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How Designers Decorate Their Bedrooms: 5 Examples for Different Budgets

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Very beautiful interiors that you will want to recreate

Today we collected five of the most interesting bedrooms that designers decorated for themselves. Here you can see both budget and impressive interiors from professionals in the field.

1. Budget, but Attractive Bedroom of a Designer
Designer Tatiana Ivanova decorated her small 35 sq. m apartment herself. The main task was to create a budget-friendly yet attractive interior with bright accents. A reconfiguration was unavoidable. Where the kitchen used to be, the designer made a bedroom. "The main problem was with the gas connection: I didn't have gas, but the drain pipe for the sewage wasn't going into the screed. I solved this issue by making a step in the hallway,"— Tatiana Ivanova explains.Design: Tatiana IvanovaDesign: Tatiana Ivanova
A three-meter wardrobe in the designer's bedroom was ordered from a local carpenter's workshop. The bed with a soft headboard was chosen from a domestic manufacturer in the budget segment. Nightstands, like the textiles, were bought at IKEA.Design: Tatiana IvanovaDesign: Tatiana Ivanova
Design: Tatiana IvanovaDesign: Tatiana Ivanova

2. Bright Bedroom for a Designer's Family
Large windows, minimalism, and modern art—this is how Julia Fambulova decorated the interior of her three-room apartment. The wall between the bathroom and bedroom was slightly modified to make it more functional. As a result, a niche for a washing machine appeared near the bathroom, and a dresser and open shelves for storage were placed near the bedroom.
Her favorite color is gray. Julia uses it in various shades in her bedroom. The gray palette is balanced with bright textiles and a canvas by Anna Lesukhina.Design: Julia FambulovaDesign: Julia Fambulova
Elegant cast iron bed and dresser were purchased at IKEA, while the duvet cover was bought at Zara Home.Design: Julia FambulovaDesign: Julia Fambulova

3. Vibrant Colors in a Designer's Bedroom
In a 45 sq. m two-room Khrushchyovka, designer Nadia Zотовa managed to create a unique space full of color and comfort. The small bedroom with low ceilings was not made empty or light, but rather enriched with vibrant colors and bold details. Behind the cozy velvet curtains in the bedroom lies a walk-in closet with a circular passage.Design: Nadia ZотовaDesign: Nadia Zотовa
An antique bed is already a work of art in itself. It is complemented by a hanging lamp from the 1950s by Barovier & Toso, paintings brought back from travels, and textiles.Design: Nadia ZотовaDesign: Nadia Zотовa

4. Monochrome Bedroom of an Architect
Architect Boris Denisюk realized his long-held dream of living in a mansard and decorated it in white-red-black tones. The move to a small apartment was due to the opportunity to implement ideas that clients rarely agree to.Design: Boris DenisюkDesign: Boris Denisюk
The bedroom was almost untouched by reconfiguration. The architect placed the main storage system here—three wardrobes that occupy the entire wall. Two side tables for clean and dirty laundry appeared next to the bed. Boris Denisюk decided they were more needed here because he, like most people, dresses in the bedroom rather than in the bathroom.Design: Boris DenisюkDesign: Boris Denisюk

5. Strict Lines and Rounded Shapes in a Designer's Bedroom
After completing the project of a three-room apartment in Moscow, designer Natalia Belugina realized that it was so personal that she decided to keep it for herself. In the bedroom, Natalia created a space that feels endless and bright with large floor-to-ceiling windows.Design: Natalia BeluginaDesign: Natalia Belugina
The designer wanted to create a bedroom interior that gives the feeling of being on the Miami coast, not in Russia. With the chosen color palette in calm blue-gray tones with accents, she succeeded.
Design: Natalia BeluginaDesign: Natalia Belugina
Design: Natalia BeluginaDesign: Natalia Belugina