Which room should be the nursery




















This question is different for everybody. The only decision here is if you want to put the nursery closer or further away from your own room if you have that luxury. It could also be that transforming this space into the nursery means you lose out on having a dedicated office, guest room, exercise room, etc. The only downside to this, beyond the hassle of moving, is the high cost. Newest First. Violation Reported. Cute nursery! Rossbby, I'm just worried we won't have enough space in there, I don't think we'll be able to fit a chair for nursing and there isn't a real closet so everything will have to fit in the small dresser.

MonkeyMom, Sorry, this content has been deleted. You'll be using the room with baby more often than guests coming in. First Year. In September Babies Nursery room chair - which did you get? Not sure where to start! Would love to hear what you got for your nursery. Latest: 2 months ago victoryrose. WTE Must Reads. Jump to Your Week of Pregnancy. Pregnancy Week. Trending On What to Expect.

Please whitelist our site to get all the best deals and offers from our partners. The upsides are that it has a big window that gets a nice amount of sun, and the view is decent.

It's small so it'd be easy to heat and cool. And it's cosy because it's little. The doorway is just across the hall from ours, it's close to the front door so if there was a fire, chances are, if we could get out of our room, we could get into that one. The downside is that since we're having twins, the other bedroom we could use is bigger so would be suited better for when they're a little older and have big kid beds, plus the other bigger bedroom leads off the lounge room so we could use the lounge room air con to cool it down in summer none of the bedrooms have air con.

The smaller room also strikes me as more dangerous, since we live on a busy road, so people could walk past and throw stuff in there, or since we're not far from a corner, a car could be driving stupidly and crash through but it'd have to go through a tree first.

The bigger room has no natural lighting though, since our house is about 1. I'd have lace curtains so the neighbours couldn't really see in, but the view would basically be of their window lol. I guess the only appeal is that the room is bigger which is better for a few years time and arguably a bit safer. Any thoughts? The bigger room is quite large compared to our house.

It's probably bigger than our loungeroom. Add a comment. Comments 8 Add a comment. We have chosen the smaller room for baby, I figure it will limit the amount of junk we can collect ; your smaller room sounds lovely and you can always change when your babies are bigger. Yeah, that's what I'm thinking.

Plus a bigger room means a bigger space for them to leave their toys etc laying around. It's funny you said about the cars, when we were buying a house I told hubby I didnt want to get a house where the kids rooms would be at the front but you only need to worry about this if you live on a corner block or are the house at the end of a street so in your case I wouldnt worry.

We chose the smaller room for ds and will move him when he's bigger. We thought the aircon from the lounge could cool his room too but having it running to cool down two spaces costs a fortune and takes ages in our house to get through to his room so will have to invest in one of those little free standing ones I think.

My coffee table doubles as a play table. A friend uses this adjustable play table at its low level with her kids, then raises it for dinner parties. It you want to go cutesy, this is the time to do it. Remember a few years back when bird motifs were trendy and you couldn't throw a teething ring without hitting a cutesy owl print? And I hesitated before going to town with the birds and woodland creatures in my son's nursery.

Would it mesh with his personality? Was it too baby-ish? He didn't care, as long as the milk train me was on time. But my little woodland creature nursery made me happy, and I'm glad I did it, because now that he's reached the ripe old age of 6, the only permissible decor themes are New York Mets and "Star Wars. See also: Why you should dress your baby up for Halloween.

Various design blogs promise that your baby will sleep better with a soothing color like blue or lavender on the walls. Millions of parents who have spent many a sleepless night in a soothing lavender-blue nursery will back me up here. Your baby will sleep through the night when he or she is ready, and you're going to spend a lot of time staring at those walls in the meantime, so you might as well decorate them exactly as you like.

Babies take up very little space, yet the pressure can be on to give your kid's nursery an HGTV overhaul. After your nosy relatives ask you if you're finding out the gender or if you've picked out names, chances are, they'll say, "And, how are you decorating the nursery?

When my first child was born, we lived in an foot-wide home and I felt intense mommy guilt because his nursery was actually a room divided with a bookcase to be my office and his nursery combined. When I think back on it now, the space was so sweet and cozy, and I have such great memories of snuggling my newborn baby boy in that tiny half room.



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