Think your design ambitions are bigger than your budget? Think again. 
Here are 11 ways to achieve the look you want
1. Paint
Though painting is the cheapest investment you 
can make, it’s also the one with the most dramatic result. Go ahead and put some 
color on those walls for a fresh — and inexpensive — new look.
2. Do It Yourself 
The biggest budget buster is hiring 
others to do things you could do. Consider what you'll save by taking on some 
relatively simple projects: painting, tiling, installing a new floor, sewing 
curtain panels or throw pillows — whatever you feel up to trying.
3. Call in Family and Friends
You may not have a wad of 
cash or a lot of home-improvement know-how, but you have other resources that 
can help get your decorating project off the ground: the people you know. Call 
on a group of relatives, friends and neighbors who can supply the muscle to rip 
down wall paneling, roll on paint or assemble a room of flat-packed furniture. 
Just don’t forget to feed them lunch.
4. Shop Secondhand Stores 
Thrift stores, consignment 
shops, church rummage sales, online auction sites, estate sales and even salvage 
yards offer a bounty of discount decorating booty. Look for furniture with solid 
construction and classic lines that new upholstery or paint will bring back to 
life.
5. Look for Less-Than-Perfect Merchandise
You may be able 
to snag super deals on slightly damaged items, floor models and seconds (such as 
towels from a dye lot that was slightly off), so be sure to check stores’ "as 
is" areas or to ask the manager about fire-sale items. Chances are, no one but 
you will be any the wiser, and you’ll save big bucks.
6. Save With Stock Items
Custom framing, sewing, 
upholstering and other skilled labor can add a bundle to the bottom line. 
Instead, stick with stock items whenever you can: Buy off-the-shelf frames and 
mats, and trim non-valuable art prints to fit them. Buy standard blinds that are 
a bit larger than your windows and mount them outside the frames. Snap up stock 
cabinets and finish them with moldings for a custom look. Order that sofa in a 
neutral, ready-to-ship fabric and use the money you save to splurge on colorful 
throw pillows.
7. Wait Patiently for Sales and Discounts
Wait to find 
what you really love at a price you really love. While you shop, ask if items 
will be discounted any time soon. Store and department managers are usually the 
best sources for this insider info and may even offer you the discounted price 
before it goes into effect. 
8. Mix, Don’t Match
Not only is a "matchy-matchy" look 
boring, but buying entire suites of furniture tends to cost more than putting 
together a creative, eclectic look. Mix it up by opting for a couch and chairs 
upholstered in complementary fabrics, flanking a bed with unmatched nightstands 
and decorating with other diverse items unified by color, form, material and 
tone. Or try pairing a stately wood table with shiny aluminum or brightly 
colored plastic chairs. And don’t be afraid to mix high-end and low-end or 
modern and traditional.
9. Sew Your Own Linens
If you have a sewing machine, you 
can quickly and easily transform patterned flat sheets into curtain panels, 
pillow and duvet covers, tablecloths, and even slipcovers — and pay a small 
fraction of what you’d shell out for fabric yardage. Of course, this assumes 
you’ve had successful sewing experience or are good friends with a 
seamstress.
10. Add Unexpected Accessories
Almost anything can serve 
as an accessory, and that goes for found objects and household items that cost 
practically nothing. Architectural corbels rescued from a salvage yard make 
great bookends, while seashells and driftwood collected at the shore create a 
lovely natural grouping. A bowl filled with crisp green apples lends a bright 
pop of color to just about any surface, and a stack of vintage hardbacks adds 
height, dimension and character to an occasional table.
11. Reuse Items You Already Have
You don’t have to buy 
new pieces to turn your tired domicile into a hip space. Instead, turn a fresh 
eye to what you already have and think about how it might be camouflaged, 
repurposed or reimagined. Reinvent a drab dresser in a guest bedroom as a 
dramatic dining-room sideboard with a few coats of glossy black paint and 
sparkling new hardware. Make over that old couch with a slipcover in a fabulous 
fabric. Turn plain pillows into eye-catching accents by stenciling simple 
designs on them. After all, there’s no better budget stretcher than your 
imagination.
http://www.hgtv.com/decorating/11-ideas-for-designing-on-a-budget/page-2.html
 
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