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Kids’ bedrooms: good design is child’s play

wide shot of dark blue bedroom with wood furniture and blue draperies
Sneak peak – my son James opted for moody blues tones and lots of texture for his bedroom. Designer Lisa Canning helped me pick the colour – so terrific!

My “baby” is now 21 years old, so my interest in the design and decor of children’s bedrooms is less intense than it once was. And, to be honest,  with four kids and tight funds, my kids’ rooms were always pretty utilitarian.* It did not weigh much on my mind. Back then there seemed to be two options – very expensive rooms put together by a designer, or cheesy “themed” rooms based on the Disney character du jour. Neither appealed to me, one for financial, the other for aesthetic, reasons.  So it’s been lovely to watch the evolution of decor and design for kids, as illustrated by this gallery of wonderful rooms created by HomeSense.  Versatile, handsome and playful, these polished, sophisticated looks are made possible in part by  the increased availability of good-quality, affordable options, says Tamara Robbins Griffith, design expert for HomeSense. “Selection has improved so much over the last ten years — it’s easy to get excited about a kid’s room, and it’s easier to achieve a high design look on a budget,” she says. No kidding! These rooms are divine, are they not?  Two clever ideas to note – incorporating a child’s own work into an art wall, and using simple hooks and baskets to help kids keep stuff tidy (Okay, yes, I know, good luck with that one – but worth a try, right?)

* Kid Three and Kid Four, who still – sort of – live at home, did get makeovers within the last few years – more on that later. (See pic at right – shot by Michael LaFond). All other photos from HomeSense.

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Just slightly ahead of its time

That some of Toronto’s best-known designers are choosing Lightmaker Studio pieces for their own homes, even if they can’t yet sell their clients on them, indicates that the design cognoscenti may simply need more time to fall in love with the handsome fixtures that pay homage to mid-century modern shapes without ever falling prey to retro kitsch.

The reserved reception, says co-owner Denise Murphy, may be “because the prevailing aesthetic is pretty traditional, and we don’t fit into that, or into super sterile European design.”

Lightmaker Studio was launched three years ago by Murphy, who also has an IT and project management background and her husband Michael Stamler, an industrial designer who worked for many years in IT (and still does on the side). Last year, they were joined by a young industrial designer, Alyaa Ashraf. Fixtures are assembled onsite with beautifully-finished solid brass parts and hand-blown glass globes and spheres.

These big, beautiful fixtures, which play with striking geometric and organic shapes, strike me as the most handsome ones I’ve seen since I fell in love with Zia Priven a few years ago.

There are encouraging signs, however, for Lightmaker. This was the third year they appeared at the Interior Design Show and there was lots of buzz. A growing demographic firmly committed to buying locally helps, says Murphy, and sales from New York, “which always wants what is new and fresh and different” are relatively brisk.

Take a look. I KNOW you’ll think they’re beautiful. Right?