Boston Herald

Get crash course on decorating dorm rooms

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When Young Huh left for college in the 1980s, she brought “one giant poster of The Cure, bedding from the local bed-and-bath store and maybe some desk accessorie­s.” Like so many Gen Xers, her one creative touch was asking a supermarke­t for leftover milk crates to use as bookshelve­s.

Now an interior designer, she has helped her own children decorate their dorm rooms, and she’s amazed at the design expectatio­ns among college students.

“It’s a level of decorating that did not even exist in my world view when I was in school,” Huh said.

Today, there are lots of products “that cater entirely to the college crowd,” she said.

Interior designer Jon Call sees the same phenomenon: While his main business is designing luxury homes in Manhattan, he also gets asked to design college living spaces.

“This new generation has grown up under the influence of home magazines, HGTV and the virtues of ‘democratic design.’ They understand the value of creating unique spaces for themselves,” he said. They want their dorm rooms “not only to function, but also to reflect who they are.”

We’ve asked Huh, Call and small-space design expert Theodore Leaf, host of the Design Network series “Living Big in Under 1,000 Sq. Ft.,” for advice on infusing a college dorm room with style and personalit­y, while keeping budget and function in mind.

As with any design project, Huh recommends beginning with an overall vision for the space. “Is it all one color and soothing? Is it ethnic eclectic? Are you going for pink extravagan­za? Clip some pictures or start a Pinterest page,” she said.

Then, choose a focal point for the room, something you would like to see every day. “It could be your bed with an oversize artwork or a fun suzani wall hanging over it,” Huh said. “Having something overscaled or very interestin­g to look at distracts the eye and makes you forget the size of the space.”

If your focal point includes saturated, dramatic color, it will also help disguise the fact that a room is small. “This could be a red bed in an otherwise neutral room,” Call said. “It allows the eye to focus on one thing and the defining walls to disappear.”

Call also suggests adding a beautiful headboard to the existing bed frame, elevating the look of basic dorm furniture.

Another trick: Keep your color scheme to just three colors to help make a small space feel bigger, and “focus on fewer pieces of furniture at a larger scale,” Call said.

Leaf says the few furniture pieces you bring should do double-duty, such as a storage ottoman large enough to function as a mini coffee table or as seating.

Call agreed: “Your end table may have a drawer that is outfitted with chargers and cords to make it an electronic­s station. Your bed could have bolsters on it to convert it into a daybed for additional seating.”

Huh suggests adding a loft to lift the bed, or at least adding risers to create under-bed storage space.

You can also use window draperies to make the room seem larger. Dorm rooms often come with vertical blinds, Leaf says, and you can transform the look by adding inexpensiv­e sheer curtains hung high on a tension rod over the blinds. To make it even more dramatic, use a larger rod (even a tension rod made for a shower curtain) and run the sheers across an entire wall.

A colorful rug is an easy way to add style and warmth. Temporary wallpaper also can make a dorm feel less institutio­nal.

Lighting is another powerful room-changer: Instead of living with harsh fluorescen­t lights, Leaf sug- gests gathering a few hand- me-down lamps from par- ents or grandparen­ts, and changing the lamp shades if you don’t like them.

Lastly, said Huh: “Fairy lights are de rigueur dorm decor.”

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 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY OF MR. CALL DESIGNS VIA AP ?? SPRUCE IT UP: Interior designer Jon Call suggests adding softer ambient light, a headboard, high-quality bedding and seating for friends to your dorm room.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF MR. CALL DESIGNS VIA AP SPRUCE IT UP: Interior designer Jon Call suggests adding softer ambient light, a headboard, high-quality bedding and seating for friends to your dorm room.
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