The Star Malaysia - Star2

Making her mark

Just because you’re renting a space, it doesn’t mean you can’t stamp your own style all over it.

- By KIM PALME

MOST renters don’t invest a lot of time or money on decorating their apartments, especially when they don’t plan to stay long.

Not Sue Hunter.

When the interior designer, owner of Home for a Change in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota, found herself between homes, she pulled out all the stops to make her temporary rental her own.

First she rented a truck and went speed-shopping for new furniture, accessorie­s and quick-fix “decor helpers” like decals and drapery panels. Then she began a three-day marathon of moving, styling and picture-hanging until her two-bedroom apartment in Minnetonka, Minnesota, was a showcase of her personal taste and style.

“This does not look like an apartment,” she says of her finished creation.

Hunter became a renter after years of homeowners­hip when she sold her longtime home in December 2015. Her three children were grown, and the house, with its half hectare lot, pool and gardens, required too much upkeep.

“I was travelling more, and I had to hire people to take care of it,” says Hunter, who works with design clients in both Minnesota and Florida. “I wanted to keep life more simple.”

She started looking for a condo, but couldn’t find the right one.

“I didn’t like anything I saw,” she says. “Everything was too dark, or I didn’t like the building, or it was too expensive.” So after selling her house, she opted to rent – and resume the search for a condo later.

She found an apartment she liked that had tall windows and a barrel-vault ceiling in the living room. “It makes it feel so much bigger,” she says.

But even though the high ceiling made it feel more spacious, the two-bedroom apartment was less than half the size of her 260sq m house. She would have to dramatical­ly downsize her belongings. And many of her things just weren’t going to work in the apartment.

“It was painful to leave my house,” she says now. Parting with some of her beloved artwork was the hardest of all. But Hunter seized the challenge of paring down and transformi­ng her apartment into a place that felt like home.

To get started, she culled her furniture and accessorie­s to the few pieces she wanted to bring with her, including a grey velvet sofa, a few pieces of artwork and her favourite area rug.

“I would not give up my zebra rug,” she says.

Some of her other favourite pieces went to her mother. “I decorated her independen­t-living apartment with them, so I still have the enjoyment of them. She loves them.”

Hunter sold the rest of her stuff at an estate sale. Then she went speed-shopping, hitting affordable stores like Home Goods, Ikea and At Home to buy furniture and accessorie­s that fit the apartment. “All my big stuff I had to replace,” she explains.

Hunter moved in on a Saturday, and by Tuesday, the transforma­tion was complete. She worked late into the evenings until the last piece of artwork was hung in place. “I had to get it done,” she says.

Now that the space is decorated the way she wants it, her shortterm home feels cozy and comfortabl­e. The style is more contempora­ry than what she had in her house, with “French flair”, she says. “I have a love affair with Paris – the architectu­re, the fashion.”

The colour palette is dramatic black and white, accented with grey and pops of turquoise. Some of the furniture is mirrored, and Hunter also added huge framed mirrors as a decorative element. “I love mirrored stuff. I love the reflection of it. Now things just sparkle.”

Like most renters, Hunter couldn’t change the structure or the 1980s-era finishes and fixtures inside her apartment. But she found other ways to add flair –

from peel-and-stick murals and decals, to plug-in chandelier­s, to battery-operated mood lighting.

To create a focal point on one wall, she chose a giant mural – a black-andwhite photo of a woman gazing at a mist-shrouded Eiffel Tower. “You can peel it off and it won’t damage the wall or leave a sticky residue,” she says.

Floating shelves from Ikea add visual interest and a place to display books and accent pieces in her guest bedroom. “They’re so neat and clean. You don’t have ugly brackets,” she says.

To dress up her windows with their generic blinds, Hunter added side-panel draperies. She also hung bold blackand-white-striped side panels to create a “French bistro” effect for her kitchen.

Even her bathroom got a floor-toceiling drapery panel, edged with ribbon, to dress up the shower curtain.

What she didn’t like in the apartment, she hid, including the towel bars in the bathrooms, which she covered up with new towels. “It didn’t cost a lot of money, but it made a big difference,” she says.

She’s also not a fan of her kitchen floor tile, so she dressed it with an area rug.

All told, Hunter spent about US$4,000 (RM16,300) for new furniture and accessorie­s to fill her apartment.

It was worth it, in her opinion, to “surround yourself with everything you love so it doesn’t feel like an apartment”.

Her experience inspired her to start an “Apartment Decorating” board on her Pinterest page.

“People who rent think it’s not theirs, so they don’t do stuff,” she said. “I’m thrilled to have people over and have it looking pretty.” — Star Tribune/ Tribune News Service

 ??  ?? Peel-and-stick decals in a fleur-de-lis pattern add visual interest to generic cabinets and backsplash. Hunter didn’t like the floor tiles so she covered them up with a dramatic rug.
Peel-and-stick decals in a fleur-de-lis pattern add visual interest to generic cabinets and backsplash. Hunter didn’t like the floor tiles so she covered them up with a dramatic rug.
 ??  ?? Hunter decorated her living room with Parisian flair, using black and white to create drama. — Photos: TNS
Hunter decorated her living room with Parisian flair, using black and white to create drama. — Photos: TNS

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