DIY dorm redo: A canopy chandelier and other simple projects


DwellStudio founder and creative director Christiane Lemieux’s tips include papering inside a bookcase with colorful paper and Blu-tack for easy removal later. PHOTO CREDIT: Laura Moss Photography


DwellStudio founder and creative director Christiane Lemieux’s tips include creating a chandelier with a hula hoop, duct tape, two curtain panels, a string of lights and washi tape. Instructions are in Lemieux’s “Industrial Bohemian Luxe” YouTube tutorial. PHOTO CREDIT: Laura Moss Photography


Hanging a temporary, adhesive mural and incorporating bedding that coordinates with the room is both cost-effective and attractive. PHOTO CREDIT: Laura Moss Photography

For teenagers heading off to college, it’s both a design dream and a challenge: What to do with a small, nondescript dorm room — a space you might have to share? A space that might include furniture you can neither remove nor alter?

Do-it-yourself projects are a great, low-cost way to inject personality into a temporary space.

Some DIY advice from the experts:

Reclaim old wood from junked furniture to turn into new furniture, said Maxwell Ryan, who focuses on economical, small-space design as founder and CEO of the New York-based lifestyle blog Apartment Therapy. For instance, you might build a desk by positioning a wood slab, such as a piece of an old door, atop two inexpensive file cabinets.

“When you think about it, a desk is mostly just a hunk of wood,” Ryan said.

Create a headboard from a large mirror, which reflects light and makes a room look larger.

If you want to go the cinder-block route (or plastic milk crates or wood pallets) to make bookcases, a desk or other simple furniture, be sure to paint them first — preferably white or something bright, Ryan suggests. Wood pallets, in particular, are useful: “They can become coffee tables or foundations for beds or sofas.”

Christine Lemieux, founder of DwellStudio and creative director at Wayfair, suggests personalizing bookcases with colorful scrapbook or other paper on the inside back wall, adhering it with Blu-tack, which removes easily. Or use washi tape, which also comes off easily, on nearly any surface: the edges of bookshelves, computer cords and furniture, including headboards and mirrors.

You can create a graphic image on a dorm wall with washi tape, Lemieux suggests, or cover a large wall with temporary wallpaper or an adhesive mural. Try the temporary dry-erase-board or chalkboard wallpaper, on which you can write (and erase) your daily activities.

Temporary wallpaper also can be used on furniture, she says. Or jazz up a plain, white dresser (your own, not the one provided by the dorm or in a furnished apartment) with colored Sharpie pens. Update drawer pulls with bright duct tape or spray paint.

Most important, Lemieux said, is the bed, usually a dorm room’s centerpiece. Think of it as a sofa: Push it sideways against a wall and dress it up like a day bed.

“Your bed is your lounge area, your media center, your office, your everything,” she said.

Hang a tapestry or curtain behind it to create an inexpensive but dramatic headboard. Over the bed, hang a canopy chandelier made from a hula hoop, duct tape, two curtain panels, a string of lights and washi tape.

“It’s so easy to do and so inexpensive, and provides such a big bang,” Lemieux said.

Canopy and chandelier DIY

Supplies

1 hula hoop1 roll of gold duct tapewashi taperibbon bits1 string of indoor white lights2 sheer curtain panelsPretty cord

Assembly

1. Cut the hula hoop open.

2. Cover the hoop with the gold-colored duct tape.

3. Thread the two curtain panels onto the hoop.

4. Close the hoop with more gold duct tape.

5. Drape the string of lights around the hoop.

6. Add decorative washi and ribbon details to the string of lights.

7. Tie a pretty cord at four balanced points on the hoop and hang it from these points.

Jennifer Forker writes for The Associated Press.

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