Children's bedrooms present a unique decorating challenge.
On the one hand, kids are brimming with ardent fascinations; on
the other, these ardent fascinations can be somewhat fleeting
(remember Smurfs?), and you may balk at the idea of decking out
an entire room with what may well be the theme of the moment.
So how do you acknowledge your kids' passions and express their
individuality without breaking the bank or committing to a
decade of, say, the Tazmanian Devil? Why, stencils, of course.
Tips
Basic shapes make the best stencils. Some themes we like:
Dinosaurs (such as this diplodocus)
The beach: fish, shells, sun, clouds
Insects: dragonflies, butterflies, ladybugs, inchworms
Cars and trucks and things that go
| Prep Time: Under 1 hour | |
| What you need: | |
| Manila Folders
Paper Plates Plastic Report Covers Scissors paint | |
| Seasons: Year round | |
| Materials: paints, scissors | |
| Instructions: | |
| 1. | Keep it cheap. Plastic report covers, manila folders, and
masking tape often work as well as more expensive specialty
materials, as do acrylic craft paints or latex wall paints.
|
| 2. | Keep it simple. Start with a stencil shape that's no more
intricate than a cookie cutter. Remember, straight lines are
easier to cut than curves.
|
| 3. | Keep it dry. Pour some paint on a paper plate, coat your
stencil brush (available at craft stores), then blot it on a dry
area of the plate. Use a "pouncing" motion to dab paint onto the
wall (brushing could cause seepage). Work from the outside of the
stencil in.
|
| 4. | Keep it clean. Wipe any paint from the underside of the stencil before you reposition it. To ensure good wall contact (and fewer leaks), use masking tape to firmly affix the stencil in place |
Variations
Stenciling allows you to reproduce a beloved image around
an entire roomon walls, furniture, and accessoriesplus, it's
cheap, quick, and offers thrilling results, even for art-shy
novices. Talentwise, the ideas below require, at most, the
freehand sketching of a leaf. By and large, they rely on
photocopying, tracing, and sheer simplicity. From a
star-studded
lamp to a
wall
crawling with snails to an
inviting,
shady tree, our projects introduce you to a range of ideas
and materials that can be easily adapted to suit your own
children's tastes and interests. Best of all, when those
interests change, you can just start over with a new set of
stencils.
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