Gianna's:
P.S. I didn't plan on this being something you could do while being couped and socially distanced for (possibly) weeks on end but it totally is so I'll chalk one up on the coincidence chart.
Last, but not the least tweak in the living room, and over in that back door corner is a little yarn art. I’ve seen these made on Pinterest a hundred times but took a notes from Andrea at Harlow & Thistle to make my very own.
For a little bit, I struggled with what to hang on that door. Since it got painted white and kind of blends in with the wall, which is great, I still liked the idea of adding some sort of wreath or hanging decor. It had to be fairly simple and I didn’t want anything floral. I didn’t want to add any holes to the door so it also had to be something light enough to hang from one of these magnetic hooks*.
I know you can find this tutorial a thousand times over elsewhere, but hey, “Here I go again on my own...”
L O V E…and a little bit of white paint. Maybe and maybe not but with all of the orangey-wood trim in this casa, I don’t know what else to go for and I’m playing it safe!
I do know, however, that it has been so great shaking up the living room to take it from the heavily curtained, brown, brown, brown before:
to an in-progress and better after:
I saved almost every single petal of every single rose Anthony gave me while we were dating. My thick college textbooks were the perfect places to press them - I’d pick the petals off dying flowers and carefully stick them in random pages. I’d leave them there for a few weeks and into a big bowl they’d go with the rest of the pressed petals once dry. I didn’t really have any intentions or plans to do anything special with them while I did it though. I just saved them because of the love and thoughtfulness they signified. Fast forward to those months in the midst of planning our wedding, when I had this great idea to have them made into a rosary for Anthony; my gift to him on our wedding day. I had heard from a friend of a convent of sisters who would do just this out in California (I think that’s where they were at least) but when I wrote them, I was sad to receive a letter back saying they no longer made rose rosaries. I looked into some other options but the prices were higher than I could spend while paying for our wedding so the idea wilted and life went on.
Fast forward again, only this time to present day, and to the ziploc bags filled with those dried petals that I’ve held onto for all these years. I’ve finally found a place for them, or at least some of them.
See ‘em? They’re inside that shadowbox frame on the wall above our desk! :) That frame was one of many inside that bargain cart we bought a few years ago at Dirt Cheap. (Here’s a similar frame*, though not square.) I’ve had the idea to fill it with the roses for about a year now and, per the usual, my plans always get delayed by life. But here it was, before I got to work on it last week:The starfish that was inside had come unglued and floated around wherever gravity let it and the backing of the frame had a little dent in it. In other words, it was bumped and bruised and the perfect piece for a project.
So, after removing it from the packaging, I turned it over and ripped off the brown paper backing. It was just glued on around the edges.
I also wanted to ditch the blue background for a crisp white one so, I grabbed some watercolor paper I had (similar*) and used the mat to cut it to the size of the frame.
Completely undocumented because it had to be quick to beat the end of naptime, I got out a little bit of black acrylic paint, a paint brush, and some water and lettered “you & me” onto the paper. I waffled between a lot of different sayings – the lyrics to our wedding song “When God Made You”, a favorite verse from the book of Tobit, and some other sappy sayings but in the end, settled with simple yet profound.
Enter the bags of rose petals. They were going to be carefully laid inside the bottom of the frame, high enough that they’d show above the mat but not encroaching upon the “you & me” that would also be in view.
At first, I didn’t think I’d have enough petals to fill the bottom of the frame enough that the flowers would peek up over the mat. Thankfully, in this case at least, estimation has never been my strong suit, because I had way too many. I mean, I probably used about 1/4 of the petals. I’m really, really, really not good at estimating. Once I realized I had too many petals, I went through and picked out the brightest red ones to use inside the frame. The others I saved for another project; another day…maybe I’ll get that rosary made one of these days. :)
Once I was satisfied with the amount of petals inside the frame, I glued the watercolor paper with the “you & me” lettering to the inside of the cardboard backing (covering up the blue), and then ran a thin strip of Elmer’s glue along the back of the frame to hold the backing on.
Since the back of the frame is against the wall, I didn’t add any brown paper to the back, but left it as-is. Call it lazy or call it efficient, you decide.
Up it went, the start of a collage that will eventually make its way up this small expanse of wall.
The evening after I shot these “after” photos, I took off, kid-less, to my favorite local haunt, Dirt Cheap, where I found this gorgeous cantilever floor lamp*. It was on a bottom shelf, in a box that had never been opened. I carried it around the store whilst I shopped, unsure if I wanted to spend the $25 it was marked at. I’ve been using our desk to do finishing work on my pillow covers recently – things like cutting strings and serging edges – and the lack of light has been frustrating me. But now, my $25 lamp has solved that problemo. Yep, I got it. It just makes the space, doesn’t it?
As far as everything else goes, the chair was a Varage Sale buy ($15) that I plan on reupholsering someday, the desk was a yard sale find ($30), the rug was also a Dirt Cheap buy ($25), the basket was clearanced at JoAnn Fabrics ($7), the plant was a gift and the vase it’s in was thrifted ($1), the curtains were once sheets, the valance is fake and is a diy I’ll share one of these days, and the mirror was a cheap diy project. The wall color is “Heaven on Earth”, by Benjamin Moore but color matched to Valspar at Lowe’s and the carpet is original to the home and something I’d replace in a heartbeat if we picked the right numbers.
This desk, you can’t see the whole thing, but it’s pretty big. And, it’s been a big mess until recently. It was the home for many an item labeled “to-do” and many a paper waiting to be filed. About a month ago, I unburied the top of it so that we could utilize it and we’ve worked hard to keep it a clutter-free zone. It’s been a much-needed space away from the kids for me to sew and a space where Anthony can study for his Masters’. It’s not ideal for us to have an ‘office space’ in our bedroom but it’s the only place we have now that all the other bedrooms are taken by little people. But, it’s been fun for me to make it “pretty” so that we venture more toward ‘creative space’ and farther from ‘office space’. I mean, nobody wants to think about work when they’re in their bedroom, right? So, the prettier and more integrated into the entire design of the room, the better in this case.
Anyone else have their office in an odd space? Any tips on making it feel like it belongs or so that it doesn’t necessarily look like a work-only space? I’m sure I could tweak a few things over here so I’m all eyes. Type away. :)
. . .
*affiliate links
Holy Week is here! Lent is almost over and Easter is on it’s way! I’m popping in quick with the what’s and how’s of the watercolor in the kids’ bathroom and then I’m out for the rest of the week to focus on JESUS! Whoop! I’ve been reading “Jesus and the Jewish Roots of the Eucharist” for Lent and it’s been such a great read (especially for this mainly fiction reader) and I can’t wait to finish this week. I love history and when you mix history and the faith like this and read the words of someone who knows what they’re talking about, well, it gets me. Highly recommend it…
So, the watercolor painting I hung in the kids’ bathroom…I really, really like it.
I picked it up at a yard sale last summer and I’ll never let it go…I mean, I can’t even figure out who wanted to in the first place, right? It’s not a print but an actual watercolor painting! Maybe the giver wasn’t aware? Originally, it looked like this:
I didn’t think the frame was that bad but Anthony said it reminded him of something you’d see hanging in a doc’s office. I could see it too, I guess. Regardless, it was a little too big for where I wanted it so I went a-hunting for a smaller frame at Goodwill last week and found this one:
I thought the frame itself was some sort of plastic since it was nice and shiny but once I started sanding it down and prepping it for paint, I realized it was wood. Ha! $5 for a 22” x 17” wood frame…not bad!
Anyway, it was papered over on the back, which used to scare me to the point that I’d avoid all paper-backed frames in thrift stores. But, since then, I’ve cast aside that fear and now I don’t care what a frame looks like on the back. All I know is that no matter what’s on the back, pretty much any frame can be hacked into and used to display whatever I want it to. Maybe you’ve been intimidated after seeing that paper too? Well, don’t be. Here’s how to take a frame like this apart:
1 – See the paper. Own the paper. Forget the paper.
2 – Rip the paper off. It doesn’t own you.
3 – Under the paper, something will be holding everything in place. Sometimes it’s staples all around the inside edge and sometimes, like this time for me, it’s small nails. Sometimes you might even get lucky and just find tape. If that’s your luck, just rip it out or grab the nearest knife or razor blade and slice along the edges. If it’s staples or nails, take them out, one by one. I’ve found a needle-nose pliers works best for this type of thing. Yes, it’s a little tedious but that’s ok. Just remember that there’s glass under there so don’t go too crazy banging and pulling.
4 – Once you get all the things (nails, tape, staples, etc…) that are holding the contents of the frame in place out, take out everything down to the glass so that all you’re left with is the frame itself.
Then, wash that glass quick because chances are it’ll need a good cleaning on both sides and put everything back in the way you had it, replacing whatever it is you want with whatever was in the frame when you bought it. So, glass, mat (if there is one), art (I usually tape it in so it doesn’t slide around when in), cardboard (or other backing, and then nails (staples or tape). You can even tape or glue some more paper to the back to make it look more professional if you want but I never do because who looks at the backside of a frame once it’s on the wall? Not me and hopefully not you either because that might be really weird…
But, let’s backtrack a tad to the point where you have everything out of the frame. If you want to change up the look of the frame with paint or anything else without having to worry about it’s contents getting in the way, now would be the time. I wanted to go white with this one so I did a quick sanding to get rid of that glossy sheen. I liked the gold on the frame though so I taped over that so I’d end up with a white frame with gold trim on the inside.
I primed the frame with white spray paint and then brush-painted it with leftover paint I have on hand from painting this wood couch. I would’ve gone the spray paint route but I’m currently out of white spray paint and haven’t had a chance to grab anymore recently so latex it was.
Before I could stick the watercolor into it’s new frame, I had to trim it down a little. So, I measured and penciled two lines on the top and left sides; where I’d need to trim to get it to the size I wanted it.
I could’ve taken an equal amount off each of the four sides but I wanted to keep as much of the watercolor itself in view so I cut off the two sides with the least amount of color.
It was now a perfect fit. What didn’t come out so perfect was my paint job. Either I didn’t press down my painters’ tape enough or the painters’ tape I used just stinks, but the white paint leaked underneath and onto the gold edge I wanted to keep. I tried sanding it off but then ended up sanding off some of the gold and now it just looks a little messy. Maybe I can call it distressed?
I think I’ll just grab some gold paint and touch it up but until that happens, at least the watercolor draws the eye towards itself and not the frame’s paint job…or maybe that’s just me playing the justification/excuse card but either way, since the frame isn’t the star of this show, I really don’t care all that much to rush to fix it.
And that is that.
I hope you all have a wonderful and powerful Holy Week and an even better Easter!
My grandparents drove in for a little visit last month and with them, they brought a plastic bag filled with stuff of my dad’s from high school. (In case you’re new here, my dad passed away when I was in college, so as you can imagine, having his stuff means so much to me.) Among the random things was a big stack of photos. They all seemed to be from the same road trip out west and some of them were really cool pictures. I picked out four of my favorites and hung them in Sebastian’s room last week.
Because they were a tad smaller than the normal 4 x 6s of today and therefore didn’t quite fill the space behind the mats already in the frames I put them in, I whipped up some new mats for them out of cardstock I picked up at Hobby Lobby (only 54 cents each!).
See? Not quite wide enough.
They now not only fit just perfectly with the new mats, but they add a bright punch of color to Seb’s room too.
To make them, I gathered a few supplies – a ruler, an x-acto knife*, a pencil, and the cardstock and frames. (If you don’t have an x-acto knife laying around, I’d totally recommend getting one! They’re so handy!)
First, I laid the existing mat onto one corner end of the cardstock and lightly traced around the outside and inside. (Note: Since I needed the mat opening to be a little smaller width-wise, I just made it that way by drawing a new line farther in from the existing line on each side.)
[Too hot for shirts in Arizona apparently.]
[That’s my old (young) man on the left…all chill-like in Utah.]
Hopefully someday I’ll find out the sure-to-be great stories from this trip. Until then, I’ll let Sebastian make up his own. ;)
. . .
*affiliate link to an x-acto knife very similar to the one I purchased
Let’s reach back to our five-year-old selves and pull out those finger painting skillz, shall we? Not only will they come in handy for this tutorial but as it turns out, getting your hands dirty with pretty colors can be really stress-relieving…not that I would know about stress. My life is all butterflies and roses…and tantrums and meltdowns and toddler woes 58% of the time.
The art I painted and hung above Sebastian’s crib is 80% finger painted and 20% brushed.
It was so easy to do that even if you’ve already taken once glance at it and determined that “no, you can’t do that”, you can. Yes, you can.
But before tell you how you can, let me remind you (or tell you in case you didn’t see this post) that I bought this green metal frame at a local thrift store for 50 cents. It had a large piece of discolored foam board fitted inside and so I just painted right onto that foam board instead of buying a new large piece of paper/board/whatever. The jewel green color is a latex paint (Alexandrite by Sherwin Williams for Lowe’s) and the rest of the colors are acrylics, some of which I already had and some that I purchased at Hobby Lobby. The acrylic colors I used were black, white, mint, gray, and a yellowy-mustard color.
So first, just for a little interest to peek through under my finger painting, I grabbed some black white acrylic paint and painted b&w stripes in a few random places across the board. I painted the black stripes first…
…and then added the white ones in between once the black paint was dry. After I was done with the white I had a good amount of white paint left on the plate I was using so I just dumped it onto the board and smeared it around a little with my hands.
At the same time as I was painting this, my cousin Faith was at my house painting a fabric “S” for Sebastian’s room and she had just finished so I grabbed the paint she had leftover from painting that and smeared it around the board too.
Then I let all that paint dry.
During the next free naptime, I grabbed all of the colors minus black. Over the top of the board, making sure not to go over the stripes, I squirted different colors one-by-one in random places all over.
(Except I spooned on the green latex since it came from a test pot. Technicalities folks.)
And then I just smeared all those colors together. The key is not smearing too much that the colors blend to make a totally different color but just blending so that they streak together. Also, make sure you have enough paint squirted onto the surface of whatever you’re painting so that you’re not having to spread paint around too much to cover. The more paint, the better. And also, the more paint, the more texture which is a great addition!
As I was smearing, I made sure to not smear completely over the stripes I had painted. I just smeared around them but over the edges so that they didn’t sit on an island of sorts – stripes surrounded by blank foam board surrounded by a ring of paint. Make sense? I just wanted them to peek through.
The painting looked really cool after I was done smearing and the plan was to leave it that way but of course, I tweaked it just a little more by going in with each color and a brush and added some dots around the piece. I literally dipped the brush in whatever color I was using and dabbed it randomly around the painting. I also added a few smears of black in the end.
Art definitely isn’t my strong suit but I think this one turned out pretty good, no?
And considering I only paid about $5 from start to finish (most of that went to paint of which I used not even half of each color supply) it looks even better.
So, any painters out there? Maybe some wanna be painters like me? Abstract art is the way to go! If you make a mistake, it just looks like you meant to! I wish falling on your face in public was more like that…like “oops” you totally meant to do that. “I just needed a quick thrill to wake me up. No big deal.” Or forgetting to zip it up below the belt. Wearing no-zip maternity paints totally took my zip-it-up habit and tossed it right out the nursery window.
And you wonder why I like long shirts…
. . .