Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Round Here

Here's what's currently going on around here:

Broken toes

Painting chairs

Puzzling

That's all she wrote.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Side Table

Most of my furniture is stuff I've picked up secondhand, and my living room side table is no exception. I got it for $30 at the local junior guild resale store, which has some really good stuff. They had a beautiful mission side table that I was coveting, but at $70 I had to pass.

But I love this table. It is some heavy-duty wood and I actually like the color a lot. The original pulls were these strangely shaped loops, so I replaced them with a couple of knobs from Anthropologie. But that's all I had to do to make this one presentable... not too shabby.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Ugliness ---> Awesomeness

Remember that basket that is hanging out in my TV stand?


Well, it is kind of ugly. Whatever wicker material it's made out of is unfinished (read: dull) and a light, nondescript, blah color. I got tired of the ugliness and decided to do something about it.

I actually got two of these baskets thinking they would both go under the TV, but the DVD player and VCR made it impossible to use another basket opposite the one in the picture above. The other basket found a home on the bottom shelf of my bookshelf and now holds oversize books and Scout's growing collection of cat toys. I used that one as my guinea pig basket.

Here are my supplies for the ugly basket renovation project:
Counterclockwise from left: gloves, wood stain, piece of old t-shirt, plastic drop cloth, chip brush, newspaper. Also, ugly basket (not pictured).

Basically the idea was to stain the wicker using plain old wood stain. Everything else is for protection of the work area besides the chip brush and t-shirt, which are used to apply the stain. Wood stain is so easy to use and really makes a remarkable difference in most cases (see this post for example). The key is just to have an unfinished surface to work with. If my baskets hadn't been inexpensive unfinished wicker, the stain would not have had much effect. As it is, though, here's the photographic proof of the Power of the Stain:

Before.

During (1st coat).

After 2 coats (finished basket on the left; yet-to-be-done basket on the right)

How 'bout DEM apples.

Friday, March 25, 2011

In which I get lucky twice


This is my TV stand. I got it at Goodwill for $50. I was actually a little disappointed I had to pay $50 for it, but it's solid wood and there was no way I was going to buy something new that was laminate and cost twice as much. Plus I was really desperate at the time, since my living room looked like this:


Watching TV while it was on the floor was not so fun. I was worried when I was looking that I wouldn't be able to fit a stand in the skinny/smallish space in that corner.


I stood in the Goodwill looking at the stand for a good 15 minutes arguing with myself about whether it would fit. Eventually I bit the bullet and took it home, and phew did I get lucky. It fit both the space and the TV perfectly, and it wasn't that ugly. If I had my way I would strip and restain it, but that's a bigger project for another day. The more immediate facelifts: 1) finding that basket that's in the top picture to hold movies and 2) replacing the drawer knob with something with a little more pizazz soon. I found the basket for like $12 at HomeGoods, and that thing slid into the space like it was made for it (lucky break #2). I also have plans to spruce it up as well. All in good time.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Guess

Here's a hint for one of my projects that's currently in the works...



Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Family Tree

This is a project that my sister and I did over the summer, and unfortunately I don't have any pictures of the finished product because, well, oversight.

The project was creating a family tree, and not just one of those where you have paper and a tree and you fill in names. We wanted it to look fancy and be wall-hangable. My mom & sister had spent a lot of time researching and figuring out the family history, all the way back to Constable Andrew Everest, who came to Maine from England in the 1640s. So for my mom's birthday (in June), we decided to make the family tree.

We went through a lot of thought about what kind of materials to use that wouldn't make it look like some homegrown craft project. We eventually settled on using a foamboard as the base, covering it with some brown fabric, and printing out each individual's name on thick brown scrapbook paper and mounting that on one of 3 different types of scrapbook paper, depending on what generation the individual belonged to. The lines connecting the names would be made out of round silver cord for the horizontal lines and smaller silver cord for the vertical ones. Here's what it ended up looking like:

The names set out (and hot glued on) before the lines connecting the various family relationships were added. The 3 different types of scrapbook paper depicting the different generations can be seen here (matte brown paper, brown paper with raised decoration, and red paper with velvet). 

In the midst of adding the silver cord. The thicker cord stretched across each generation of kids, and the thinner cord connected the parent pair and each kid to the thick cord.

This is the last picture I took of the project still in progress. I promise it did get finished... I guess I'll have to take a picture the next time I go to Dallas. I have to say that it turned out WAY better than I was anticipating. It actually didn't look like some craft project, and will look pretty snazzy when it eventually gets framed. Plus my mom loved it :)

Sunday, February 13, 2011

T-1

this one's a two-fer (back and front)


magazine cutouts + construction paper + mod podge

1 day until Valentine's Day

Saturday, February 12, 2011

T-2

magazine cutouts + construction paper

2 days until Valentine's Day

Friday, February 11, 2011

T-3

magazine cutouts + stickers + construction paper

3 days until Valentine's Day

Thursday, February 10, 2011

T-4

Magazine cutouts + scrapbook paper + construction paper

4 days until Valentine's Day

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

T-5

 heart sticker + construction paper + scrapbook paper + sewn by machine

magazine cutout + construction paper + scrapbook paper

5 days until Valentine's Day

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

T-6

 Magazine cutout + scrapbook paper cutout + construction paper

Magazine cutouts + heart stickers + silver Sharpie + construction paper

6 days until Valentine's Day

Get Ready...

For the annual

Valentine's Day Countdown!


It's that time again... the time of cooing doves and swooning women. Also, the time when I make a bunch of Valentine's Day cards and use them as excuses to make daily blog posts. Without further ado...


Magazine cutouts + scrapbook paper + silver Sharpie pen + construction paper

Magazine cutouts + construction paper + stitched by machine

7 days until Valentine's Day

Sunday, February 6, 2011

The Kitchen Corner

My kitchen is pretty tiny, but even small spaces need sprucing. This is what it looked like when I moved in:



















From the placement of the rug, you can tell just how skinny the space is. Now I know what you're saying.. "What up with the lack of upper cabinet doors? And what's with the odd waste of space 1) for the stupid decorative shelf in the middle of the cabinets and 2) beside the stove?" Well, I can't say I understand the kitchen design choices.. but I am forced to work with them. Such is the curse of the renter. My food just stays on display all the time.

The strange empty corner by the stove is no longer empty, though. Here's what it looks like now:


Woo happy corner! Bogart and Bergman had been holding down the fort by themselves for a while, but now they've been joined by some other wall decor (two aprons and photos of Central Park) and a little table that fills up the corner space. Here's a closer look at the table:



My mom found this table at Canton Trade Days (a HUGE flea market type event) and gave it to me for Christmas. The bottom is from an antique sewing machine (the top was added by the seller). I did some Google searching and found this:


The "The Free" on the bottom pedal was the name of the sewing machine, which was manufactured by the Free Sewing Machine Company based out of Rockford, Ill. I'm certain that the bottom of my table is from this model specifically. It looks exactly the same as the picture, and you can even see holes on the upper sides of the legs where the drawers would have attached. I couldn't find a date for when they manufactured the machines of this style, but it's still pretty cool!

Friday, February 4, 2011

Olympics

Are they here yet?

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

New Art






I snagged these two prints off Etsy for $15 each. The frames were 40% off at Michael's, and the matting was a couple bucks a pop. I love them!

Wednesday, January 5, 2011