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First of all, what are your hobbies or interests? If you¡¯re a NASCAR? enthusiast, get your collection together of posters, model cars and collectibles and use them as a starting point. Paint the bar area in the colors of your favorite race car, and hang black and white checked curtains for a finishing touch. Get some bar stools that look like car seats, and set up the old computer loaded only with racecar games.
Football gets more of your devotion? The next time you¡¯re in the kids¡¯ section of a large department store, grab one of those toy chests shaped like a football, and use that to ice down a couple of six packs before the big game. Or fill it up with individual bags of chips and snacks, and set it on the floor at the end of the bar. Use your old programs, trading cards and posters like wallpaper: overlap the edges and use an ordinary stapler to attach them to the walls around the bar. Have the bar stool cushions covered in the same colors as your favorite team¡¯s jerseys. If you¡¯ve got a signed football or other memorabilia, put up some simple shelves behind the bar and display those memories.
Fishing and hunting trophies have been used to decorate home bars (and pubs too) for years. Again, get some simple shelves from your local do-it-yourself store and show off any trophies, small stuffed birds or animals, or powder horns and bags. Get an old, heavy picture frame at a flea market and cover a piece of cardboard cut to fit it in black or dark green felt. Then hook colorful fishing lures and flies into the felt to display them. Use a fishing creel to hold bar or cocktail napkins on the counter. Cross two fly-fishing rods like swords on the back wall, using cup hooks or other wall fasteners to hold them in position.
If you like the look of an English pub, you can have the same effect by painting the walls in a dark, aged-looking hunter green, maroon or dull blue. Panel the walls in inexpensive dark ¡®wood¡¯ paneling halfway up for a wainscoting look. Get a handsome dartboard and hang it on the wall so it can be actually used for matches, and look around at flea markets and odd little shops for old mirrors that have ale or beer brand names painted on them. Paintings of dogs and horses are great too. You might want to get a couple of green hanging lamps for lighting, the kind that traditionally lit the billiards table. Display your collection of beer steins, and set out bowls of salted nuts and pretzels.
Like to gamble? Use decks of playing cards and staple them to the wall as a border next to the ceiling. You can buy small serving dishes for pretzels and nuts shaped like spades, hearts and so on, and glasses are readily available with those patterns printed on them. Or look around for wallpaper with gambling items and cards printed on it, then use the card decks to make up winning hands and frame them as decorative pictures. If you¡¯ve got four bar stools, cover each cushion in the same solid color but with a different suit symbol: heart, club, spade, diamond. If the bar counter¡¯s surface needs refinishing, use old lottery tickets and horse-racing programs glued to it with any good decoupage glue from the hobby store near you. Glue old poker chips to the hanging lampshade or use them to frame a mirror.
The bar itself needs refinishing? Wrap bamboo screening from the garden store around the sides of it and put up jungle theme wallpaper. Use press-on black vinyl tiles to cover the bar¡¯s surface if it¡¯s badly damaged too. Next cover the bar stool cushions with a fake fur material, like a tiger or jaguar. Frame posters of wild animals in inexpensive split bamboo (paint it black if you want) and hang them for more atmosphere. Collect beer mugs that look like elephants and lions and finish the area with a couple of fake palm trees standing in the corner.
Finally, for a bar that looks like it was delivered straight from the Wild West, think cowboy style. Use an old rope and nail it to the edge of the bar. Cover the bar stool cushions with colorful bandanna material, or ¡®paint pony¡¯ fake fur. Of course if your bar area has its own door, you¡¯ve got to remove the old door and hang a pair of batwing doors so it looks like the ol¡¯ saloon. Mugs shaped like cowboy boots are hard to find but worth the effort. Paint the walls off-white, and get several strips of wood lath from your local handyman store. If you¡¯ve got an old wood-burning pen around, use it to burn cattle brands into the wood, and then nail the wood strips to the wall for a decorative effect. Put a peg rack up on the wall and hang a well-worn cowboy hat from it. Behind the bar, display ranching paraphernalia like old spurs, branding irons or an old battered coffee pot. A couple of miniature Conestoga wagon lamps (popular do-it-yourself kits during the 50¡¯s and 60¡¯s) would work great for lighting. Hang a horseshoe above the big mirror hung on the back wall, and pour a shot of ¡®whuskey,¡¯ pardner!
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