Regina Leader-Post

No need for renters to compromise on style

- REBECCA KEILLOR

Just because you don’t own the home you live in doesn’t mean you can’t completely make it your own, says interior designer and home stylist Laura Melling.

More and more, larger cities such as Toronto and Vancouver are becoming “just too expensive” for anyone thinking of buying a home, she says. “I think a lot of people are intentiona­lly choosing to rent, and just because it’s a rental, it doesn’t mean you should spend any less time or energy on a space because at the end of the day, it’s still the home you’re coming home to.”

Choosing a few key pieces, for your home is key, Melling says.

“It can be a mash-up,” she says. “And really eclectic. It doesn’t have to be all the same style; it can be a lot more interestin­g and reflective of someone’s personalit­y.”

Melling often works with a home builder and recently handled the interior design for a collection of rental homes in B.C.

“We’re not changing any finishes,” she says. “It’s more about how can you style the space with furniture, textiles, objects and artwork to really make it your own. We used really soft linen drapery, for example ... and I think that really did a lot to warm it up — otherwise, it’s white walls, it’s very clean. And then the rugs and linen, that’s where we relax the space and warm it up.”

Something people can easily do in rental homes to personaliz­e and stylize them is a gallery wall, Melling says.

“We did a pretty eclectic gallery wall that was a combinatio­n of photograph­y, textile pieces and prints (in the rental developmen­t),” she says. “It really brings personalit­y into the space, and it’s really uplifting and not too cold and anonymous.”

Rugs also work wonders, she says.

“With rentals, you don’t have a choice about flooring,” she says. “Rugs can go a long way in really warming up a space and making it your own,” she says, specifical­ly in the main living areas and bedrooms.

Modular and multi-purpose furniture, she says, is also a great investment if you’re renting, with pieces like a Jens End Table transition­ing easily from one room to another.

“So many of the condo spaces are designed with open floor plan concepts,” Melling says. “So we’re starting to go with more modular furniture. Things that can be very easily moved around to fit your lifestyle needs. A sofa that can be pulled apart and reimagined in two loveseat configurat­ions, for example, or ottomans scattered around for kids to jump on.”

This same movement is seen in interior design for larger spaces, she says, in that designers are going for more “relaxed,” less-formal furniture arrangemen­ts.

You don’t need to spend a lot of money to style your place in a way that really makes it feel like home, says Melling, just a bit of time.

A big part of her work is styling homes for photo shoots, she says, and her husband often notices that their apartment (which they rent) empties out during these photo shoots, and when she brings everything back, their home is “reimagined.”

Art is put up differentl­y in different configurat­ions, and the bookcase is also redesigned into a new configurat­ion.

“I changed out the artwork only in the last month,” she says. “And it really transforme­d the space — it injected this whole new energy. I have a lot of prints and things hanging around, and the compositio­n that I ended up doing on one of our main walls has some pieces that are framed, but then I had two prints by a friend of mine, and I was like, ‘I can’t frame these right now, it’s not in the budget,’ so I just put them up with nicer clips on the wall, and they’re just hanging on their own.”

 ?? JANIS NICOLAY ?? Invest in versatile pieces and modular furniture if renting, says interior designer Laura Melling.
JANIS NICOLAY Invest in versatile pieces and modular furniture if renting, says interior designer Laura Melling.

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