1. Something borrowed
Architectural details can turn into furniture. A mantelpiece, as an illustration, can present construction for a fabric-lined foam headboard. If over-the-high is your model, go nearly all the way in which to the ceiling with a salvaged pocket door and by-the-foot crown molding. (And also you’ll have room for sconces.) Greatest for: those with a way of event-and history.
2. Creating boundaries
Take a leaf from the Murphy bed book: Frame your mattress with custom cubbies, forming in the course of a headboard in reverse. This mix of open and closed storage enables you to show what you want whereas stashing the rest. Painting the headboard zone in a neutral shade keeps the whole thing from being overwhelming. Best for: the mildly OCD, who will hold the open shelves nice and neat.
Take a leaf from the Murphy bed book: Frame your mattress with custom cubbies, forming in the course of a headboard in reverse. This mix of open and closed storage enables you to show what you want whereas stashing the rest. Painting the headboard zone in a neutral shade keeps the whole thing from being overwhelming. Best for: the mildly OCD, who will hold the open shelves nice and neat.
3. What lies within
When space is tight, it pays to search for storage in uncommon locations-say, between the studs, as San Francisco architect John Lum did here. The boxy cabinets are set in a wall that divides this bed room from a windowed entryway; resin panels let light filter from there into the darker bedroom. Finest for: the fixed reader, who can never be far from a book
When space is tight, it pays to search for storage in uncommon locations-say, between the studs, as San Francisco architect John Lum did here. The boxy cabinets are set in a wall that divides this bed room from a windowed entryway; resin panels let light filter from there into the darker bedroom. Finest for: the fixed reader, who can never be far from a book
source: sunset
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