Have you ever walked into someone’s home and thought, “Wow, I want to live here?” Here are some great ideas for getting your geeky friends to say that every time they visit you.

Getting Started and Storing Your Stuff

Many young adults have preconceived notions about what an “adult” home will look like. From television series, magazines or our families, we develop these ideas that our homes must look like the examples we have seen or we are somehow not adulting. I call foul!

I fell for it too, imagining that without plants and throw pillows and boring artwork or family photos on the wall, I was still living like a college student or not being a grown up. But after many years, my husband and I have dispelled ourselves of that notion. So here are some tips based on our experience on how to decorate like an adult geek.

Talk With Your Significant Other

The first thing you need to know about decorating like a geek is that you have to be on the same page with anyone who might be sharing the house. Thor is a minimalist in most things, so I had to make him understand that my house, apartment, or other lodging feels more homey when it has art on the walls. The only thing that mattered to him about decorating was keeping the house clean and clutter-free,

Once you agree on a decorating style, it’s time to talk about your various fandoms. Hopefully you share favorites with your significant other, but if each of you has a favorite of your own, decide how that will be reflected in your shared space. For us, the solution was fairly simple. My Nightmare Before Christmas collection became the basis of the decorating for our home office where I spend far more time than he does. The remainder of the house we discussed with me willing to give in to his preferences when he expressed them because it was only fair.

Think About Your Hobbies

As a geek, chances are you have a hobby, or hobbies that require some amount of space in your home. From comic collections to board games to LARP accessories, geek hobbies generally take up space. For us, that was a major consideration. When we moved to Pennsylvania, one of our first decisions as we unpacked was where we would store our things. We have a few hundred DVDs, a video game collection, a board game collection, dozens of role playing books, hundreds of war gaming miniatures and terrain and more.  Even though we have a three-bedroom place for just two people, we knew one bedroom would be the home office and that we would have to store all our other stuff in the other spare room and throughout the house.

LARP Gear Storage

Fancy decoration, or a place to stash your LARP gear?

Storage Options

The amount of time Thor put into figuring out storage options was huge, so you get to benefit from his research. Some of his ideas were obvious and some less so.

  1. Book Shelves. Our spare bedroom has one wall lined with book shelves. Those shelves primarily house our board game collection, though a few war gaming supplies, such as the miniatures he is currently painting also steal shelf space. In the actual game room – the living room that we converted into gaming space – the bookshelves house our role-playing books and our reading collection including our graphic novels.
  2. The Kallax is an IKEA product but lots of knocks-offs exist. These shelving units can be left open with space for displaying your collections or can be filled with baskets or drawers. You can also add doors to make them more cabinet-like. We have found that the drawers are perfect for storing office and painting supplies. More recently, we discovered they are also great for storing miniatures. Use a drawer liner to prevent sliding and access to your miniature collection becomes much easier.
  3. Closet Space. We sacrificed our entry closet to game storage, putting a book case in the closet next to the vacuum cleaner. One shelf gets winter weather gear, but the remainder is for game storage. The coats go on a rack behind the front door.
  4. Hat boxes, suitcases and trunks. We aren’t LARPers anymore, but when we were, we used decorative boxes that can be hidden in plain sight to stash our LARP gear while still looking neat.
  5. Electronic devices. We read a lot and own a fair amount of music. We transferred our CDs into a single storage album after adding electronic copies to our computers and external hard drives. We opted for e-readers for everything except the book collections that have sentimental value (like signed editions) or that we will read over and over again.

Our next installment on geek decorating will focus on how to decorate like a geek on the cheap.