I want to decorate my daughters room for christmas
Question Posted Tuesday November 4 2014, 9:02 am
How should I decorate my daughters room for Christmas? She is 13 years old. I have a budget of $5-$20 dollars. I want it to fit a teenager's style? What should I do and how should I decorate?
Dragonflymagic answered Tuesday November 4 2014, 11:37 pm: For that cost, check out the dollar stores. I get lots of Christmas stuff there. And I have found Walmart to have the less expensive light sets. Ask her what she'd like and take her along on the trip. If I were a teen again and Mom wanted to help decorate my room, I'd be excited to get to pick out what I want.
To add to it all, make paper snowflakes. there are plenty tutorials on line. I make fresh ones every year and hang them from a thread taped to the ceiling at different lengths so it looks like snowfalling. Add white lights and it's a winter wonderland. [ Dragonflymagic's advice column | Ask Dragonflymagic A Question ]
sillyrob answered Tuesday November 4 2014, 4:03 pm: I'm not trying to sound like a dick here, but with a budget of $5-$20, you're not gonna get much that's going to fit a 13 year olds style. You're probably gonna have to resort to basic Christmas stuff, red and green.....those sparkly things that go around trees, (sorry, I'm suffering a sinus infection and some words are escaping me) or strings of lights. Hell, night time with a wall lined with Christmas lights would look really cool actually. So don't go crazy, just some lights and those sparkly boa things, and she might think it's really cool. [ sillyrob's advice column | Ask sillyrob A Question ]
Attention: NOTHING on this site may be reproduced in any fashion whatsoever without explicit consent (in writing) of the owner of said material, unless otherwise stated on the page where the content originated. Search engines are free to index and cache our content. Users who post their account names or personal information in their questions have no expectation of privacy beyond that point for anything they disclose. Questions are otherwise considered anonymous to the general public.