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Decorating A Teens
Room
If you've followed the first two installments of our three-part series on
decorating for kids' bedrooms, you've most likely noticed the underlying
theme running through both:
Just as when decorating for adults, when
decorating for kids, form should follow function first–then aesthetic
taste. In other words the first step should always be to consider how the room will be used, not only in general
terms, but in detail: What specific
activities need to be accommodated in this particular space?
For example, babies' rooms, or nurseries, generally need to provide space
and surfaces for sleep, changing, storage of clothes and small toys and
maybe a rocking chair or cradle. Young kids' rooms can lose the changing
table and maybe the rocking chair, but need space for play and arts and
crafts, and once kids leave their toddler years they usually want to have a
say in the decor.
And teens, in turn, have their own set of needs. Up until the last ten years
or so, most people didn't think of teen decorating as separate from
decorating for younger kids–as little Jane got older, everything in her
room was left pretty much the same except for an abundance of posters and
dirty clothes on the floor.
In recent years, though, as the market for home furnishings for non-adults
has exploded, new ideas about what kids need in their rooms have emerged as
well as new lines of furniture targeted specifically for them. The reigning
trend dictates that teens fare best in sort of apartment-within-the-house,
minus the kitchen but with a private bath. The idea is that this will help
ease the eventual transition into independent living, while still keeping
the family and teen within close reach of one another. And the private bath
makes the long hours teens tend to spend there a little easier on the rest
of the household.
So here's a rundown of the basic elements you'll want to include in a modern
teen's room:
The Usual Suspects
Regardless of whatever else the room will offer, the bed, work area and
storage are still the essentials. A desk that is large enough to hold a
computer and still have ample space to spread out papers and books is ideal,
as is a comfortable, ergonomically sound chair. The good chair is more
important than ever, as sitting at a desk e-mailing has come to rival
talking on the phone as the favorite teen activity.
Storage is also more important now than when they were younger, as this is
the age when kids really get into defining themselves by their stuff:
clothes, makeup, sneakers, magazines, CDs, trendy electronic gadgets, and
more clothes are of the utmost importance to your average teen. And while
everyone knows that most teens are serious slobs, providing ample storage
for the mass junk they'll accumulate can help keep the mess to whatever
minimum of neatness they can manage.
And speaking of storage, don't forget to include extra storage options in
the bathroom for the vast assortment of grooming products teens often like
to experiment with, and that includes guys as well as girls. These days it's
more than just Oxy-10 and hair gel-now there's a different paint-on
haircolor for each day, body glitter, unisex nail polish, and more creams
and potions and pomades aimed at the teen market than you can shake a stick
at.
The Connection
It goes without saying that teens like to talk on the phone at great length,
so you might as well work it into the decorating scheme–and make sure that
it's either cordless or on a very long cord that can move easily between the
desk, the bed and the bathroom, or consider having more than one extension
in the room. And bear in mind that it might be easier on the rest of the
household if it's on a separate line from the rest of the house. As for the
phone itself, there's a wide assortment of novelty phones on the market
ranging from nifty to tacky and beyond. Clear plastic, in fruity iMac colors, is hot right now.
Come in, Sit Down, Relax
It has become common for teens to have not only a bed, but a sofa or pair of
comfortable chairs–sort of a personal miniature living room for
entertaining friends and watching TV. For many parents the jury is still out
on this one, for it encourages kids to stay in their rooms all the time
without ever interacting with the rest of the family. For others, though,
it's all the better not to be subjected to teen taste in music and
movies–after all, a little Britney can go a long way. And a sofa can
double as an extra bed for friends sleeping over, another diehard teen
favorite. An inexpensive, undersized, foam-rubber fold-out sofa might be a
good idea, or even one of the newer inflatable ones (watch out for kitty
with those, though–one sharp claw might be the end).
Sound and the Fury
And speaking of Britney, most teens like to crank up the tunes as loud as
you'll let them. It must be something hormonal–apparently they just can't
hear the music unless the folks in the next town can hear it too. To save
your own sanity if not your ears, you might want to include a lot of fabric
and carpeting in the room to absorb some of the sound. Big pillows on the
floor and clothes folded on shelves instead of in drawers are also good for
this. It's probably not such a good idea to totally soundproof the place,
however–it's good to be able to tell when they're home, and of course you
want to be able to hear them call if something's wrong.
The Bottom Line
Above all, the main thing to remember when decorating for a teen is to do it
with his or her input. At this age, kids are all about creating an
environment that expresses who they are, and if you don't cater to this need
then they will take the lovely and seemingly reasonable decorating scheme
you devise without them and alter it beyond recognition. You might as well
work with them, and you may find it comforting that teens are now more
design-conscious than ever before. All the marketing the design industry is
aiming at them is making its mark on their taste, and many teens now really
care about what constitutes good design and want to surround themselves with
it.
Good luck and have fun!
–Holly McWhorter
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