Kapiti News

desk JOB

Help your children study or get creative with an inspiring desk

- Photo / Bryce Carleton.

Your son or daughter is likely to spend many hours at his or her desk during the school years — and it’s not always to study, either! Arts and crafts, reading a book for fun or playing games on a laptop all require a sturdy yet inviting desk space.

Sometimes it can be hard for them to feel motivated to study before an exam or assignment, and in these cases a well-designed desk area can go a long way towards inspiring them to knuckle down and put in the hard yards.

Here are some design ideas for a desk in your child’s room, based on their schooling age.

Primary school

Let’s make learning fun!

In primary school, it’s more about introducin­g the little ones to reading, writing, maths and science. Make their bedroom feel like a mini-classroom by painting the wall above their desk with Resene FX Write-on Wall Paint, a great study tool as well as a chance for you to play teacher when you spend time supervisin­g them as they do their homework.

Magnetic whiteboard markers can be placed onto the wall directly, so they are always close at hand.

The desk itself shouldn’t feel like a scary, daunting area — instead, encourage them to use it often by painting it with bright, welcoming colours such as Resene Daredevil in a warm red, Resene Spotlight in a sunny yellow, Resene Bingo in an emerald green or Resene Captain Cook in a deep blue. Or let your child choose their favourite.

Paint the chair in a different yet complement­ary colour. Add a cushion to the back of the chair for comfort, and perhaps your little one may also need a pillow on the seat of the chair for some added height to reach the desk.

Keep the playful environmen­t by adding colourful picture-books or colour-by-numbers books on floating shelves above the desk, using chunky toys as book ends.

Intermedia­te school

Teach your child the importance of organisati­on. Mastering this skill during these two years can help make high school a breeze. Add storage options by placing stationery organisers on the desk for loose sheets of paper, pen stands for brushes and pencils, and make a small shelf system for placing to-do assignment­s, photocopie­s for research and finished notes in different levels.

You can stack folders along the desk’s edge, colour co-ordinating them by subject. A great way for them to have unique, one-of-a-kind folders for each class is by wallpaperi­ng the outside with patterns in different colours using the Resene Wallpaper Collection. You can always recycle leftover scraps in your home for this DIY project, too. Touch up the desk’s paint with more grown-up, neutral colours such as Resene Blast Grey or Resene Double Sea Fog, setting the stage for high school.

High school

Celebrate the occasion by making the desk a truly special part of the room. Add shimmering, metallic accents by painting drawers and legs in Resene metallics.

A useful DIY project is to nail wooden clipboards to the wall, easy for these young scholars to clip their permission slips, homework or exam summaries to. Paint these in Resene metallic testpot colours too, to match the desk.

Hang the clipboards in neat rows, or salonstyle with different framed prints or quotes between them for these budding academics to gaze at.

Have fun getting your geek on with the kids!

 ?? Photo / Melanie Jenkins ?? Left, clouds of colour form an inspiring scene in this project by Megan Harrison-Turner. She uses Resene Seagull, Re. Quarter Alabaster, R. Gorse, R. Shakespear­e and R. Jelly Bean to achieve this effect.
Photo / Melanie Jenkins Left, clouds of colour form an inspiring scene in this project by Megan Harrison-Turner. She uses Resene Seagull, Re. Quarter Alabaster, R. Gorse, R. Shakespear­e and R. Jelly Bean to achieve this effect.
 ?? Photo / Wendy Fenwick ?? In this project, Emily Somerville­Ryan combines Resene Gelato pink, R. Moonbeam yellow and R. Geyser.
Photo / Wendy Fenwick In this project, Emily Somerville­Ryan combines Resene Gelato pink, R. Moonbeam yellow and R. Geyser.
 ??  ?? Resene Coast and R. Poured Milk are a backdrop to this colourful desk and noteboards in Re. Influentia­l, R. Shilo, R. Yes Please and R. Raging Bull. Project by Vanessa Nouwens.
Resene Coast and R. Poured Milk are a backdrop to this colourful desk and noteboards in Re. Influentia­l, R. Shilo, R. Yes Please and R. Raging Bull. Project by Vanessa Nouwens.

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