Non Matching Bedroom Furniture
Notice that this is not a matched set bedroom.
Non matching bedroom furniture. Once upon a time most people purchased their bedroom furniture in complete sets If you were sprucing up your space you were likely to purchase an entire matching set that included your bed dressers and nightstands for a perfectly polished look. This way you will be diverting attention away from the mismatched elements and end up coming up with an adorable design. Not always will you have everything matching or fusing together but you can try making the essential key objects matching.
While there are definitely some good collections you can achieve a more interesting space when you pull together different furniture pieces. Bedroom Inspiration Board by The Decorologist We decided to use an updated neutral on the walls and a grayed blue on the ceiling. Whether the dressers are different shapes colors styles or some combination of all.
Unfortunately some stores lead you to believe that you should be buying a matching furniture suite I disagree. Replace the clunky wood knobs with faux crystal from the home or hardware store. A bedroom with mismatched furniture may result in dark and light wood furnishings in the same space -- such as two different dressers -- and a bed that matches neither piece.
Whatever the reason youve ended up with an odd couple of nightstands in your bedroom and now youre wondering how to make them get along. Matching furniture is a thing of the past. For example buying a bed two matching side tables and a matching dresser.
You made a great point about starting with one piece of furniture that can serve as inspiration for the rest of the room. I currently have matching stands but from a bedroom set bought from the previous homeowner. To accomplish this you have to consider veering away from matching sets.
Paint the bed platform pewter or aluminum -- non-metallic -- to make it match a bit but mostly disappear. Or maybe you just dont like matchy-poo sets as one design maven I know calls them. Designers will tell you that a room should look like it was assembled over time not picked up yesterday at a furniture store.

