Showing posts with label decorating dork. Show all posts
Showing posts with label decorating dork. Show all posts

A Letter Wreath

Some of you may remember a wreath that my friend made last year.


This is how it looked all decked out for the Holiday Season. I love how full and voluptuous is is but the red was a little much by the time February rolled around. So I pulled out all the red stuff and stuck it in one of my white dishes.


I don't know about you but when I have a good wreath form, instead of buying or making a different wreath when I'm ready for a change, I just pull out the parts that define the season and stick new parts in.


Since this wreath started out as a grapevine wreath, it's easy to wedge in whatever you have available and it magically stays if you shove it in far enough. I try to never hot glue or wire anything in that way I can change it up fast and reuse everything. Every now and then something might fall out but hardly ever, it's a small price to pay to be able to reuse my floral stuff. But I did wrap a wire around that starfish.


I like to add in some fern. In the photo they look really distracting. But in real life they blend in much better and don't demand that much attention.


We have purple flowers growing in our front yard. So I figured I'd add in some purple. Not my favorite color but I loved the end result. I just tear these stick berry branch things apart with my bear hands, I mean bare hands and force them in. After that work you will wish you had bear hands. The branches are from Hobby Lobby of course.


After mixing up the greenery and color, the wreath needed something more. I found this "S" and thought it would be a great addition. I mean, who cares if our last name doesn't start with an S--it was on sale. Just kidding.

This "S" started out really yellow. Once it was on the door next to our white trim it made my house look like a pretty girl with yellow teeth. So I got a paper towel and brushed on some white acrylic paint. Much better.


Now for the part I am most proud of. I have a bad habit of saving any and everything that I think could possible be useful. Last year I purchased a pretty fluffy blanket and it was wrapped in a thick taupe ribbon that closed with Velcro. What a genius idea. I saved that ribbon.

When I went to hang my wreath like I've talked about here--this is the link to click if you want to read how to hang the wreath with a ribbon because it's too long to tell it all again in this post, I remembered this ribbon. And, since I knew right where it was {ask me to find last year's tax returns, my children's medical records or a working ink pen and you are out of luck, I don't even know our home phone number by heart} I grabbed it and it worked. I hope Simplemom isn't reading this.


See how the Velcro meets right at the back!? Do you think I could patent this? I mean, utilizing this ribbon that just happened to be cut to the perfect length was my finest hour. I was so entirely impressed with myself. I had to take my husband out and show him. Anyone want to nominate me for the Nobel Peace Prize? Now I can easily change out my wreath, or if we change our last name, I can switch out the letter with the greatest of ease. And all you have to do is go buy a $40 blanket at Target and you, too can have one of these ribbons.

Sometimes I feel like an idiot decorating savant. I'll admit, there are times when things just seem to work out. All the Design Stars must have aligned for me. I think it comes just from doing so many things the wrong way that sooner or later, something decent is bound to happen. Too bad my brain isn't wired for technology or medicine. I'm sorry world.


One last thing, I wanted to show you the back side of this wreath. Turn your children away as it is naked and not ashamed. See how there are actually two grapevine wreaths wired together? One is big and one is small. This makes for a super fat wreath.

Do you ever rip stuff out of your old wreaths and redo them?

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This post just added to Get Your Craft On at Today's Creative Blog.

Easy Fireplace Surround Makeover * And Giveaway


Here's the after shot of my surround makeover.


And here is one of the billions of befores. Forgive me for the tragedy that is up on the mantle. But do you notice the difference with the black surround? Or whatever that part is called surrounding the firebox? It's not a huge change but for a renter like me, it gave me back a little control over how I can make this house feel more like our home.


I used these "Vinyl Decals" that WallCandy Arts sent me. I signed up to be an affiliate with them months ago. That means, if I put up an ad for their products {like at the end of this post or the link up above} and you click and buy, I'll make a couple of dollars commission from the purchase. WallCandy sent me some removable chalkboard to try and some to give to some to you. You know hoping we would all fall in love with the stuff and they would retire fat and happy. And I'll be honest, I wasn't too crazy about it at first. I just couldn't think of how I wanted to use it.


Then I got to looking at my fireplace and how the surround was yellowish and my walls are pinkish {long story} and I kept thinking that the fireplace would have more impact if it were black. I remembered the chalkboard sticky sheets that I had and wondered if there were some way that could work without me burning down the house. Naturally, I turned on the fireplace for about 30 minutes in July to see just how hot the outside of the fireplace gets. It never even got warm. I think we have a blower or something that makes the air go out. So, I wouldn't recommend this application for everyone but for us it works.


I loved it. Loved it plain black but then, I decided to draw some whimsical bricks. Let me just tell you, I brought funky back into my family room. This room so needed some not so serious, fun focal point and the lopsided bricks did just the trick. So far the only down side is that my son, the 8 year old engineer has begged me nonstop to let him redraw the bricks so they will be strait. I told him that it doesn't have to be perfect to be beautiful and he scowled at me.


I was so sure this would never work that I didn't even take photos of the 3 minute process of me cutting large L shaped pieces out of the chalkboard rectangles and smacking them on the fireplace. The decal is like the vinyl words that you get from other places but really thick and forgiving and according to the package, you can remove it and use it over and over.


I saved every little scrap. I put a large piece here.



And here.
It would be fantastic inside of here. Unlike chalkboard paint, you don't have to commit to a long term relationship. You can try out where you want your chalkboard to go and then move it later. And for us renters who see the chalkboard walls in others houses and get all jealous that we cannot have that, this is a great solution. And to top it off, you don't even have to paint!


I didn't even mess with measuring precisely and matching up the seams, I just overlapped the chalkboard decals and it turned out fine.


I've got some extra sheets to give to two lucky readers. If you think you could use it, convince me in the comments that you have a great idea for this stuff and maybe you'll win. If you want to spend your cold hard cash on some of these decals or anything WallCandy has to offer just click here: "Vinyl Decals"or the buttons and any commission I earn helps keep my coffee habit going strong and ultimately results in better blogging, right?

Removable Chalkboard


Free Shipping on WallCandy orders over $75 with code freeship75

Good luck! I hope you win--contest closes Friday at midnight.

Want a chance to win even more free stuff? Visit Sandy, the Reluctant Entertainer!

Beautifying: It's A State of Mind


This birdcage is one of my favorite things. I don't have a bird. I don't need a big huge 3 foot tall bird cage. I didn't wake up one morning saying "this is the day, I shall buy me a needless birdcage". I was out, I fell in love, I had the cash. I bought it for love, not knowing where I would use it and decided it was worth the risk and that I could make it work. On the drive home I had decided it would look striking on my dining room table. When I got home, I forgot, we had a chandelier and the cage wouldn't fit. That forced me to try it in our bedroom and it worked beautifully.


Over the weekend I was hanging with my our family at my sister's house and my dad mentioned something about me carrying around my fabric all the time and how people approach shopping for their home. He asked a question that he probably doesn't remember even asking, and that got me thinking.

There are two kinds of shopping and shoppers.


1. Need Based Shopping/ers. You need a kitchen table so you save the money, measure, take a free Saturday and don't stop until you find the right table.

2. Beautifying State of Mind Shopping/ers. You are out for whatever reason, you see something you are drawn to, it's affordable, you LOVE it you might not know EXACTLY where in your house it will go, you just know that it will GO.

I would dare to say that most of the people reading this blog have experienced shopping method number one.


And, with this audience, I think lots of us have a beautifying state of mind. And we beautifiers can take it too far and have closets full of empty photo frames {or birdcages} that we love and were a great price. We can mistakenly make a purchase that we just didn't need and cannot use. We have to watch out for that. We could learn a lot by the strictly need based shoppers.


However, I've also shopped with people who have agonized over a purchase. They have found something for $7.99 that they love and they stand there in the store paralyzed with fear. Should they buy it? Where EXACTLY would they put it? If it's a frame, what photo will they put in it? What if they hate it. Never mind, it might not be the perfect shade of silver.

To those people I say, try it. Don't take that kind of risk with a sofa but, do take that risk with a decorative pillow. You can always take it back. And, before long, you start learning what will work and what won't and you'll have to return things less and less.


I'm not advocating shopping as a past time. Nor am I saying that you should purchase anything you love if you can afford it. But, I am saying, if you think that you are strictly a need based shopper and then wonder why your home doesn't seem finished, you might be stuck in the details.

I tend to be a need based shopper with the big things and have a beautifying state of mind with the small things. If I'm at a yard sale and something is 50 cents--no question, if I think I can use it, I'll try it and if it doesn't work I'll donate it. I also think it's great to shop with a friend who is the opposite type of shopper as you. You kind of balance things out.

armoire:need based shopping/stuff on top:beautifying state of mind

But, for any of you out there that feel like you can't make a small purchase that you can afford unless you know the very place it will work perfectly, I ask you to take that risk. If you truly find the item beautiful and think it would enhance your home, check out the return policy and just try it. Take it home, try it out 37 different places and start to learn what you do and don't like and what does and does not work. It's not rocket surgery, it's beautifying your home and it's supposed to be fun!

What kind of shopper are you?

*****

They look even better in person!

This is a article was originally posted in March of 2008. It's one of my all time favorite posts...enjoy!

I wanted to share this with you so that you can be at the ready when going into some of these wonderful fabric stores! Kimberley just emailed this to me--it's a play by play of her experience with a fabriteer as I like to call them. Read on, and enjoy...


here's Kimberley:

I simply must share my conversation with the clerk at the snooty fabric store where I purchased my mistreatment supplies!

Clerk (middle-aged, attractive, though not pretty, uptight!!!!): How can I help you today?

Me: I need 4 yards of this fabric (a fabulous animal print that was only $13.95/yard, which is a miracle at this store!!!!!)

Clerk: This is a lovely fabric, what are you working on?

Me: (Here we go...) A decorator's table skirt and two window treatments.

Clerk: Are you sure 4 yards is enough fabric?

Me: Yes, I believe so. I need 3 yards for the table, and whatever is left will be used for the windows.

Clerk: You don't know how much fabric you need for your window treatments?

Me: Not exactly, but I'm sure a yard will do the trick.

Clerk: Are you working with a designer?

Me: Yes.

Clerk: Well, what kind of window treatments has she designed?

Me: Upholstery tack valances.

Clerk: Are you using one of our recommended designers?

Me: Nope.

Clerk: Who exactly is your designer?

Me: Nester.

Clerk: Who? I've never heard of Nester, and I know all the designers in town!

Me: She's not in town. She's online.

Clerk: She's an online designer? How does she conduct her consultations online?

Me: She doesn't.

Clerk: Then how do you know what you are doing?

Me: I don't, I'm just looking at her pictures online and following her step-by-step instructions.

Clerk: I've just got to see this. Do you have her website? (She boots up her laptop.)

Me: Go to thenester.com. Yep, there she is. Click on the right hand side where it says window mistreatments. There you go!

Clerk: (After spending several minutes scrolling madly!) Well, these do look nice online, but I can guarantee you they don't look all that great in person!!!

Me: I don't know about that! My kitchen and family room look pretty fabulous--And all I needed were some upholstery tacks and unmeasured fabric with rough edges!!!

Clerk: (flustered) I'll have your fabric ready for you in just a minute. Did you say you needed trim?

Me: Yes.

Clerk: How much?

Me: Oh, I don't know, lets just eyeball it!


Let's hear it for Kimberley!!!!!!!!

Talk about facing the giants! For a minute there I didn't think the fabriteer was gonna let her make a purchase! I know she was just trying to be helpful but shesh! Can a person not go in a fabric store and buy $60 worth of something without being grilled? I mean, my checkout girl at the grocery doesn't ask what I'm making for dinner and then continue to tell me how I'm gonna burn it and mess up the recipe!


I sometimes feel like some of those women were just waiting to convince me that whatever it was I was doing couldn't be done without the help of them and a $100 per hour designer. When they ask me what I am doing with what I am buying I've learned not to tell them! I'll just say that my mom asked me to pick up a few yards of such and such for her or mumble something impossible to understand.


I'll be the first to say that there are some wonderfully, brilliant, encouraging fabriteers/designers out there--let's hear it for Jennipher {yes, that's how she spells her name so funky!} at Printer's Alley--this girl encouraged me to sell my tassels at a local shop! And I cannot forget Debbie out at 1502 she walked me through a purchase of 60 yards of fabric for a COM order! These girls really helped me make some great decisions!


But for all those poshy 50-something ladies {edited to add: poshy 20-something, 30-something, 40-something, 60-something and 70-something [thank you readers for pointing that out]} out there who believe that it must be perfect to be beautiful--give us mom's a break! Maybe we want our house to be beautiful but we also want to have enough money left over to sponsor a compassion child. Maybe we were nervous about even walking into your fancy store. Maybe we can only come with our children. Maybe we just want to be encouraged that we can do it ourselves and within our budget. Maybe we need to to be reminded that
it doesn't have to be perfect to be beautiful!


Lately, if I need something from a fabric store, I'll visit Fabric.com, etsy supplies or ebay first, I wonder if those fabriteers miss me? Have your fabric shopping experiences been good?

Freeloaders Alert: It's a Giveaway!

This contest is now closed.

Y'all, this is my favorite giveaway yet. I am telling you if this woman, I mean if Kim Wheeler is not one of the most talented women I've ever met then I don't know who is. Look at her hand painted, "incredibly cute personalized art".


She can custom make a sign to match your nursery.


Wouldn't this be a perfect wedding gift?


Look at the detail.


Loving these colors.


After you have Kim make a sign for your baby, have their photo taken with it--makes me want to have more babies.

Everything Kim makes is packaged to the hilt. I felt like royalty when I received my "S" all wrapped in clear packaging with all of her shiny cards and darling tags and thank yous and ribbon with her logo. I also felt like I needed to personally apologize for my boring packaging for my tassels. I hereby promise to step it up a notch. I shall not be out packaged.


Here's what Kim made for me and I cannot wait to put it in the perfect frame and really make it stand out!



Kim is offering a free, hand painted 8 x 10 letter of your choice. You know it would look great in your house.


Don't forget to visit the Small Words website to see and hear some more adorableness!

You know how I love these mompreneures -- don't forget to visit the moms with Mom's Unite on the sidebar. See Kimba's directory for the complete list with photos.

Thanks to the top 10 referrers to Nesting Place for November!

1. Bring the Rain
2. Chatting at the Sky
3. A Soft Place to Land
4. The Inspired Room
5. BooMama
6. Simple Mom
7. Like Merchant Ships
8. Kelley's Korner
9. I Should Be Folding Laundry
10. Just a Girl

Simply leave a comment to enter the giveaway-- contest closes Thursday at Midnight--winner will be announced on Monday.