > - Show quoted text -
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> I found out that murals are nothing but the picture turned into panels
> of wallpaper. you get like 6 or 8 panels, and have to apply paste and
> the whole 9. forget that! especially for a child who's tastes will
> change every few years.
>
> you are right - as far as decorating without wallpaper/painting. and
> accessorizing. that's what we're thinking of doing right now.- Hide
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> - Show quoted text -
yeah, not sure I'll go with the mural if that is the case. This house
had wallpaper everywhere that was just a bear to get down. Once
revealing it, there were also some damaged disintegrating walls hiding
behind some of it. Of course, the previous owners felt that spackle
was the fix-all for everything from a gap between the floor/wall trim
to behind sinks, to actually using 2 wooden ****ms spackled to the back
of some tiles around the tub faucet fixtures. I can't even guess at
the differing compounds they used to get some of that paper to stick -
some took waaaaaay longer to remove than others. I swore then and
there I would never use wallpaper.


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