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How to Outfit Your College Living Room

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By eHow Contributing Writer
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Your college quarters' living room furnishings should be functional, inexpensive, portable - and, within the limits of the first three priorities, as attractive as possible. Here are some ideas to consider.

Difficulty: Moderately Easy
Instructions

Things You'll Need:

  • Coffee Tables
  • Curtain Rods
  • End Tables
  • Inflatable Furniture
  • Posters
  • Sofas
  • Throw Pillows
  • Window Treatment
  • Posters
  1. Step 1

    Look for a secondhand sofa (in your college's town, rather than your hometown, to avoid a long-distance moving hassle); plan to resell it when you move out. Other options include a futon frame plus a mattress, or a sofa that you can assemble yourself.

  2. Step 2

    Consider easy chairs, which are more portable than a sofa and so may be "keepers" when you move out. Beanbag chairs win points for low price and light weight, but you may want to go with a sturdier secondhand chair, a cushioned Adirondack chair or more-packable stacking chairs or director's chairs.

  3. Step 3

    Create a coffee table by adding a glass tabletop to two large terracotta flowerpots, two stacks of coffee table books, or an old steamer trunk or footlocker. Other options include cutting off the legs of an old table or desk.

  4. Step 4

    Make a lamp table by adding a small glass tabletop to a stack of coffee-table books or a terracotta flowerpot. Or buy inexpensive particleboard tables and cover them with a full-length round tablecloth or a file cabinet.

  5. Step 5

    Choose discount-store lighting if you can't raid a parent's or grandparent's attic or basement. Adjustable halogen and pharmacy lamps are often $20 to $50.

  6. Step 6

    Bring things from your bedroom at home to personalize the living room in college. Posters, pictures, an old quilt and toss pillows make the room more homey.

  7. Step 7

    Upgrade the landlord's window treatment (often plain miniblinds or pleated drapes) with a ready-made window valance for an inexpensive decorator touch.

Tips & Warnings
  • In larger communities, furniture rental may be an option.
  • Start accumulating used furnishings several weeks before your move. Check newspaper classified ads to find garage and yard sales that have what you need; secondhand stores are another source.
  • Spruce up tired upholstered furnishings with inexpensive slipcovers, pretty bed sheets and pieced quilts. Wooden pieces may benefit from a paint job.
  • Ready-to-assemble furnishings of all types can be a bargain on two fronts. First, they are usually value-priced. And second, they can be disassembled into a very small amount of space for moving.

Comments  

Anonymous

Anonymous said

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on 2/1/2006 If you can, get a look at the room you'll be staying in (or one of the same model) before you start buying things. There are plenty of things you can do to make the room more comfortable, like adding a sofa or a coffee table. But the fact of the matter is; at most schools you're not going to have near enough room for anything like that.

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