Master Bedroom Mood Board and DIY Plan
This may be the hardest post I’ve written so far, but here goes: a mood board for the master bedroom. I’ve never made one before, so I’m learning as I go. The goal is simple — use a mood board to visualize the results of upcoming DIY projects and help guide design decisions for a very small, multifunctional bedroom.

About the Room
“Master Bedroom” is a bit of a joke — this is a tiny room that must serve multiple purposes: sleeping, working, and craft storage. We gave the larger bedroom to the kids, so this space has to be efficient. The room measures roughly 13 by 10 feet, with a small closet in the upper-left corner, two windows flanking the bed, and a door on the upper right. Because space is tight, each piece of furniture must pull double duty.
The Mood Board and Color Palette
The mood board I created pulls together the room’s existing elements: cream walls, the brown and grey tones of a mid-century modern sideboard, and a warm copper accent from a cork lampshade. The palette is intentionally calm and neutral, with contrast from grey and wood tones and a touch of copper for warmth.

Key Pieces and Planned Makeovers
Here’s what’s in the room now and the DIY ideas I’m considering:
Dresser
I have a shabby-chic distressed dresser I painted previously. I’m considering adding a stencil or faux inlay to create visual interest. I love the look of refined patterns like a faux bone or inlay effect, but I worry a heavily patterned dresser might overwhelm the small room.


Mid-Century Modern Sideboard
I painted a low mid-century sideboard last year. Because it’s short, I stacked a smaller side table on top to increase usable surface area without using more floor space. This configuration holds my printer and provides storage, but it needs a cohesive finishing touch so the two pieces read as one unit.

Options I’m weighing:
- Paint the exterior of the top piece grey to match the bottom sideboard, keeping the interior wood tones
- Paint just the drawers grey and leave the sides natural wood for contrast

Bookcases
I have two narrow black bookcases that are practical but unattractive. They store craft supplies and need a makeover to fit the new palette and feel less visually heavy. Ideas include painting them white and decoupaging the back panels with book pages or patterned paper, or updating them with a muted wood-and-white look.


Desk
The desk under the shelf started life as a vintage kitchen table with leaves. The first table I tried was too short, which made working uncomfortable. After a garage sale swap, I now have a taller table that fits better. I’m considering painting the legs white while leaving the top in a soft natural tone to tie in with the rest of the room.


Bed and Layout
The bed is currently a mattress on a frame and will sit in the corner of the room. I plan to add a short headboard that won’t collide with the window sill. The room will also include a bench and a natural wood chair I’ve already updated.

Floor Plan and Visual Tools
For clarity I made a simple floor plan that shows the closet, windows, door, and the furniture arrangement. Creating a room planner and 3D mockups has been invaluable: it lets me move pieces around, test proportions, and see how colors and finishes interact before I commit to any DIY updates.

Mockups and Options
Below are a few quick mockups showing possible paint choices for the stacked mid-century pieces. One version shows the exterior painted grey; another shows the drawers in grey while keeping the outer wood tones. These rough visualizations help me decide whether to introduce more grey or preserve the wood contrast.


Final Mood Board and Next Steps
The mood board summarizes the look I’m aiming for: cream walls, grey and wood mid-century pieces, white accents, and warm copper details. The mood board lets me visualize the results of the DIY projects before I start, and it keeps each makeover connected to the overall plan.

Questions for You
I’d love your opinion on a few things:
- Dresser stencils: yes or no?
- Bookcases: decoupage the backs and paint white, or try another finish?
- Mid-century stack: paint the exterior grey and keep wood interiors, or paint the drawer fronts grey and leave the rest natural?
If you have experience planning small rooms or executing any of these techniques—stenciling, decoupage, or mid-century paint finishes—please share your thoughts. Your feedback will help me prioritize projects and choose finishes that make this small, busy room feel cohesive and calm.

Connect and Follow Along
If you’d like to follow the project, subscribe to updates on the blog. I’ll share progress photos and detailed how-to posts for each DIY makeover so you can recreate these looks in your own spaces.
Note: Some product links in the original planning materials were affiliate links; I removed external links here but will list sourced materials and paint colors in future project posts for transparency.
