10. Accidentally spill crayon wax on your bathroom floor | The Odyssey Online
Start writing a post
Student Life

11 Ways to Spruce Up Your Dorm room

Whether you're in a one-room brick room or living in a campus apartment, these tips will help you turn your living space into a home-sweet-home!

189
11 Ways to Spruce Up Your Dorm room
Elyssa Day

In This Article:

We've turned our calendars to August and Walmart is filled to the brim with crayons and three-ring binders.

Your friends are asking you to compare schedules with them and family members are wondering what subjects you'll be studying.

Yes, my friends, it is once more that annual time of year: the return to school.

For us college kids, returning to school is more than buying textbooks and figuring out financial aid. It's also the time where we're moving into dorms or our first apartments.

While this is exciting for some, it can also be dreadful. How will this drab room ever feel like a home away from home?

Fear not, readers. Having lived in a total of five dorms/apartments throughout my college life, I have gathered the finest tips and tools to help turn your dorm into a home-sweet-home.

1. Buy a rug

Although this picture shows off my current apartment, I first bought this rug while living in a community college dorm room, where the dorms were made of concrete brick and one room. Thankfully, adding this rug made the room feel warm and inviting.

2. Add some plants (along with a cute planter!)

Plants liven up the space! Cute planters are, well, cute!

3. Cut out animal silhouettes and tape them to your wall.

So far, my wall includes a cat, octopus, rooster, giraffe, and a pterodactyl. The pterodactyl is by far my favorite!

4. If your dorm allows, buy a fish!

You can decorate the tank to fit your room! Plus, caring for fish is a great way to have a pet on a college campus. Plus, they’re so adorable!

5. Hang up a map of your city

When I first moved here, I bought a map and pinned it up on the wall above my couch. I then started the tradition of sticking pins in for every new location I visit.

6. Make art!

Paint! Draw! Melt crayons! Art brightens up your walls! Plus, it’s fun and is a great stress reliever!

7. Purchase a calendar

Whether they come as a dry erase board or with a different picture for each month, calendars can certainly spruce up your walls. Plus, they keep you up-to-date!

8. Hilarious posters are a must

Sometimes, all your walls need are a witty poster.

9. Assemble a bookshelf using plastic crates

Bookshelves can be expensive. Thank goodness for inexpensive plastic crate shelves! Plus, when you acquire a real bookshelf, these bad boys can be whatever you want them to be. (For example, storage, laundry basket, plant stand, etc).

10. Accidentally spill crayon wax on your bathroom floor

Accidents happen, but if they have to happen, make sure it's with bright crayon wax so that every time you see it, you say, “Hey! Happy colors!"

11. Hang up pictures!

Hang up pictures, with or without frames! Prints are cheap, and allow you to keep your treasured memories forever!

Report this Content
This article has not been reviewed by Odyssey HQ and solely reflects the ideas and opinions of the creator.
6 Signs You Are An English Major

There are various stereotypes about college students, most of which revolve around the concept of your major. Unfortunately, we often let stereotypes precede our own judgments, and we take what information is immediately available to us rather than forming our own opinions after considerable reflection. If I got a dollar for every time my friends have made a joke about my major I could pay my tuition. One stereotype on campus is the sensitive, overly critical and rigid English major. Here are six telltale signs you are one of them.

Keep Reading...Show less
Entertainment

27 Things 'The Office' Has Taught Us

"The Office" is a mockumentary based on everyday office life featuring love triangles, silly pranks and everything in between. It can get pretty crazy for just an average day at the office.

1740
the office
http://www.ssninsider.com/

When you were little, your parents probably told you television makes your brain rot so you wouldn't watch it for twelve straight hours. However, I feel we can learn some pretty valuable stuff from television shows. "The Office," while a comedy, has some pretty teachable moments thrown in there. You may not know how to react in a situation where a co-worker does something crazy (like put your office supplies in jello) but thanks to "The Office," now you'll have an idea how to behave ifsomething like that should happen.

Here are just a few of the things that religious Office watchers can expect to learn.

Keep Reading...Show less
Grey's Anatomy
TV Guide

Being pre-med is quite a journey. It’s not easy juggling school work, extracurricular activities, volunteering, shadowing, research, and MCAT prep all at the same time. Ever heard of “pain is temporary, but GPA is forever?” Pre-meds don’t just embody that motto; we live and breathe it. Here are 10 symptoms you’re down with the pre-med student syndrome.

Keep Reading...Show less
Entertainment

High School And College Sucked All Of The Fun Out Of Reading

Books were always about understanding for me, about learning the way someone else sees, about connection.

790
High School And College Sucked All Of The Fun Out Of Reading

I keep making this joke whenever the idea of books is brought up: "God, I wish I knew how to read." It runs parallel to another stupid phrase, as I watch my friends struggle through their calculus classes late at night in our floor lounge: "I hope this is the year that I learn to count." They're both truly idiotic expressions, but, when I consider the former, I sometimes wonder if there's some truth to it.

Keep Reading...Show less
One Book Made Me Question Existence In Its Entirety
Photo by Rey Seven on Unsplash

"The Stranger" by Albert Campus touches upon many heavy elements... but not in the way you expect. Although it touches upon the aspects of death and love, it also deals with a hidden philosophy similar to that of nihilism.

The story follows the short life events of Meursault, a Frenchman whose carelessness for his actions eventually ends him in jail and dependent on a jury of people to judge the ethicality of his decision and the punishment that he deserves. He eventually gets the death penalty and all throughout he is nonchalant and almost apathetic towards his situation. He finally snaps when the prison sends a priest to him to absolve him of his sins and to cajole him in confessing to the lord.

Keep Reading...Show less

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Facebook Comments