
About Lauren Hayes
At thirty-two weeks pregnant, I stood in the middle of our spare room in Charleston, South Carolina, holding a dripping paint roller while staring at a half-finished wall of “soothing sage.” The nesting panic had hit me so hard my hands were shaking. I had spent hours obsessing over a high-end nursery I saw in a magazine, but my attempt to recreate it just left me with a ruined drop cloth and a crib that wouldn’t fit through the door frame. I realized right then that creating a functional space for a baby requires more than just picking a cute theme—it takes actual spatial planning. Before I became hyper-focused on nursery layouts, I worked as a textile buyer for a boutique hotel group and spent three years staging small-footprint downtown apartments. I knew how to make a room look good, but designing for a newborn brought entirely new challenges. I had to figure out how to squeeze a changing station, a bulky glider, and a safe sleep environment into a tiny room without making it feel like a cramped storage unit. These days, I spend my time hunting down Oeko-Tex certified blackout curtains that actually look stylish and testing whether those expensive washable rugs can truly survive a 3 AM diaper blowout. On babynestideas.com, I share the exact floor plans, safety-first design rules, and budget-friendly decor alternatives I’ve figured out along the way. You won’t find impossible, pristine showrooms here. Instead, I write about creating calm, practical nurseries that actually work for sleep-deprived parents.