49 Kids Room Ideas to Bookmark From the AD Archive
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Kids room ideas are everywherebut perhaps nowhere are they more special than in the pages of AD. For designers, decorating for a child brims with license to go all in on color and daydream-worthy design schemes, so it helps to not think of them as predictable pink and blue monoliths. As the ultimate blank canvases, they might just be the most fun part of a decoration project. With these thoughts in mind, we rounded up 49 of our favorite kids rooms ideas from the AD archiveincluding memorable spaces by Nate Berkus and Jeremiah Brent, Miles Redd, and many others. Just bear in mind that they may spark joy regardless of your age.A sophisticated Brooklyn oasisA copper-hued nursery from July/August 2019Photographed by Sam Frost, AD, July/August 2019As founder and CEO of Maisonette, the one-stop shop for stylish baby and kids clothing, toys, and decor, Sylvana Ward Durrett naturally desired a nursery that matched the chic ambiance permeating the rest of her Carrier and Companydesigned Brooklyn home. The rose-tinted metallic crib and pillow-festooned sofa nestled against the window are enlivened by Flat Vernaculars painterly terra-cotta Perseid wallpaper dressing the ceiling.One classy Greenwich Village nurseryPoppys world from the October 2015 issuePhotography by Douglas Friedman, Architectural Digest, October 2015When renovating their airy Greenwich Village residence, buzzy design duo Nate Berkus and Jeremiah Brent ensured their daughter Poppys nursery was just as glamorous as the other rooms. Its wrapped in soothing Zak + Fox wallpaper that reimagines a hand-painted design by Apparatus artistic director Gabriel Hendifar, and a white crib from RH Baby & Child is planted on a patterned Caitlin Wilson rug.Two nostalgic Los Angeles hangoutsPattern, pattern everywhere in the LA home of Mary Kitchen and familyPhotography by Stephen Kent Johnson, AD, July/August 2022Another fun room in the home.Photography by Stephen Kent Johnson, AD, July/August 2022Inside a Hollywood Regency-style LA abode built byCaspar Ehmcke in 1966, television presenter, model, and philanthropist Mary Kitchen resides with her husband and three daughters Baye, Eden, and Maine. Eccentric wonderland is the unofficial theme of the kids room decor, designed byJamie Bush. (Architect William Hefner and landscape guru Raymond Jungles also worked on the project.) The house features a bunk room for the girls lively sleepovers, dominated by breezy tulip-print fabric from Quadrille. Its rounded out with an earthy RH carpet, Silvio Piattelli pendant, and skirted chair covered in blue Dedar velvet.Enveloped in the same botanical motif Quadrille wallpaper and fabric as the bunk room, but in a different colorway, one of the girls bedrooms in the Kitchen house is balanced with a vintage Stilnovo pendant from Rewire Gallery. Zoning the house by color allowed us to control the incredible variety of pieces and themes that Mary was drawn to, Bush toldAD.Homey vibes in an Alabama bedroomOld and new coalesce in this childs room.Photography by Ty Cole, AD, April 2023Louisa Pierce of the AD100 studio Pierce & Ward grew up in Birmingham, so moving back to the city with her husband Austin Scaggs and two children Levon and Poet was a homecoming. Like the rest of the Tudor-style residence, Poets layered bedroom exudes an attractive patina starring heirloom pieces like a brass-and-iron bed and chaise longue. Artwork and objects mingle with a Pottery Barn Teen snake mirror and lighthearted Ferm Living horse wallpaper. As Im getting older, Ive realized I dont want a room to look perfect. I find so much beauty in the mess, Pierce commented toADat the time.A dreamy Long Island bedroomA Super Girl needs a super room.Photography by Isabel Parra, AD, April 2021Fashion designers Mark Badgley and James Mischka once owned the 1930s stable in Locust Valley, New York, that designer Asia Baker Stokes shares with her husband and two daughters, Ava and Georgia. Among the houses sunny, artful rooms is Avas personal refuge, simply decked out with an Isamu Noguchi lantern and custom-painted Chelsea Textiles bed that matches the cool blue hue of the floral Marthe Armitage wallpaper. Its important for your spaces not to feel like a showroom, Baker Stokes pointed out toAD.A playroom that conjures the circusUnder the big top chez Swanson FrankPhotography by Isabel Parra, AD, June 2022Baker Stokes does it again. In this French country-style Greenwich, Connecticut, home where photographer Claiborne Swanson Frank lives with her husband and two sons, an uplifting palette of blue and white holds court. Consider the office turned boys playroom reminiscent of a circus tent, for which designer Baker Stokes animated the pitched doorway with striped cotton curtains from Jane Shelton Fabrics. To up the ante, she paired them with a mlange of punchy, painted stripes and a bold-print Jonathan Adler rug.It was a labor of love, Swanson Frank shared withAD. I think that so often kids rooms arent given that level of attention.Pattern languageAn artful mix of eras at the hacienda home of Michelle NussbaumerPhotography by Douglas Friedman, AD, April 2019San Miguel de Allende is a relatively quick flight from Dallas, where designer Michelle Nussbaumer is basedbut her familys holiday hacienda in the Mexican city feels otherworldly. (Much of the property dates to the 16th century.)I love bringing timeworn techniques into a modern era, Nussbaumer toldAD at the time of publication.Take her daughter Niles bedroom, where a centerpiece mural Nussbaumer enlarged from a 1940s Mexican pottery pattern is bolstered by a vintage chair and the bed she draped in a canopy of Rajasthani hangings.One beautifully blue bedroomA photograph from the January 2014 issue of Architectural DigestPhotographed by Oberto Gili, Architectural Digest, January 2014AD100 architect Annabelle Selldorf renovated this New York town house, which belongs to art dealer Christophe Van de Weghe and his wife, Anne-Galle. Seen here, their two adorable children, Tristan and Emma, perch on a De La Espada bed with the family dog, Cookie. Nearby, a pair of stuffed giraffes enjoy a light-filled city view. The drawing table is by Ducduc.A good type of red scareHide-and-seek circa March 2018Photographed by Miles Aldridge, AD, March 2018In the room of Amanda Brookss son, the graphic use of red, white, and blue is almost overwhelming (as her childs stance makes clear). Nonetheless, from a nearby toy Elmo to a Christmas-worthy bed, the interior is a riotous delight. Its star attraction might just be the vintage David Hicks hex motif rug, a design classic.One dreamy view of VeniceGondoliers galore in May 2008Photographed by Ken Hayden, Architectural Digest, May 2008When AD100 interior designer Joanne de Guardiola set sail on a project to decorate her familys yacht, she was in for a treatthanks to an original mural of Venices Grand Canal that she discovered under a fabric wall covering. (I was so excited to find itits hand-done, she commented at the time.) The restored work complements the rest of the cabin perfectly. Theres beautiful teak cabinetry throughout, she added.A forested Adirondacks hideawayA room for peacocking, circa July 2014Photographed by Pieter Estersohn, Architectural Digest, July 2014Designer Thom Filicia and the architects at Shope Reno Wharton were inspired by Gilded Age Adirondack camps when creating this retreat on Upper Saranac Lake in New York. In a daughters bedroom, seen here, a Cavern wallpaper brings the nearby forestry in. A Matthew Williamson design for The Rug Company covers the floor, and the sconces are from Urban Electric. Vintage bed frames were painted anew in a neon green by Benjamin Moore.One peachy-keen bedroom on the island of MustiqueTwo four-poster canopy beds, pictured in August 2006Photographed by Luke White, Architectural Digest, August 2006Emma Burns of Sibyl Colefax & John Fowler designed the house in which this childrens bedroom is located. Peach fabric, which was used on the beds and on one small lampshade, was sourced from Manuel Canovas.An ode to French style in HoustonFranco-Texan flair in the August 2013 issue of Architectural Digest.Photographed by Eric Piasecki, Architectural Digest, August 2013The Stark Carpet is lovely and the Rubelli fabric charming, but its the lit la polonaise that steals the show in this daughters bedroom in Houston. And if that specific style of French canopy bed werent enough to turn the head of a Francophile, consider the the Louis XVI marquise.The cozy and colorful room of a Brooklyn childRed and white and cute all over circa August 2015Photographed by Pieter Estersohn, AD, August 2015Wall coverings by Hinson & Co. and Phillip Jeffries provide this red-and-white childrens room with an abundance of graphic, pattern-filled design notes. The rest of the Brooklyn brownstone in which it is located is just as charming. The couple wanted the home to be dense, warm, and inviting, designer Nick Olsen commented to AD at the time.A Blackberry Farmworthy childrens roomA November 2012 scenePhotographed by Pieter Estersohn, Architectural Digest, November 2012Benjamin Moores Crystal Clear paint and a rug by Stark Carpet help set the tone for this daughters bedroom, which was designed by AD100 decorator Suzanne Kasler. Its located in the home of the owners of Blackberry Farm, the renowned Tennessee retreat. Suzannes a great editor, Mary Celeste, one of the homeowners, said of Kasler at the time. She knew that we wanted every piece of furniture to be used, that everything must have a purpose.A Modernist marvel in the HamptonsYellow racing stripes rule this November 2012 room.Photographed by Michael Moran, November 2012AD100 firm SheltonMindel & Associates updated this Hamptons home with a charming childrens room. (The structure of the shingle-clad Colonial Revival estate was designed by fellow AD100 member Robert A.M. Stern.) There is no surface that was left untouched, but there has been a lot of respect for what came before, Mindel told AD at the time of the project. Here, a Jonas trundle bed and CB2 yellow stools are balanced by an Alvar Aalto table and chairs and a Eero Saarinen Womb chair.One childs paradise foundThe Hawaiian bedroom, photographed December 2007Photographed by Matthew Millman, Architectural Digest, December 2007Suburban ideal or tropical escape? Both, it would seem, in the case of this Hawaii-set childrens bedroomwhere a playhouse-themed bunk bed reigns supreme. Florals and nearby lanterns help bridge the gap between outer environment and the elaborate built-in structure. And yet, it is clear which piece wins the day.The dreamy London bedroom of one lucky kidA room to carry any childor personup, up and away. It was published in the May 2021 issue.Photographed by Helen Cathcart, AD, May 2021A Regency cot bed sourced from The Baby Cot Shop sets a graphic centerpiece of a childs room in this home. But it is impossible not to look upward, thanks to the whimsical use of miniature hot-air balloons. The London townhouse in which this room sits was designed by Bryan OSullivan. I wanted to feel total escapism, which ultimately translated into an overload of texture, color, and comfort, one homeowner said at the time. Clearly, this interior was no exception.The San Francisco bedroom of a designers childA room in which to vroom circa October 2020Photographed by Douglas Friedman, AD, October 2020In this San Francisco home, Coral & Tusk curtains complement an Oeuf bunk bed and Faye Toogood chair. Nonetheless, a Kvadrat felt wall piece is clearly the main attraction. And yet, designer Nicole Holliss son, seen here, remains entirely distracted by his charming collection of toy trucks. My taste is definitely more informed by materiality, his AD100 mom noted at the time, adding that its all about form, light, and shadow. This felt pieceand roomindicate as much.Peekaboo baby, Napa Valley editionForget the wine countrythis room (pictured in October 2020) could capture your imagination for a full day.Photographed by Laura Resen, AD, October 2020Pink zebra skin pattered rug? Check. Sheepskin mat? Check. Adorable baby hiding in a pile of velvet pillows? Check, check. In Napa, California, this colorful childrens room brims with happiness. And while a rattan daybed and dinosaur-patterned wallpaper may be particular standouts within this space, the rest of the house does not cease to delight.Seth Meyerss sons roomReaching hour for a bunny and a dinosaur, captured March 2019Photographed by Shade Degges, AD, March 2019Seen here is the bedroom of one of Alexi Ashe Meyers and Seth Meyerss children. The room, and the rest of the Manhattan house, was designed by AD100 firm Ashe Leandroof which Alexis sister Ariel is a founder. The rugs seen are vintage Moroccan pieces; the shelves are custom-made. A lot of our clients are creative, Ariel Ashe told AD at the time, and they dont want their kids to have a boring room. And kids rooms can be so boring and repetitivea blue room for a boy and a pink room for a girl.Nell Diamonds sons roomThe jungle-themed room of young Henry Wasserman, circa August 2018Photographed by Kyle Knodell, AD, August 2018A boy bedroom doesnt have to skimp on pattern and whimsyand its no surprise that Nell Diamond, founder of Hill House Home (a luxury bedding company), would ensure that her son Henry would have a charming space of his own. This room, like the rest of her New York town house, was designed by Mark Cunningham. The pendant light fixture is by George Nelson and the wallpaper is Herms. Bedroom ideas aplenty here!A Miles Redddesigned room in San FranciscoCalifornia casual style is conspicuously absent from this room, photographed January 2018Photographed by Trevor Tondro, AD, January 2018Clarence House and Brunschwig & Fils fabrics brighten up this childrens bedroom, which is located in a San Francisco house designed by Miles Redd. The carpeting is by Stark, and the desk is a Swedish Gustavian piece. Antiques are such a good value today, and theyre great for a family lifestyletheyve already been through a lot and will go through more, one homeowner (a mother of four) noted at the time. A delightful pop of blue pattern peeks out underneath the coverlet of the twin bed.One library-slash-bedroom in LondonNever mind the fireplacethis February 2013 photo is all about that ingenious bed.Photographed by Luke White, Architectural Digest, February 2013Is it a bed? Or a home library? If youre talking about the focal point of this London childrens bedroom, the answer is both. A Campana Brothers stuffed-animal chair is another notable attraction, as is a Fort Street Studio carpet. AD100 designer Francis Sultana was responsible for the interior. A bean bag chair nests in the corner of this modern and inviting space.A special David Netto creationA room in which the walls perfectly match the curtains. The photograph was published in June 2016.Photographed by Pieter Estersohn, AD, June 2016Interior designer David Netto and architect David Hottenroth teamed up to create the beach retreat in which this bedroom is located. In this kids room, a Room & Board bunk bed, toile curtains, and a portrait of an owners grandfather cant help but stand out. The vintage Poul Kjrholm armchairs are from Dansk Mbelkunst Gallery.A bedroom designed by Delphine KrakoffPurple reigns supreme in this July 2013 photograph.Photographed by Bjorn Wallander, AD, July 2013Delphine Krakoff designed the minimalist New York townhouse in which this bedroom serves as a beacon of childish delight. Pierre Frey fabric, a Fornasetti desk, and Gio Ponti chairs are indisputable high points. The home at large is one of the select projects that Krakoff has taken on. I dont want to be a businesswoman, Krakoff, wife of fashion designer Reed Krakoff, said at the time. I want to be a designer. Thats what I love. Its why Ive kept my business very small. So Im known as the girl who often says no.One kids room, perched high above the cloudsFlying high in February 2021Photographed by Steven Johnson, AD, February 2021Who says a childrens bedroom has to be boisterous and bright? In the case of this Manhattan skyscraper, the opposite is true. The Pierre Paulin chair is covered in Maharam fabric, and D. Porthault sheets appoint the mahogany bunk bed. We didnt want the spaces to feel as if there was too much going on, designer Steven Volpe said to AD at the time. The decorative effects are calculated for subtlety, not artificial drama. When youre in the apartment, you sense the quality. Its quiet, but you feel it.A four-bed room in which Josef Frank rulesA Svenskt Tenn wall covering, captured in November 2016Photographed by Roger Davies, AD, November 2016In this guesthouse, a four-bed space is fit to be any visiting childs dream come true. Pink and blue options aside, a Josef Frank floral pattered wallpaper brings with it the perfect dose of whimsy. Decorator David Netto created the entire stand-alone guest dwelling, with the help of architect Marc Appleton and landscape designer Deborah Nevins.Blue and green and patterned all overThis striped room originally appeared in ADs January 2015 issue.Photo: Roger DaviesFor this California home, designer Miles Redd was tasked with toning down his usually color-happy sensibility for a client who preferred a subdued color scheme. The kids bedroom was the one place he was able to play with color in his typical fashion. The walls and ceilings are painted in white and blue Benjamin Moore; a green Alan Campbell pattern upholsters the bench, ottoman, and side chairs. Finally, a pinch of robins egg enlivens the lampshades.Kelly Wearstlers take on the teen roomIts a party! Stripes, dots, and a dash of fuchsia enliven this teens room from January 2013.Photo: Roger DaviesWhen AD100 Hall of Fame designer Kelly Wearstler gave this Bel Air homepublished in January 2013a makeover, the bedazzled flair she brought to the rest of the house carried into the daughters room. The homeowner requested a touch of pink, which Wearstler delivered through a fuchsia leather armchair and ottoman. The chrome bed by Paul Evans puts a fresh spin on the traditional four-poster. Both the custom wall covering by Porter Teleo and the customized carpet by the Rug Company reflect the youthful exuberance of the rooms inhabitant.Think pinkRose tones rule in this bedroom from February 2012.Photo: Roger DaviesPink may be an expected hue for a girls room design, but architect and decorator Jorge Eliass execution is anything but. Featured in the February 2012 issue of AD, Elias custom designed the four-posters for the bedroom, choosing an off-white tone that pales against the coral walls. From the footstools to the light fixtures, the antique-looking pieces add dimension to the space. The Indian coverlets on each bed were sourced from Jorge Elias Boutique.A spot for a color and chaosBerkus and Brent redux, seen in the January 2018 issuePhoto: Douglas FriedmanWe go for a very clean, masculine look. We dont like to live with a lot of color, Jeremiah Brent told AD in the January 2018 feature on his and Nate Berkuss family home in LA. Their daughters playroom is one slight exception to the designers shared no-color rule. The memory board over the sofa offers a prime spot for displaying colorful artworks, and the toy basket runs over with plush playthings. Shes obsessed with pink and princessesbig shockerso we try to keep the color and chaos confined to her zone, Berkus explained. Still, the furnishings stick to Brent and Berkuss clean look.Symmetry winsTwin peeks in May 2016Credit: Upton Photography Ltd.A romp through the AD archive can be helpful for identifying some space-saving kids room storage ideas too. Case in point? This room for the children of Fiona Kotur by Alexander Stuart. As seen in the May 2016 issue, the home for the family of six contained many custom pieces made in Hong Kong. Storage solutions were a necessity in the shared bedroomso the beds in the boys room have built-in drawers to maximize space.Layered and lived-inControlled chaos makes this room from November 2012 a charmer.Photo: Pieter EstersohnAnother Blackberry Farm feature! Designer Suzanne Kasler described the Tennessee homes look as collected rather than decorated, in the November 2012 issue. The designer worked with architecture firm Spitzmiller & Norris to give the new build that coveted lived-in feel for a family of six. It abounds with bookmark-worthy kids room ideas, amplifying the layered feeling of the whole home with plenty of textiles, patterns, and mementos to go around.A place for purpleVirginia Tupkers whimsical take on a childs room appeared in the January 2023 issue.Photo: Isabel ParraEach room has a strong color story, AD100 designer Virginia Tupker said to AD about this Connecticut home published in the January 2023 issue. It unifies the house and allows a narrative to unfold through the spaces. This purple bedroom features an Adelphi Paper Hangings wallpaper, a custom floral fabric bedspread, and a Delft tile on the fireplace.Playing dress upIts a jungle in there. This scene was captured for ADs January 2019 issue.Photo: Jean-Francois JaussaudAD100 designer Isabelle Stanislas worked with her clients to restore their 17th-century Paris apartment to its original grandeur. Though they had history in mind, they didnt shy away from modern touches. The five-year-old daughters bedroom has the same attitude, with some modern furnishings against a grand backdrop set by the de Gournay wall covering and under the antique Murano chandelier. For functionality, a bookshelf nook is placed near the bed. My goal was both to remain true to its past and to give it a new soul, Stanislas told AD in the January 2019 feature.Bright white and storage fullSeen in the February 2012 issue of ADPhoto: Nikolas KoenigThen editorial director of Martha Stewart Weddings Darcy Miller Nussbaum was completely in love with this found Upper East Side apartment, but no one else in the family was. She turned to David Mann of MR Architecture + Decor to remake it for their needs, and the finished product was featured in ADs February 2012 issue. Mann brightened the space up by using a lot of white throughout, including in this kids room. The built-in bookcase ensures that all of the stuffed animals, picture books, and toys always have a place to rest.California coolThis light and bright kids room appeared in ADs January 2024 issue.Photo: Peter BakerThis childs room, designed by Alexander Liberman of AML Studio, pays tribute to California midcentury modernism while still being kid-friendly. The rounded shapes of the headboard and side table are appropriately playfuland can easily feel grown-up once the clients daughter is. As seen in the January 2024 issue of AD, the simple color palette draws the eyes up to the rooms clerestory windows.Wild and wonderful reposeFlora and fauna appear throughout this Sara Storydesigned room from April 2014.Photo: Pieter EstersohnAt AD100 designer Sara Storys family home in Texas, published in the April 2014 issue of the magazine, her daughters bedroom looks like an homage to the wonders of nature. Almost like decals, butterflies on the de Gournay wallpaper appear in mid-flight. A side chair has a wonderfully bright floral pattern, and a side table looks like an elephants foot.Refined simplicityIn the November 2023 issue, Giancarlo Valle whips up a soothing palette with punchy patterns.Photo: Stephen JohnsonIt had an unimposing formality that we tried to maintain, Jane Keltner de Valle said of the home she shares with her children and husband, AD100 designer Giancarlo Valle, in ADs November 2023 issue. Even as we put our own stamp on it, we wanted the house to remain as it has always been. In their daughters bedroom, a secretary desk serves as a storage solution while maintaining that charming air of formality. The piece is surrounded by a Studio Giancarlo Valle Paloma Mirror, Roman shades in a Maharam fabric, and a quilt from Paula Rubenstein.Bed overheadA ladyfinger-like bed crowns this girls room from the July 2021 issue of AD.Photo: Trevor TondroFeatured in the July 2021 issue of AD, the home Nate Berkus and Jeremiah Brent designed for their friends Brian Robbins and Tracy James balances moody moments with energetic bright spots. One space that falls in the latter category is the little girls bedroom. The room has an adorable custom loft bed in Designers Guild fabric and is wrapped in a vibrant pink Rebel Walls covering.Pink, pink, and more pinkThis room appeared in the October 2011 issue of AD.Photo: Nikolas KoenigSometimes the classic kids room ideas are the very best. Published in ADs October 2011 issue, designers Tony Ingrao and Randy Kemper created a happily pink-infused bedroom for their clients daughter. They deployed fabrics by Osborne & Little and Designers Guild for the window coverings, plus carpeting by Stark. The long headboard design gives the twin frame daybed-like adaptability.Honey yellow high/lowCordelia de Castellanes daughters roomwith its charming mix of golden gingham and throwback floralsran in ADs September 2020 issue.Photo: Matthieu SalvaingHigh/low is the way to go in the bedroom of Cordelia de Castellanes daughter. The walls are wrapped in a Colefax and Fowler floral fabric, and the linens and bedside lamp are from Zara Home. With its honey-and-white color palette, the space feels like a breath of fresh air. Its a bit mix and match but every piece has a story, de Castellane told AD in the September 2020 feature on her home.Pragmatic primpingThis pink-accented room appeared in the pages of AD in January 2010.Photo: Saylor H. DurstonInterior designer Tracey Winn Pruzan of Cullman & Kravis renovated her Park Avenue duplex with interior architect John B. Murray, giving the space a better backdrop for her varied furnishings. New moldings, doors, floors, and ceilings were devised for every space, including her daughters room, which has a built-in desk and bookcase too. If she is ever tired of the bright pink, we can always replace the rug and redo the pillows, Pruzan told AD in her January 2010 feature regarding the pragmatic decision to keep the permanent elements neutral.Fashion friendlyBack in December 2007, AD published this childs room with its cocooning daybed.Photo: Soluri TonyIn her Chicago home, designer Suzanne Lovell honored her daughters love of fashion by centering her bedroom on a custom art piece by artist Key-Sook Geum. Nearby, a George Nelson Bubble lamp illuminates one corner, and etchings acquired in Vietnam preside over the bed. I was surprised by objects I had to contribute, from my family and my own life and travels, Lovell said of the design experience in the December 2007 piece. It was all incredibly fun.I want a hippopotamus for ChristmasFrom the October 2018 issue of ADPhoto: William AbranowiczHigh design isnt just for adults, as illustrated by this home featured in the October 2018 issue of AD. Masterminded by Charles de Lisle, with architectural restoration by Marmol Radziner, the home of Jessica and Aaron Sittig is filled with design deep cuts and curiosities. The kids room has a Renate Mller hippo toy and a freestanding plywood sleeping pod. And in the kids bathroom sits a custom sink by London design star Max Lamb.A music lovers momentAD featured this cozy kid retreat in February 2023.Photo: Frank FrancesViola Daviss daughters bedroom is exactly what every tween wants, chockablock with posters, fun hanging chairs, and records galore. The Davises worked with designer Michaela Cadiz on their LA home, which was published in ADs February 2023 issue. They embraced a statement wallpaper, a colorful striped rug, and some simple white curtains for good balance.A rich tapestrySteeped in textiles, accessories, and bold sweeps of color, this Tribeca kids roomwhich ran in ADs January 2022 issueis a showstopper.Photo: Miguel Flores-ViannaSearching for kids room decor ideas that are as complex and rich as the rest of the home? Look no further than this wonderfully layered Tribeca room from ADs January 2022 issue. We paint a picture for you; we make a movie for you to live in, designer Will Cooper, then of Ash, told AD at the time. We always write a narrative when we start these projects. The kids bedroom decor is certainly cinematic. Amidst a sea of greenspecifically Benjamin Moore's Cedar Groveantique Indian wedding-procession tents hang above the beds, which date back to the 1920s.To access the full AD archive, subscribe to AD PRO.
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