We’ve Moved!

 

If you aren’t redirected here is the link:

 

Remodelaholic!

 

THANKS!

Anthropology Inspired Dresser Redo

11 October 2010



I love this party link!  I think it is especially genius because if you have a piece that you don't want to totally refinish, you might just be able to amp it up with a stencil.  but so you know,  Kate from Twenty-Six to Life who created this piece did sand and stain the dresser, and I love the way it turned out, check out her post:


When I saw this dresser (forever ago), I knew Anthropologie was just daring someone to DIY something similar. So of course I did tried.





I found this dresser on craigslist for just $15. While it's not a match for shape, I decided I liked it anyway. Besides, for $15 the price was right considering I have no idea where it will actually go.


For those of you who just scroll to the after, here it is!


I will be the first to admit that it didn't turn out quite like I had anticipated.  It looks very different from my "inspiration piece" and that's largely due to the fact that I used what I already had.  I wasn't really willing to go buy a lighter stain, or black paint, or create or buy different stencils.  I had the dark stain, white paint, and hammer spray paint for the knobs already.  So I used them.  I hope none of you mind the differences, but if you do, here's a 
consolation prize.

And for those of you that like a little tutorial, here's what I did:

1. Of course, like with anything, I sanded. And sanded and sanded and sanded. I hate sanding, but it's a necessary evil. It got rid of that awful orangey hue.




2. Stain. This time I only used one coat. This was were the changes from the anthropologie dresser started. Originally, I meant to get a lighter stain so I could do black numbers, but when the time came I was feeling lazy and cheap wasn't thinking and used a dark stain. C'est la vie. I just switched it up and went with white numbers.

3. Spray. The formerly brassy knobs got new life with hammer black spray paint.  It's the same stuff I used on those 
white dressers I did before.


4. Upgrade. The drawer bottoms were a mess so I ditched the old ones and had new ones cut at Home Depot. I also added the wheels to the legs, I think they add even more character.

5. Stencil. I used cheapo stencils centered on each drawer and filled them in with white paint I already had.

In the end, this before and after cost less than $25. $15 for the dresser, $7 for new drawer bottoms from Home Depot, $1.50 for the stencils, $0.50 for a foam brush.

I know it's not perfect. My OCD is kicking in looking at these photos and that "3", but I guess it's all part of the learning process. Maybe in the future I'll rough it up a little and it'll become less noticeable. For $25, I'm going to try to enjoy my new piece of furniture and try not to stress about any imperfections.



I think imperfections can add to the piece.  
Also who could beat $25.00 
for a whole new dresser!
Great Job!

Read more...

Craft Party Reminder!

Just wanted to remind you about the
new craft blog's link party today!  
I hope you all will participate!  Thanks!

Here is the link or click on the image below!

Read more...

Custom Wall Treatment Without Painting; Blog Swap

Hey you'all,  I am doing a blog swap with Or so she says... which is a blog for women looking for great ideas on cooking, creating traditions and enriching family life.  They too, feature wonderful bloggers ideas (i.e. YOU), this is one of their post that I am sharing!  Enjoy!


Oh, and this is a great idea if you live in an apartment and cannot paint the walls!  
Besides it looks so super cute.  Here is the post:


Siiigh... on my wedding day, oh those days & bodies of yesteryear.

I'm back again - how cool is that? Well at least it is for me :). I love being listed among so many talented and downright awesome ladies. So for those who may be new around here, here's a small run down about who I am. Mommy of the Janester, wife of hubby d., lover of toasted sour dough bread, Pad Thai, and Napolitano style pizza (pizza Naples style). I'm also a photographer who is having a love affair with Photoshop - don't worry the hubster encourages it. Check out my work and my saaaweet giveaway (oh yes you read right) giveaway going on now! Just click on the logo below for a direct link or go to erindphotography.blogspot.com.


As the hubster and I are still in the "student" phase of our lives money is tight & cheap apartment living is what we do. I recently had the opportunity to paint the nursery for my newest nephew. It was my gift to him and his momma. I loved the way it turned out, it made me long for the day when I can paint my own walls and employ whatever designs I'd like.



Since actually being able to do this in my own home is somewhere in my (very) distant future, I had to compromise with my apartment living. I had a baby girl due in January of 2009, and there was no way she was going to have drab walls if there was anything I could say about it. So several months before her debut I began searching for a way to spice up her room.



BTW: This is not my image, fun colors though right?!

I wanted to incorporate her name somehow, but I didn't want to hang letters on the wall, for the maternal fear that there would be a freak earth quake and one of the letters would fall and impale my daughter (seriously though... if there was an earth quake, I think the letters on her wall would be the least of my concerns...). My first thought was to go with vinyl, but it was so expensive and I couldn't find the right colors I wanted in town. So I continued to think and search until I found my solution! Thanks to a few tips from the good ol' internet I had a plan and I executed it (and had a lot of fun doing it I might add)!


Here is how you too can non-permanently "paint" the walls of your apartment or home.


Supplies you will need to do what I did:
Regular Paper
Poster Board
A Regular Pencil
A White Colored Pencil
A Pencil Sharpener (to keep that white pencil sharp)
Fabric
A pair of Sharp Scissors (fabric scissors) - if they aren't sharp they will ruin your fabric
Liquid Starch
Paper Towels
Paintbrush
Paint Pan (I just used a pie tin)
First decide what you want your design to be. I based mine off of my daughter's bedding. (I chose this bedding because it was on clearance for $30 at Walmart.com and it didn't have jungle animals all over it - yay for the clearance section!)



Then decide where on the walls you want to place your images and measure about how big on the wall you would like them to be. Write down your measurements. I found that thinking about my image in a "frame" so to speak & measuring a square area helped me get the most accurate measurements I was looking for.
Then start sketching your design on regular paper. 


Once you know what you want, draw it bigger - to the size you'd like on pieces of poster board - this may take several pieces to get the right size, depending on how large your shape is. It also may require you to divide up the pieces of your "shape" on different parts of the poster board - a leaf here, a petal there, etc. (I hope that made sense).



Then cut your "shapes" out of the poster board. You will want to make sure that any pieces that require a different color are cut out separately (for example with my tulip type flowers I traced the stem and leaves of the flower [which would be green] separate from the bulbs of the flowers [which would be pink]).



Now go to your favorite fabric store and buy the colors you will need (you obviously can do this before hand if you like). I am not a seamstress, so bare with me here... I bought thinner fabric, it felt like my bed sheets, and I am pretty sure it was 100% cotton (this was nearly 2 years ago, sorry for my lack of details).



I am pleased with my final results but I think you could go with even thicker fabric if you'd like maybe even a light flannel for a softer/thicker effect on the walls. Note: DO NOT wash your fabric.
Once you have your poster board stencils cut and your fabric purchased, trace your stencil upside down on the fabric with the white pencil. You want to trace it upside down so that your white pencil doesn't show through on the front. You also want to use a white pencil because it won't show through the back of the fabric once it is on the wall.



Then cut out your shapes using very sharp scissors - mine weren't sharp enough so I went to the store and bought a new pair. My old pair was tearing the fabric rather than cutting it - yucky. I found tracing and cutting the most time consuming part of the process.
Once you have your shapes all cut out you are ready to start putting them up on the wall!



Pour some of your liquid starch into a pie pan/paint pan etc. Now dip in your paintbrush and lightly paint the wall where you are wanting to put your fabric cut out. This light amount of starch will help you stick your fabric to the wall and get it on nice and straight. Then paint over the top of your shape with a good helping of starch, smoothing it onto the wall and pressing out any air bubbles under your fabric as you go.



If you are layering on your shape, like I did on my red flower with the pink center, now is the time to add your different layers. Place them on top of your starched shape and then starch over the top of the new fabric, again smoothing out any air bubbles as you go. If we have a boy one of these days I'd like to try my hand at making a blue rocket ship, with a red tip and wings and a bunch of cute little grey windows rimmed with green - daring I know. They don't call me Darrington for nuthin'.



Keep an eye on your shapes, they may bleed a little from the starch and you will want to use a paper towel to soak up any color that may be running.



When I did my daughter's name on the wall, I was glad I had my mom and my sister's help. My sister gave me an extra set of hands to help me put it on and straighten it out, and my mom was our extra set of eyes who could stand back and tell us if we had it on the wall straight.



Let your shapes sit untouched for 24 hours or so so that the starch can fully dry and fuse to the wall. Just run a fan in the room and touch it occasionally to check its progress.

I love the way my daughter's room turned out. It was a simple way to decorate her room without violating my contract with my landlord and without exposing my pregnant self to the danger of paint fumes. I love how it matches her bed set and anytime someone sees her room they always remark with "That was nice of your landlord to let you paint in here". Then I explain how amazingly witty and clever I am, which always leads to their bowing and groveling before my incredible genius (ahem... moving on).



To remove your "paint", just get it wet. If you have a wall paper steamer I bet this would work wonders. However, do know that for a month we had a humidifier constantly running in my daughter's room and the shapes never bled or peeled off the wall (yay for that).



Know that you could also essentially "wall paper" a room this way. If your son loves Toy Story, find some Toy Story fabric and put it up on one wall, you'd probably want to use a roller brush for the starch. But then a year later when he prefers Lightening McQueen, just use a wet sponge, peel it off the wall, and put up your Cars fabric instead. Wash the Toy Story fabric and make some pillowcases... or whatever it is you crafty seamstress women can think up! Boom Bam Baby.



Please do continue thinking about what a sexy pregnant woman I was, I know you simply can't resist.
I hope this tip helps you apartment dwellers spice up your walls and get creative. I also hope that it helps you home dwellers get creative in your children's rooms with their ever changing minds about their favorite things. I am looking forward to maybe putting some damask style shapes above the head of our bed in our room... I can feel my creative juices flowing!
Again don't forget to sign up for my give away at erindphotography.blogspot.com or the Or So She Says give away. There are some great things to be had!


Happy Non-Painting!
- Erin D.


Isn't that awesome!, 
 I love the way she designed it all especially the font she used for her daughter's name!

Read more...

No Bake Halloween Skeleton Cookies

10 October 2010

This project was sent into me for consideration on the new craft blog, but I had to ask if I could show it off for our Sunday recipe swap because people this is easy, festive and ADORABLE!  It is from the blog Roots and Wings Co. and boy do these sisters have GREAT ideas.  Go check out their blog- seriously, you will not me disappointed if you like cute Halloween Decor especially.  Here is their fabulous idea

No Bake Halloween Skeleton Cookies


Gingerbread skeletons
Aaak! Sometimes I kill myself with cuteness/easy factor of things. This is both adorable AND easy. I mean easy. The hardest part is finding Gingerbread cookies in October. The last two years, the only place I have found these Pepperidge Farm Ginger Man cookies was at Target.
gather your supplies
You only need two ingredients to make these! Gingerbread cookies which you can buy premade, and white frosting, cream cheese flavor just happens to be the favorite. ****Katrina here with my two cents..... If you plan to travel with these then using white chocolate would be the way to go.****

Place the icing in a ziploc baggie, then cut a SMALL hole on one of the bottom corners. Smaller is better because you can always make the hole bigger but you can't make it smaller. (Speaking from experience.) Then carefully ice the cookies to look like skeletons. I did the bodies first. Then I cut the hole a little bigger and did the heads.
with the frosting in a baggie and the end cut off the baggie ice on your details
Really this is my favorite picture…there are little fingers waiting to grab one of these up. Can you blame them? There are just too cute!
plate full with little ones watching

Oh my, the icing, the little sugar granuals, the gingerbread. These taste so good. Go ahead and dip the cookie right in the remainder of your icing, if you must. Actually, you MUST. Just try it. Or stick your finger in the tub. Don’t hold back. Get a spoon. (Ok this was added by Anjeanette and I can’t have this specific icing. Oh my, do I miss it.)

skeletons in a row

We did all of these fun things together with Rebecca and her kids.We had an early Halloween party in celebration of the start of October.

dry ice root beer orange jack o lantern skeleton cookie_thumb[1]
 Remodelaholic adds:
Did you also see those adorable jack-o-lantern oranges? 
 Uh hello, that is the coolest thing EVER!

Okay so what have you been up to?



Read more...
Related Posts with Thumbnails
Emealz - Easy Meals for Busy People!
Home & Garden Blogs Home & Garden Blogs - Blog Rankings

Blogging  tips, tutorials and SEO

From Here to Eternity

  © Blogger template On The Road by Ourblogtemplates.com 2009

Back to TOP