Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess mine are the only kids with rooms that look professionally decorated? Custom dark green velvet curtains, fancy 9x12 rug, matching bedding, custom pillows, Ballard chandelier, carefully collected paintings on the walls and I refinished the entire bedroom set really well. Daughters is the same but with pink and pink silk curtains. They love their rooms and really haven’t ever asked for posters. They can put whatever they want on their dressers.
I remember I loved helping my mom decorate my room when I was a teen.
You're not the only one. We hired a separate designer for our kids' rooms. It sounds extravagant but I'm pleased with the result. If my kids were speaking to me I'm sure they'd tell me they like it, too. But I'm not going to lie, it was a bit of a chore: had to fly the designer over from England. And then travel with her to the couple of Sotheby's and Christie's auctions until we found the right paintings and objets d'art to tie it all together. DS is a teen so of course he wanted some risque poster out of Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition. We compromised on a lesser-known Mapplethorpe and a Reubens reproduction. The window treatments, rugs, pillows, mattresses, etc. are all custom by various artisans. So yes, you're not alone. I don't let them put whatever they want on their dressers, though. They can put whatever they want *in* the second drawer from the top of each dresser, but they've been directed not to re-arrange the lamps, frames, and objets on top of the dressers.
Anonymous wrote:I don't really care what my 15 yr old son's room looks like and neither does he! As long as there is no food and it is generally not a mess (no laundry on the floor, occasionally cleaning it), I don't care.
Anonymous wrote:When my kids were little I decorated there room all cute with nice stuff from Pottery Barn Kids and the like...
The years have gone by and I/we never really updated them...now the rooms are kind of a hodge podge of some of the cute bedding and random other blankets, etc.
So with this staying at home business I've been on an organization/decorating binge in general....My 15 year old boy has a few strings of Christmas lights on his walls/ceiling. I can just hear my own mother's voice telling me how awful and trash it looks...
What is your teen's room like?
Anonymous wrote:My 15 year old son's room looks like a teenage boys room. When we first moved in he started with a 'shell' I created (nice, approrpate furniture, new paint, shelves, the basics done nicely) but he's been allowed to make it his own. For him this means Christmas lights around his bed and above his dresser, band and car posters and tapestries hung with thumbtacks, random electronics boxes stacked in the closet (why he wants to keep them, no idea), a weird bubbly lamp thing on his desk, a very random assortment of shells, bones, sand, sticks, and other found items that mean something to him, etc. Also, a constant tornado of clothes and shoes on the floor. It sometimes drives me crazy but like PP said - it's his room, it has a door, I close it and try not to go in.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My Teen DS has lights up, stickers all over, and he currently is working a La Croix wall tower. His room.
You own stock in a La Croix too? Boy they can put that stuff away these days!
Mine, too. Lights and LaCroix cans, like little gems all over the room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: My teens like the white Christmas lights. I allow them as long as they are LED-which are cheap and easy to find (want to save electricity plus they don't get hot).
I'm pretty fine with whatever they want to put up in their rooms-as long as they use command hooks/hangers! I don't allow tacks as we just built this house 2 years ago, don't want holes. I would certainly excersize veto power over pot or tittie posters LOL but they have never put up anything like that.
I chose the paint color, one color for the whole interior, so we all have it in the bedrooms and that isn't changing anytime soon!
Maybe worry less about pot or titties and more about your atrocious spelling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't be a control freak. As long as it's not truly inappropriate (e.g., porn hanging on the walls), let them have one space in the hours that is theirs.
+1
Anonymous wrote:I guess mine are the only kids with rooms that look professionally decorated? Custom dark green velvet curtains, fancy 9x12 rug, matching bedding, custom pillows, Ballard chandelier, carefully collected paintings on the walls and I refinished the entire bedroom set really well. Daughters is the same but with pink and pink silk curtains. They love their rooms and really haven’t ever asked for posters. They can put whatever they want on their dressers.
I remember I loved helping my mom decorate my room when I was a teen.