I wanted to share some photos of how I recently decorated my new office at work. If you're like me, you may find that you spend a large percentage of your Monday through Friday life inside the four walls of an office.
Many people do not have the option to personalize their space beyond a few framed photos, a pencil cup and candy jar. On the other hand, these same folks typically are provided really nice office spaces with plush, coordinating furnishings that match the decor of the entire office building. And their salaries most often reflect this as well.
I, on the other hand, work in a higher education administrative type of setting. I do not work with high-dollar clients. My typical "customers" are Freshman and Sophomore college students in their very late teens/early twenties. When my entire office was relocated to another place, we were supplied with small offices with white walls -- and a mesh-mash of white metallic desks, ancient desk chairs and wooden bookcases that have a date from the 1970s stamped on the backside! You could not ask for a more blah and sterile work environment.
Since I work approximately 10 hour weekdays (Fridays are half-days), I knew I could not maximize my productivity every week in that cave-like setting. The week we moved, I did a literal blitz of blogs and Pinterest for fun work ideas but without tons of leads. I collaborated some of the ideas that I did stumble upon with other ideas that had evolved inside my cluttered brain...and the following photos show the colorful canvas I ended up with as my work environment...
![]() | ||||||
A closeup of my duct-taped desk handy work! |
![]() |
I found this idea on Pinterest, and I think it linked back to a blog : The Paint Chip Office Calendar. Cut 35 paint sample chips into perfect squares. Line these into 5 rows of 7. Use Elmer's clear drying glue to attach these onto a sheet of scrapbooking paper (measure and cut to fit the size of the frame to be used). Dry overnight. Frame it and use a dry-erase marker to label the month, year and days on the glass part of the frame. My frame was from a clearance bin for about $2, and the frame part of it actually fell apart on me the first day. I improvised by using a couple of large binder clips from our office supply cabinet at work to hold my calendar together. I clipped one binder clip on the top left and one on the bottom right. |
![]() |
BEFORE: The blah, faded blue student chair |
![]() | ||
This is the door sign I created and applied that was affixed to the main door that enters our office's lobby area, thanks to the beauty of my Cricut machine. :) |