Designing Your Baby Nursery - How To Choose The Right Color Schemes

There are several things that you need to think about when you want to choose the right color scheme for your baby’s nursery. Small children love bright primary colors, but large swatches of red, blue and yellow can be a little over the top. Consider a color scheme that is comfortable for both you and your baby.
So long as you are paying attention to the details, you’ll find that practically any color scheme that you can imagine will work. Also keep in mind that your small child might be alarmed of things like certain colors, toys or people painted on the wall. You can get a safer, friendlier environment with lighter colors, which will also make it easier to change the dcor as your child grows older.
Is the room a little dark or does it have a western or northern exposure? If so, look for warm colors like cranberry, coral and even ruby to give the room a more warm and welcoming look. If you are a little shy of red, consider peach, primrose or dusky pink instead.
Don’t forget to balance your color. If you use rich tones on your walls, keep the ceiling, floor and furniture light. Cream, pale blue or green, and white will balance your red walls by providing a cool serenity. If you go with the lighter tones on the walls, like yellow, peach, pink, or melon, accent with furniture, rugs, toys and accessories that go POW.
For a neutral boy/girl look, try a cheery indoor garden approach. Paint the ceiling a light sky blue and add some puffy white clouds, the walls a pale yellow, and the floor neutral - a natural wood tone or a taupe tile. A border paper of pink and white daisies, or pink, blue and white balloons, and a cotton throw rug that looks outdoorsy would be great. The furniture can be white, pale green, or a natural light wood.
If you have your heart set on a whimsical look, do everything permanent in a monochromatic color scheme. For example, you are doing a nursery for your baby girl in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Walls, floor, and ceiling would be lovely in mint green, using its different values by adding white or black to your mix. Then add your colors with bedding, borders, posters or pictures, rug, play table and chairs, etc.
Decorating in monochrome can give you plenty of advantages. Remember that a room in monochrome looks bigger; a room where the ceiling and floor are the color of the walls will look the largest. Consider how you can shorten a tall narrow room with a darker ceiling and how you can raise the ceiling with darker walls and white above.
Because children outgrow their nurseries so quickly, moving up to the next step, toddler, becomes an easy and inexpensive process. The monochromatic color can remain the same. Then all it takes is changing the bed, updating the border on the wall, removing the changing table and adding a play table and chairs and Voila.

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