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Pick Your Child’s Furniture

By: Azlan It’s a frequent predicament; decorating a toddler nursery with the right child furniture. Your child has outgrown teddy bears and pastel ribbons, and is ready for a motif that looks more “grown up" but still maintains that feeling of innocence. You also want child furniture that’s as practical as it is pretty. After all, your child’s grown more lively and inquisitive. He loves to play, read, and occasionally subject his toys to the loud banging and kicking.

Design – The first step is to decide on a theme. Look at your child’s character and individual favorites. Does he love cars or animals, cowboys or aliens? Is she fascinated with fairy tales or stories of jungle safaris? If you’re not sure, then focus the options to two and allow your child to pick and choose – the room becomes more unique if your child helped to arrange it.

Functionality – When buying child furniture, test out the practicality and design. The stools are supposed to be well-built, and use non-leaded paint. Look for surfaces that are trouble-free to clean and have rounded corners. Desks should be spacious enough to hold paper and crayons, tea sets or books. After all, this is your child’s “work space". Special bonuses are shelves or compartments where you can stash away little boxes for art materials, puzzle pieces and other bric-a-bracs.

Safety – The benefit of purchasing specialty children’s furniture is that you’re more or less assured that they have met safety regulations and are built for a child’s proportions (at least he won’t tip over as he tries to scramble up a chair!). And of course, the attractive design encourages the child to sit and play. This is his table, his chair, and for toddlers, that awareness of ownership is an immense factor in establishing self-esteem. He is growing more independent, and the role of parents is to provide just enough freedom in secure surroundings – like an area where everything is child-friendly. Here he can be left for hours, discovering how to play independently and investigate on his own, without mum perpetually worried that he’ll break something (or his neck). That alone makes investing in specialty child’s furniture advisable.

Tables and chairs encourage your child to spend hours drawing, writing, reading, or engaging in pretend play. Think of this set as the stage for your child’s creativity. With no table or chair, your child will be constrained to do these activities on the floor, while hunched over, or lying on his stomach. This is tiring and ultimately bad for his posture.

Book cases will encourage a child’s love for reading, so books must be kept accessible. He should be able to grab a book whenever he wants to, and then put the book back himself (unless you want to acquire the habit of cleaning up after him each time!)

Toys can get lost or broken if they are left willy-nilly on the floor. The best toy storage should have different compartments to segregate the various items in his ever-growing collection. Teaching your child to organize toys (stuffed animals on one shelf, blocks on another) also aids him in building up abstract thinking.


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Article Source: http://www.lifeweightloss.com

Alan Parkins is a researcher and writer working for www.basichomedecor.com, where you can get all the best children’s furniture at the best prices. Visit us for all your furniture and decor needs.

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