Although sophomore Ashley Elmore has a couple years before she will go to college, she’s well prepared for living in a dormitory. She said she knows how to utilize her furniture in the most efficient way possible to optimize her space.
“(A struggle I’ve encountered) with decorating a small room is finding furniture that fits both your style and your space,” Elmore said. “(I try to) find multiple purposes for one piece of furniture, like my dresser. I put candles on top of it, but I also have clothes in it. My bed frame has drawers in it so I can put clothes in there. Finding multiple purposes for one piece of furniture is really helpful.”
Lila Torp, Intro to Housing and Interior Design teacher, has a similar viewpoint on decorating a small space, recommending that students choose furniture that has a purpose.
“If it’s a small space, then less is more,” Torp said. “Pick the (furniture) pieces very carefully and make sure they are functional…You can get a number of functional storage pieces that will double as seats and all sorts of things, so choose storage that is going to fit your needs and that’s going to fit into the space.”
Senior Sophia Marbach said sharing a small space with someone new will be one of the main difficulties when moving into college dorms this summer, rather than working with the space around her.
“I will need to share my space with somebody else, which I’m not used to,” Marbach said. “I’ve shared a room with my sister, but that’s somebody I’ve known my entire life. This will be a new person that I’ve never roomed with before, so (it might be difficult) to find a common ground on how to decorate and coming (up) with a routine and developing a new relationship and being able to cohabitate.”
Torp recommended that students choose decorations carefully as a way to help work with roommates and their decisions.
“If you want to make a small space look bigger, then you want light colors, and then use a pop of
color or a bright color as accent pieces as opposed to lots of bright colors,” Torp said. “In most cases, you’re sharing (the room) with at least one other person, so if you tend to go with lights and neutrals, then whatever they bring into the other half of
the room is going to blend better.”