The Day I Found Crayon on Freshly Painted Walls
Emma was two and a half when she produced her first wall mural. The medium: purple crayon. The canvas: the hallway I'd finished painting three days earlier. I stood there, caught between laughing and crying, and realized something had to change — not Emma's creativity, but how our house handled it.
I'd spent eight years designing homes that looked beautiful in photographs. None of those homes had toddlers. Our bungalow needed a different approach: childproofing that protected both the kids and the design, without making our house look like a pediatrician's waiting room.
The Rule We Set Early
Derek and I agreed on one principle: childproofing should be invisible until needed, and unobjectionable when visible. No plastic corner guards in contrasting colors. No foam floor mats that look like a gym. No cabinet locks that require a PhD to operate when you're holding a crying toddler.
Here's what actually worked.
Cabinet Latches: The $30 Fix That Saved Our Sanity
Leo is currently in what I call his "let's see what's in every single door" phase. Our kitchen has 14 cabinet doors. You do the math.
What We Tried | Result | Verdict |
|---|---|---|
Exterior plastic latches | Ugly, broke two cabinet fronts when Leo yanked hard enough | Never again |
Adhesive magnetic locks | Instructions required an engineering degree, adhesive failed in humidity | Returned after one week |
Internal magnetic locks (Safety 1st Spring-Loaded) | Installed inside cabinets in 15 minutes, invisible from outside, release with a magnetic key mounted high | This is the one |

The key hangs on a small adhesive hook above the upper cabinets — invisible to guests, accessible to adults in one motion. I cannot overstate how much daily friction this eliminated.
The Sofa That Survived Everything
Our previous sofa was a cream linen number I'd bought during my single, child-free, design-enthusiast years. It lasted approximately four months after Emma started solids.
I replaced it with a cognac leather sofa from Article — the Sven model, in a finish they call "charme tan." Here's why it worked: leather wipes clean in three seconds, scratches blend into the patina over time, and the color is dark enough to hide whatever mysterious substance a toddler's hand just transferred onto it.
If leather isn't your thing, look for performance velvet. I've specified it for client projects with young families. It repels liquids long enough for you to grab a towel, and it doesn't stain the way natural fibers do.
Furniture Anchors: The Invisible Lifesaver
Every freestanding piece of furniture taller than Emma's waist is anchored to the wall. This is non-negotiable. I use the Hangman Anti-Tip Kit because the brackets are small and the straps adjust with a simple pull. You can't see them behind a dresser or bookshelf. Derek installed all of them in one Saturday afternoon.
What We Didn't Change
Not everything needed childproofing. The built-in bookshelves got fabric bins on the bottom two rows — easy for small hands to pull out, easy for adults to toss things into at cleanup time. The coffee table is wood with softly rounded corners; I picked it before Leo was born, knowing sharp edges and toddlers don't mix. Some decisions you make early so you don't have to retrofit later.

Rugs and Floors: The Layer You Forget About
Wood floors are forgiving, but thin wool rugs with non-slip pads underneath are essential in play zones. We have a flat-weave wool rug from Hook & Loom in the living room. It's low-pile enough that spills don't seep in immediately, and it's survived more apple juice incidents than I can count. When it needs a deep clean, I send it out once a year and roll it back the same day.
A Short List That Actually Worked
After three years of testing, here's what I'd recommend to any parent staring at a beautiful room and wondering how to keep it that way.
Internal magnetic cabinet latches — invisible, effective, $30 for a 12-pack
Leather or performance velvet upholstery — wipes clean, hides wear
Anti-tip furniture anchors — cheap, hidden, non-negotiable
Flat-weave wool rugs with non-slip pads — forgiving and cleanable
Round-edged wood furniture — pick it now so you don't replace it later
The Bigger Thing I Learned
Childproofing isn't about locking everything down. It's about removing enough friction that you can relax in your own home. When I stop worrying about what Leo might get into next, I'm a calmer parent. When I'm a calmer parent, our house feels like home rather than a stage set.
You don't have to sacrifice design to get there. You just have to be strategic about where you compromise — and where you don't.
Take your time — your house will still be here tomorrow.
No notes yet — write the first one.