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Dorm décor: How to make your dorm room slay

Annie Elliott | August 8, 2022

Attention, college-goers! I’ve been fielding a lot of questions recently about decorating dorm rooms. (And not just from my own children, I swear.) What should I bring? What’s worth caring about, and what isn’t? What should I coordinate with my roommate? Things were much simpler when I went to school, lemme tell ya.

Group of girls from the 1980s
From a shockingly accurate post titled, “This Is What Dorms Looked Like In The 80s And We Survived” from the blog Grown and Flown

Here’s my advice.

Don’t coordinate with your roommate.

I wouldn’t bother. Seriously. This isn’t your first apartment (my advice for that would be much different, believe me), and you are two people who have never met. You don’t want strife right out of the gate. So maybe tell her/him/them that you really like baby blue, or that your style is kind of bohemian, and leave it at that. Preppy and minimalist will co-exist. They’ll have to.

2 girls in a dorm room
From “Dormify” if you can believe it. I don’t recommend anything in this picture, by the way. Nothing.

But volunteer to bring the rug.

As you know, I believe an interesting rug is the foundation of every room. (Not so a beige berber, tasteful though it may be.) So the competitive side of me says, “Make sure you choose the thing that takes up the most visual real estate.”

Anthropologie

I’m picturing my own freshman dorm room, which I bet is still pretty typical: two twin beds (or the super annoying XL Twin) parallel to each other with some space in between. Dressers, desks, etc. are elsewhere. That space between your beds should have a rug on it, EVEN IF there’s already wall-to-wall carpeting. (Eew, but all the more reason to cover it up.)

Blue patterned area rug
Loloi

You don’t need a large rug. 3′ x 5′ is fine between 2 beds. 4′ x 6′ will probably work, and 5′ x 7′ is getting large for a dorm room. 2′ x 3′ is basically a doormat, but it can have an impact in front of a dresser. Please make sure you use a non-skid rug pad. Small rugs on a hard floor slip easily.

Rugs at a street fair
Rugs at the Georgetown flea market

I don’t advise a major expenditure (for ANYthing in your dorm room, actually), but if you invest your dog-sitting, bagel-store-working, or child-minding money in a decent rug, you could have it for many years.

Fairy lights are a must.

I just like them, that’s all. And they’re young and festive and twinkly — like YOU! Lights in dorm rooms aren’t on dimmers, so this is your chance at light control.

You know how people in movies throw a red silk scarf over a table lamp for “mood lighting?” Don’t do that. It’s not only a fire hazard; it’s tacky.

String lights on white wall
Bed, Bath & Beyond

Bonus points for a tiny accent lamp.

15″ or shorter. It could go next to your bed, or on your dresser, or even on your desk if you have one.

Tiny silver table lamp
$25 from LampsPlus! Remember: you will see ANYTHING you buy at Target in every room of your dorm

Once you search “accent lamp,” you’ll really go down a rabbit hole. The tinier the better for versatility and cuteness.

Tiny mouse lamps
I’m sorry, but these are hilarious. On Etsy, of course

A real tabletop plant is ok…

…but I’d skip the fake tree. It’s statement-making, sure, but it will eat up a lot of room, and you’ll be sick of it after a semester.

Small black pots with plants
Planters from Etú Home. A vase for the occasional flower isn’t a bad idea, either

Pillows are very important.

Pillows will be your second most visible item after the fabulous rug you’ve convinced your roommate you will provide. One large (if your taste is classic or clean lined) or several small (if you lean toward maximalist or bohemian style) decorative pillows on your bed show off your personality.

Floral pillows
From Loloi. This is from a trade website, but search Loloi. Etsy is also great for fun pillows

If you want your twin (or the aforementioned XL Twin) to read as a daybed, you’ll need even more pillows. Throw a lumbar (rectangular) pillow in with the 18″ squares for interest.

daybed with lots of pillows
My daughter’s room, to illustrate “pillows.” This would be a good dorm room rug, too, actually (but no, you can’t bring this one, Ruthie)

I have it on good authority (from a lovely young woman who will be a SOPHOMORE this year, so she knows) that floor pillows are handy to have for visitors.

18" square cushy pillows
From Urban Outfitters. Only 18″ in diameter, but they look pretty cushy, don’t they?

Don’t fall for something at Target because it calls itself a “floor pillow,” though. A normal pillow will do just fine, especially if it’s 20″ round or square. “Euro pillows” are 26″ square and are very comfy to sit on, but they’re BIG.

Colorful pillows and rugs
West Elm is great for pillows – and rugs, actually

Make sure you’re not just buying a pillow COVER; you may have to get the insert separately. There are inexpensive places online for that — or if you’re tight on time, Crate & Barrel’s feather inserts are reasonably priced.

Flower shaped pillows
Fun pillows on Etsy

And therefore, bedding is important.

Quilts, duvet covers, the charming but tragically outdated “bedspread”…this is the backdrop for an amazing pillow or colorful throw across the foot. It doesn’t even have to be a pattern; it could just be a beautiful color you love — or the crispest, purest white, which is always beautiful and refreshing.

Ticking stripe duvet cover
Large-patterned pillows look great on a narrow stripe, actually

Wall décor

(I LOATHE the word décor, by the way, so when I use it, please know that I’m being kind of ironic.)

Anyhoo. A framed 4″ x 6″ photograph of your dog next to your bed is perfect, but you also want interesting things on your walls. I don’t mind the hangy-uppy things like this one:

Girl hanging up pictures
From Dormify. She looks cold

If you want to put pictures of your friends (or your family! Who is paying for college!) on your actual walls, though, I recommend 5″ x 7″ or 8″ x 10″, preferably candids, preferably in black and white. Larger and B/W is more artsy and therefore more desirable as decoration.

Then there are smallish silkscreens and prints that you can get on Etsy, a street fair, and/or Urban Outfitters. (They have a lot of good dorm things, actually, but, as with Target, know that you’ll see yourself coming and going if you buy everything there.)

Dorm room decor

I’d love it if you’d have something from your hometown, and at least one object would be great, such as an actual album cover (please don’t buy THAT at Urban, though. Pick up one at a thrift store, which is cooler anyway and better for the planet). Other ideas include a race number from a meet in a torrential downpour or an invitation to something fun.

Washington DC print
On Esty

Tapestries seem to be staging a comeback (hi, Anthropologie; Indian ones never went away on Etsy), but if you have a small room, they leave precious little wall space for other things.

Blue floral tapestry
Ok, this one is really pretty. But it’s expensive

How about removable wallpaper, someone asked me. I mean, sure, but really? You want to spend time and money on that? And you would HAVE to agree on that with your roommate.

Nothing braggy on your walls, please. No awards, no pictures of you shaking hands with the president, no diplomas (unless it’s your dog’s from completing “Basic Manners” in puppy kindergarten). You’re in college now. Everyone is just as smart and accomplished and interesting as you are. Which is scary but liberating.

Crowd of people
The scene outside Georgie’s high school graduation

In sum…

Overall, my dear college adventurers, my advice is to let your dorm room reflect YOU, which means bringing a little of your past and a lot of your aspirational future. Combine vintage with shiny and new. Utilitarian with frivolous. Give it some thought.

Please, though, I implore you: don’t put pressure on yourself about decorating your dorm room. You’ll get plenty of pressure elsewhere. I just want your dorm room — like your house one day — to make you happy every time you walk through the door.

Room with bunk beds

(Snarky P.S. If YOUR mom were an interior designer, wouldn’t you let her make custom pillows for your dorm room, and not be all, “I want it to be MY room, blah blah?” Uh-huh. That’s what I thought.)

Note 10.15.22: If you’re curious about Georgie’s dorm room, we did a TikTok of her move-in, which, astonishingly, has received more than 660k views so far. ?!?

Annie Elliott Design is based in Washington, DC, and we have offices in St. Michaels, Maryland, and Middlebury, Vermont. Don’t miss our thoughts about kids’ bedroom trends in this article on HGTV.com.

Category: BedroomTag: college room, dorm decor, dorm room, teen bedroom

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