McCroskey Interiors I do not have the name of the trim color, it was an off white/cream to soften the look of the room vs a standard white trim. Thanks for your question!
McCroskey Interiors The chair came from KDR showroom. You can reproduce this look by recovering any nursing chair with a cream/pink toile fabric. Thanks!
Is the bedding pink and white? Hard to tell from the picture. Thanks! - I'm very familiar with the fabric used for the drapes and ottoman and was just wondering if the bedding you used is a soft pink and white and if not, what colors did you use? Also, is the paneling painted a bright white or something a little softer? Thank you! »
McCroskey Interiors The bedding was a pale pink, the client already had the bedding. The trim was an off white/cream to soften the room. Thanks for asking!
McCroskey Interiors Yes that's exactly what you do! I've done this in the little girl's room (with pink walls), the blue nursery, black bedroom, and grey dining room. If you go into my pictures, look at the grey dining room with cream colored chairs, black lampshades on the buffet. This room had 9ft high ceilings with the taller crown and wainscoting so you can get an idea of what your room will look like. If you don't want to go through all of this, a 4 inch crown will still be beautiful! I think just taking the time to install any crown molding gives a room that "finished look" whether it's normal height or taller. You can also drop the trim 2-3 inches if you don't want it as tall if you decide to go this route. Your carpenter will know what to do. Also, on the wainscoting, treat it just the same way you would the crown. Have the carpenter install a chair rail and baseboard but when he gets ready to do the sections in between, have him nail the trim directly to the wall in rectangles or squares (however you want your wainscoting to look). Then he will paint the chair rail, trim on the wall, the wall in between and baseboards the same color and it will look like expensive wainscoting without the cost of wood panels. This is what we did in the little girl's room and grey dining room. Most house have this treatment on the walls vs wood sheets. It's more economical and looks just as beautiful.
Feel free to email me any more questions to lmccroskey@gmail.com.
Blackout curtains. Getting baby to sleep in the middle of the day can prove difficult with the sun blaring in — but not with blackout shades. Have a blackout lining — a very dense fabric that light can't penetrate — sewn onto the back of any drapery fabric.Tip: For absolute darkness, install floor-to-ceiling drapes 18 inches past each side of the window. This will ensure that as little light as possible seeps in through cracks.