How to create a cozy and stimulating environment for your baby by yourself.

Create a World for Your Little One with Your Own Hands

When still very small, your child constantly feels the desire to be with the parents, to be close to mom and dad. But time passes, and as the years go by your child naturally asserts his or her rights to independence. And at that very moment they need their own world and space, which we commonly call the child's room.

The children's room is not only a place for quick games with friends or a place where the child will do sports, draw, study, make music, and do other activities. It is also the space in which their new world will exist and develop.

To make that world initially well suited to the growing and changing needs of its future owner, adults should make an effort—adding the right touches to the interior and ordering children's furniture from a reputable showroom.

What could be simpler than buying a children's furniture set? But that's precisely where the hardest part begins. Furniture for a child's room is presented to today's consumer in an enormous variety: shops are teeming with furniture for children's rooms made of glass and metal, plastic and wood, MDF, particleboard, fiberboard, and so on.

Browsing the websites returned by a search for "children's furniture" or "variety of living room styles" you realize how vast the choice is and how big the problem facing parents who intend to create for their child, by their own efforts, a true separate world — a fairytale one, free from anything bad.

Of course you can visit a children's furniture salon to buy inexpensive furniture that immediately appeals. But that's a hasty decision. For the health and proper development of your child it matters not only how the furniture looks, how beds are finished, or how extensive the range is. For your child to be surrounded by genuinely good children's furniture, a writing desk and modular pieces must be carefully selected and well made. That's why, when buying children's furniture, pay attention to quality certificates that comply with GOST standards and sanitary regulations, as well as to the manufacturer's workmanship, and the strength and reliability of the furniture's components. It's no secret that, for example, children's cabinet furniture made of particleboard whose edges are trimmed with plastic edging will look much neater and last longer than cheap children's furniture with paper edging.

Modular children's furniture with laminated surfaces not only has a tidier, neater design, but can also withstand your child's creative moments without showing damage, when pencils and markers become their best friends and they draw everywhere — hopefully everywhere except the ceiling.