Your not forever home Affordable, elevated, temporary décor for renters

Katherine Ormerod

Book - 2024

In Your Not Forever Home, Katherine Ormerod has curated a range of projects for every room in a rented house or flat, guiding you through techniques and invaluable insights that will help create spaces tailored to your taste. Katherine addresses why many of us are renting now for much longer, and provides reassuring guidance on how to approach alterations with your landlord - and, if you are new to DIY, Your Not Forever Home offers projects for a range of skillsets, from entry-level to the more experienced, with Katherine sharing her own experiences along the way.

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2nd Floor New Shelf 747/Ormerod (NEW SHELF) Due Feb 24, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Informational works
Illustrated works
Documents d'information
Ouvrages illustrés
Published
London : Quadrille, an imprint of Hardie Grant Publishing 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Katherine Ormerod (author)
Other Authors
Yuki Sugiura (photographer)
Physical Description
224 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781837831128
  • How we live
  • Opening notes
  • Beginner's 101: how to...
  • The Zoom room
  • Where you work
  • How to zone a room
  • How to make a scalloped shelf
  • How to curate your Zoom shelfie
  • How to make and fit skylight curtains
  • How to hang temporary wallpaper
  • How to find a rental home
  • Bistro chez moi
  • Your entertaining space
  • Twisted candles
  • Painted candles
  • Dried flower candles
  • Make your own table napkins
  • Create blanket tapestries with a homemade frame
  • Landlords, your rights as a tenant - what to get in writing
  • Home hotel
  • Your sleeping space
  • Making bolster cushions
  • Making a wavy mirror
  • Painted furniture
  • How to buy, move and place furniture, Where you work art and objects
  • Kid kingdom
  • Your children's spaces
  • Knitted words
  • Papier mache animal heads
  • Storage ideas
  • DIY expectations and energy
  • Mi casa, su casa
  • Where guests sleep
  • How to upholster a headboard
  • How to add rattan to furniture
  • Painted jug and glass
  • Moving blues
  • Everything and the sink
  • Where you cook and clean
  • How to fit removeable vinyl to a kitchen
  • Pleated cushions for bar stools
  • Simple curtain
  • Women and DIY
  • Home comforts
  • Where you live
  • Removeable radiator covers
  • Painted lamps
  • Pretty stool upgrade
  • How to buy art and objects
  • Party time
  • Where you celebrate
  • Holiday season
  • Homemade stockings
  • Wallpaper stars
  • Reusable crackers
  • Solstice chic
  • Eucalyptus chandelier
  • Wildflower table centre
  • Ric rac placemats
  • Harvest to Halloween
  • Harvest wreath
  • Witch's hat hunting
  • Chalky pumpkin patch
  • How to leave your rental
  • Conclusion
  • Glossary
  • References
  • About the Author
  • Acknowledgements
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Lamenting declining homeownership rates, journalist Ormerod (Coco Rules) provides a spirited manual exploring how tenants can express their personal style in rented abodes. She highlights decorating techniques that can be easily undone at the end of a lease, describing how to cover kitchen counters in removable vinyl, apply temporary wallpaper, and decorate removable radiator covers. Other DIY projects are aimed at upscaling furniture, as when Ormerod details how to add a foam seat to a stool and glue scalloped trim to shelves. Ormerod privileges practicality over aesthetics, as when she admits that though she prefers glass in picture framing, she usually opts for transparent vinyl instead because it won't shatter during a move. Unusual for an interior design guide, asides decrying how homeownership has become unattainable for younger generations provide a refreshing acknowledgement of political and practical constraints on decorating decisions. The projects are relatively simple (though readers will want some familiarity with a sewing machine before making their own table napkins and curtains), but it still feels like an oversight that many omit photos illustrating the steps involved. Nonetheless, renters will find this a font of inspiration. (May)

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