We checked out apartments online, found an apparently nice and mysteriously inexpensive two-bedroom in a great location, and sent my brother to check it out while he was on a business trip in the area. He did not have nice things to say. "It's two hundred years old--AND LOOKS IT" (only now do I understand how that might not be a compliment.) "It has a wooden fire escape. Do you really want to live in a place built by imbeciles?" "I don't think it's been cleaned since the Emancipation Proclamation" (Bad joke, bro!). Despite my brother's naysaying, we rented the apartment, have learned to love it, have made it a home, and plan to be here for many more years.
But there are many drawbacks to apartment living, not the least of which are aesthetic. There are many design roadblocks when it comes to renting, but the most famous and one of the most perpetually frustrating must be white walls. Even though our property managers know we'll be here for years, they still enforce a strict white walls policy. Here are some tactics for bringing color to an apartment without painting.
2. Bright textiles. Textiles can also be a nice way of brightening a room without painting. Using a significant amount of color in your furniture and accessories will make the white walls seem like a backdrop for pizazz, not an oppressive blankness. Curtains break up the white on a wall and highlight the vibrancy of the outdoors. You could also try covering a canvas with a swath of an attractive textile, as How About Orange describes here.
3. Temporary Wallpaper. If you can afford it, and still don't mind paying for it, several lines of temporary wallpaper have sprung up in the past several years. They're self-adhesive and supposedly easily removable and repositionable. I've never used it personally, so I can't verify just how easily removable it is (I'm a bit skeptical.) My mom has used wall-decals made of similar materials with disastrously permanent results. Many available patterns are very attractive, so if the idea interests you, do some more research.
4. Paint. Yep, I mean actually painting your walls. Lots of landlords are very open to this idea, sometimes with the stipulation that it's a neutral color or that you'll repaint it white upon moving out. It doesn't hurt to ask!
5. Embrace it! Does it shock you, dear fellow renter, that some homeowners actually paint their own walls white? Benita, the superwoman over at Chez Larsson, has created a gorgeous and incredibly livable home centered on the Scandinavian simplicity of white. She shows that white isn't just for extreme minimalists and college dorm rooms, but is also elegantly restrained, easy to clean, and beautiful.