Decorating together: How to fix up your home as a couple without breaking up

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In some ways, it was simpler before. When Joy Lane Hicks wanted to buy a new piece of furniture or do some redecorating, she says, “I would start with, ‘Hey, honey, I have an idea,’ and he would drop his head, groaning and moaning.”

She’d decorate, and eventually he’d learn to love the finished product. But much has changed in the decade since Hicks and her husband got married and bought their Jacksonville, Fla., home.

Audiences – male and female – now lap up hours of TV programming about renovating, decorating and DIY-ing. Magazines and Web sites explore every aspect of home design. And big-box retailers offer surprisingly stylish furniture and home accessories at bargain prices.

Men now are as likely as women to want a voice in decorating a shared space, says HGTV’s David Bromstad, host of “Color Splash” and the network’s original Design Star winner. “There’s more education about design now,” he says, and cutting-edge style is accessible to everyone.

That’s good news to Hicks. She loves when her husband sits down to watch a design show with her. But some nights, “These ideas start percolating. We’re watching and he says he loves something, and sometimes I’m like, ‘No way. That is ugly.’”

It’s possible to decorate without battling, says interior designer Kathryn Bechen of Solana Beach, Calif., who teaches a seminar called “Decorating without Divorcing.” But conflict is common when both partners weigh in on which sofa to buy and where to put it.

Talk first, buy later

Bromstad suggests that couples approach a joint decorating project by going together to favorite “bars, restaurants, hotel lobbies, anywhere the atmosphere appeals to you.” Really look around, he says, and discuss what works and how you might replicate aspects of it in your home. Also, leaf through magazines, tearing out pages and making a collage of what you both like.

Money is a common source of arguments, so Bechen advises couples to agree on a budget in advance.

Designer Brian Patrick Flynn, founder and editor of the online design magazine decordemon.com, says it’s important to discuss priorities.

“If she wants to spend $1,500 on a nice damask wallpaper,” Flynn says, “he may think $1,500 for something that goes on a wall is ludicrous. But maybe he just spent $1,800 on surround sound. They need to compare notes on how much they value certain things.”

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