Kids produce a LOT of art—drawings, crafts, school projects—and parents want to encourage it without turning every wall into a chaotic notice board.
Create a dedicated art zone. It could be a section of a hallway, a kitchen wall, or a space near their room. Limiting display to this “gallery” keeps the rest of the home visually calm.
Use frames, clipboards, or a wire with clips so pieces can be swapped easily. This makes each artwork feel valued, not just taped randomly.
Rotate regularly. When new masterpieces arrive, older ones can be stored in a folder or photographed and archived digitally. You don’t have to display everything forever.
Mix children’s art with a few “grown-up” pieces—prints, quotes, or photos—so the gallery looks intentional, not purely cluttered.
For 3D crafts or models, use a small shelf or ledge that can be refreshed every few weeks.
This way, your child sees their work honoured, and you keep control over how the house looks.
