Designers' Top Updates for Cozy Spaces on $100 or Less
These affordable design ideas will give new life to your favorite room.
1. Make Pillows Pop
Bolster your seating with pillows bearing favorite locations and phrases. You can take a linen pillow and use stencil and spray paint to add the name of your town or home country, or anything you want, says Ili Hidalgo-Nilsson, architect and designer with Terracotta Design Build in Atlanta.
2. Decorate With Clocks
If you have family out of town or travel often, arrange a trio of used clocks on a wall and set them to those time zones. That way you can keep track of what time zone they're in, and also avoid trying to Facetime them in the middle of the night. Designer Robin LaMonte set these clocks to Atlanta time, where this family lives, and China and Paris, two areas where the mother often goes on business trips.
3. Top Off the Table
Metallics add a modern touch to a room without breaking your budget. For table decor under $100, Parker Kennedy Living used a sea urchin from Target and a lacquer green and gold box from C Wonder. They didn't have to buy new books, since the homeowner already owned those, as well as the table.
4. Play Around With Paint
Paint is a go-to choice for enhancing a room, especially on a budget. Using dark trim with lighter walls brings out the architecture and painting the bookcase in a rich palette makes the entire space appear more expansive, says Donna Mathis with Atlanta-based Haven Design Works.
5. Let It Shine
Painting the walls high-gloss white is a great way to give a room a high-end finish and to increase the amount of light in the room, says Ili Hidalgo-Nilsson, designer and architect with Terracotta Design Build in Atlanta. Adding trim is an inexpensive way to give order and a high-end look to a wall with a flat screen TV, she says
6. Create a Vignette
A chaise is a great piece of furniture to add a dash of design in an affordable way. "Instead of just having a plain daybed or chaise you can layer it," says Atlanta designer Michael Habachy. Position a tray on top of a throw, or even use a textured or patterned scarf or pashmina that you own.
7. Spray Paint for a New Stunner
For an inexpensive quick fix, Atlanta interior designer Steve McKenzieused two shades of gray paint to update an ugly blond 1980s cabinet. He worked with DIY blogger Dena Stormer on the project for Dwell with Dignity, a nonprofit agency that does home makeovers for families living in poverty. "Dwell with Dignity likes to reuse or refurbish anything they can, showing the families that with a little bit of work, you can transform anything," she says. "I love that idea."
8. Supersize It
To fill a big blank wall, take your favorite vacation photo and upload it to one of the many sites that now print large format photographs. You can create an impactful, personal work of art that's inexpensive, says Atlanta interior designer and home decor store owner Steve McKenzie. He created this room as part of the makeovers given to families by Dwell with Dignity Atlanta, a nonprofit organization.
9. Rescue Discarded Designer Fabric
Scour the close-out bins at fabric stores to find designer textiles in patterns and colors that you love and that fit with your furniture. Then follow DIY instructions to make easy-sew pillows that add a pop of color to complete a room, says Atlanta interior designer Steve McKenzie.
10. Go Coastal
For a coastal-inspired living room, these accessories can easily be replicated at discount home decor stores, says designer Robin LaMonte of Rooms Revamped Interior Design. Look for colorful bowls and plates for under $100.
11. Commit to Color
A monochromatic look can be bold and budget-friendly. Consider matching your curtains to the walls, as seen in this metro Atlanta model home by the designers with Monte Hewett Homes. Since time is money, you can save time by not worrying about finding a complementary color or pattern for the drapes.
12. Upcycle and Enjoy
When designers find furniture for cheap, they don't let the existing finish keep them from using it in a room. Designer Julie Montgomery of Julie Montgomery Interiors found these side tables on casters at a thrift store. Then Dena Stormer, a DIY blogger, used a semi-gloss coat of Behr Marquee in Alabaster to give them a clean, fresh look for this living room makeover for a family, through the nonprofit Dwell with Dignity Atlanta.
13. Make Framed Art Affordable
When you have bold, colorful art and furniture, designers often use restraint on the frames. The frames don't need to match, either. These white and black frames in the gallery art cost less than $10 each. This room was part of the home makeovers created by designers and DIYers through nonprofit organization Dwell with Dignity Atlanta for families transitioning from homelessness and poverty.
14. Put a New Twist on Boxes and Books
Create your own special shadowbox with cool-looking maps or maps of favorite places, or any other motifs that appeal to you. Give stacked books that you already own a cohesive look by simply having the spines face the back of the bookshelf, as Jen Woodhouse of The House of Wood did in decorating her recycled wood and crate bookshelf.
15. Illuminate Treasures
When choosing items that you own to fill a bookcase, think about creating a contrast, says Leigh Spicher, Ashton Woods' national director of design studios. In this Orlando model home, neutral book pages and accessories stand out against the dark wood of the built-in bookcase. "Sometimes our favorite decor is something we already own," she says. If you save money by using existing items, you can also add picture and display lighting to illuminate treasured pieces.
16. Refresh a Wall
Create an accent wall with an inexpensive finish, like this white brick veneer in a Naples, Fla., home, for a comfortable, casual living space, says Leigh Spicher, Ashton Woods' national director of design studios. You also can paint existing brick or whitewash it. Also, white, gauzy curtains can be found on a budget from most home retailers and fit into a coastal-inspired design.
17. Embrace the Era
Even in traditional built-in bookshelves, you can add in vintage elements on a budget. Atlanta designer Devon Garner filled in the gaps with album covers, which you might be able to find in your attic or at a flea market.
18. Cozy Up by the Fire
To give your room a cozy feel for free, rethink how you arrange the furniture. For example, is there a spare chair in another room that you can pull beside the fireplace? For this room, Mosaic Group [Architects and Remodelers] positioned the furniture to address the fireplace, creating a salon effect where several people could settle in for conversation.
19. Reuse a Coat Rack
Wall space above a bookshelf doesn't always have to have art. In this living room, designer Janna Allbritton used a wood coat rack with metal hooks, which is cheaper than a painting. Then display anything you want, whether it's a simple number for a graphic element or colorful hats or scarves.
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