Showing posts with label Home Decor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Home Decor. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

DIY Faux Milk Glass Centerpieces

One of the inspiration blogs that I follow regularly, Ruffled Blog, had a DIY contest and I
loved looking over every single entry. One of my personal favorites was DIY faux milk glass vases submitted by Marry You Me.

DIY is at it's best when it can save you money AND time while adding a personal touch that enhances your event. I am always scouring thrift stores and antique flea markets looking for a special treasure; and what better way to create your own special treasure than turning a second hand clear vase into vintage milk glass with some glossy white spray paint!

See below for materials and the step-by-step tutorial.

Materials needed:
*assorted vintage glass vases
*rubbing alcohol (optional)
*brown craft paper or newspaper
*latex gloves
*white glossy spray pain (Krylon multipurpose indoor/outdoor gloss white)

Instructions:
Step 1: Use rubbing alcohol and a cotton ball or paper towel to remove any sticky residue from the vases. Wash vases with soap and dry completely.

Step 2. Lay down paper on your spraying surface in a well ventilated area. Shake spray paint for 1-2 minutes before spraying. Shake between sprays as well. Wearing gloves, work from side to side, spraying vases with spray paint. Don't get too close to the vase to avoid drips/runs.

Step 3. Rotate vases until covered, let dry a few minutes before adding a second coat.

Step 4. Let dry completely.

Monday, June 28, 2010

In the Catskills, Comfort in a Shabby Chic Retreat

This story out of The New York Times is magical and dreamy! You will have to read on to find out how Sandra Foster turned an old hunting cottage into her own shabby-chic retreat by scouring salvage shops and DIY projects ~ all for only $3,000.

Wow this story is inspiring, I am in love with this tranquil retreat that Sandra has created for herself! You will definitely want to see the original post on The New York Times as there is a slide show with many, many images of the before and after project. Also Sandra Foster has her own blog if you want to catch up with her there!

THE most magical things in life are the ones that spring up where you least expect them — the rosebush in the abandoned lot, for example, or in the case of Sandra Foster, the tiny Victorian cottage in the Catskills that shares space with a 1971 mobile home, two aged trucks, a pen full of chickens and a hand-lettered sign advertising “Farm Fresh Eggs, $2 a Dozen.”

The chickens and their eggs are the remnants of a restaurant that Ms. Foster’s husband, Todd, a great bear of man, tried to run in this sleepy college town last summer; like the landscape business he started a few years earlier, it failed. Mr. Foster, who is working at a local poultry farm, is still recovering from back troubles, making Ms. Foster, a fiscal administrator at Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island, the primary wage earner.

No matter. Ms. Foster has her own shabby-chic retreat. It may not have a bathroom or a kitchen, but it is a dream of Victoriana: stacks of Limoges china with tiny rosebud patterns; chandeliers dripping crystal; billows of tissue-paper garlands.

This is all the more impressive because she renovated the 9-by-14-foot cottage, an old hunting cabin, herself. The cost of renovating and furnishing it: $3,000.

Ms. Foster haunted upstate salvage shops from Kingston to Albany for old windows with wavy glass; she found an old porch door in the precise shade of hunter green once used on the boarding houses that dotted the area; she used a jigsaw to create gingerbread trim and cut out openings for the windows.

This is a very special sort of dream house: the Victorian Ms. Foster has wanted since she was a teenager on Long Island and her middle-class family lost their home. It is a house that is as soul-satisfying as it was when she first imagined it as a 15-year-old, even with the ups and downs that grown-up life brings.

“My refuge,” she calls it.

The Fosters’ country homestead is a study in contrasts, as are the Fosters. She is 42, a size zero and wears pink wellies, black tights and a paint-spattered Irish knit sweater over a brown jersey. Sitting in their trailer, listening to her husband speak, she brushes first the long hair of Zuzu, one of her two Maltese dogs, whom she sometimes refers to as her daughter, then her own long white-blond hair.

Mr. Foster, 51, is a man whose chest gives the impression that he has to go through doors sideways. An independent spirit who left high school at 15 to see the country, he has worked as a carpenter, a cook and a landscaper. His two much-larger dogs are Ruffy, a Doberman mix he found by the side of the road, tossed from a car as a puppy, and Mullet, a Labrador retriever. He also has 19 chickens, 8 chicks and 8 baby pheasants. Plus, Ms. Foster noted, two hummingbirds, though technically, they merely visit.

The Fosters’ 14-acre property in Delaware County has a “Men Are From Mars” — as in, they decorate with dog hair — “Women Are From Venus” feel, although they share the trailer, which is their actual home. (Ms. Foster’s romantic studio, lacking heat as well as plumbing, is uninhabitable in winter.) With its ’70s-era avocado-and-gold color scheme, it is known as the Groove Tube.

Mr. Foster’s personal property is his “man cave,” a truck-size shed covered by an enormous tarp. It’s furnished with a big-screen TV, lots of videotapes, cooking equipment and two lamp-warmed cages for the chicks and pheasants. (Note on young pheasants: they are the rare infants that are not cute. But when you are introduced to one, on someone’s outstretched palm, you must pat its head anyway.)

Across a stream and up a steep hill is Ms. Foster’s Victorian cottage. With lavender blush white petunias in a window box and lace curtains, it is clean as a summer cloud.

MS. Foster’s dream of a country house began when she was in high school in Holbrook on Long Island, and her father, a radio announcer, tried to start his own radio station. After the business failed, her family lost their home, and Ms. Foster said she spent “lots of my high school years being homeless,” living with her family in furnished basements or spare rooms in her parents’ friends’ houses. (Her younger sister, Nicole Tadgell, an award-winning children’s book illustrator, remembers it as being less than a year.)

Despite the financial pressures, Ms. Foster said, her father would consider no work but radio and had difficulty working with others.

Mr. Foster, hanging near the open door of the trailer, had a thought about this. “I would suggest he probably lost a lot of his spirit, kind of felt broken,” he said. “He being an entrepreneur and going through many phases of businesses opening and closing.”

What was the effect of homelessness on Ms. Foster?

“If you don’t have a home, you don’t have a sense of place, you don’t have a life, you don’t have a soul,” she said. “This was a nice average suburban community. We were four kids and two parents living in a single room. I got very internal. I buckled down and did my homework. I got used to living in small spaces.”

Ms. Foster was an honor student in high school, then graduated from Wheaton College in 1990 with a B.A. in literature and a $16,000 college loan. Unable to find a good job in New York City, she stayed with her mother in various rental properties on Long Island and worked minimum-wage jobs to pay off her loan. For several years, she worked two full-time jobs. Her solace was listening to the band Rush and gardening, she said, but whenever the landlord wanted his house, she’d lose her garden.

It was while she was working in Suffolk County, as a mail carrier by day and sterilizing glasses for a pharmaceutical company at night, that she met Todd Foster, who was then working for a landscape company.

The attraction?

“I was a gardener, he was a gardener,” she said. “There is a plant called nepeta. I had trouble growing it. He grew it like gangbusters. I was fascinated by this very handsome man who could grow something I couldn’t grow like there was no tomorrow.”

They married in 2000 in a Renaissance-themed ceremony (“I made 19 cloaks,” Mr. Foster said) and settled in Riverhead, N.Y. A year later, longing to be in the country, they bought a big, rundown farmhouse three hours away, near Kerhonkson, for $69,000. Ms. Foster worked two jobs on Long Island to pay for it, going upstate on weekends, while Mr. Foster stayed at the farmhouse and tried to start a landscape business.

“This is when I discover, much to my horror, that Todd and I aren’t completely alike,” Ms. Foster said. “He is not a tidy man, he likes to collect things and stuff, most of which is very large, like tractors. My idea of houses is Victorian, cute, magazine-perfect, lots of white. When I come home on the weekend there are dishes in the sink, dog hair everywhere and he has probably dug some new hole with one of his excavators because he wants to put a pond in, and I have three acres to weed-whack instead of mow — on the weekend, mind you, and I’m working two jobs.”

She continued: “It was horrible. I don’t have the money to do the things I want to do, like decorate. We wanted to have kids, but I don’t feel like I can stop working because I’m funding all this. Growing up with homelessness, I know the consequences of stopping working.”

The stress became so intense that Ms. Foster had what she called a nervous breakdown: falling on the floor, screaming, crying.

“The huge house was half renovated, the life was killing me,” she said. “The only thing holding me together was Todd’s love, and his love of food and feeding me, and his love of flowers. Every single day I come here, there are flowers. A whole path of rose petals leading to a bath full of rose petals and candles. He’s a magical man, despite his flaws.”

Their great big farmhouse, they realized, was ruining their lives. In 2007, they found this wooded property, with the trailer and cabin, for $46,000. Ms. Foster, seeing the hunting cabin on the hill, knew it could be her dream house.

“It was like coming home,” she said, after Mr. Foster had gone to do chores and the conversation had moved up the hill to her cottage. “I get tears in my eyes thinking about it. It was everything I had dreamed of, in every novel I had read, every song I had heard.”

The cabin was then a 9-by-10-foot box with a peaked roof, five small windows and a sleeping loft over a small porch supported by tree trunks. Ms. Foster began work on it as soon as time and money allowed, in July 2009.

Armed with a crowbar, hammer and electrical saw, she removed the front of the cabin and extended the floor and porch, using salvaged floorboards. She framed out the porch and found columns, a screen door and hardware at New York Salvage, in nearby Oneonta. The only help Ms. Foster required from her husband was setting the columns and rafter over the porch. The four columns cost $60 each, and one was split lengthwise to make decorative pilasters for the porch.

Armed with her saw, Ms. Foster cut out spaces for windows, which she bought for $30 each at Historic Albany Foundation’s Architectural Parts Warehouse. She found a tin ceiling on Craigslist for $200, and a wooden mantelpiece at the Linger Corner Gift Company antiques store in High Falls for about $350. Many of the faded white book jackets came from Beth Neumann, at TatteredVintage.

Furnishings, which had to be carried across a shaky bridge over the stream and then up the steep hill, posed a challenge. So what appears to be a short, fat love seat is really a lightweight wicker sofa from Ikea, plumped up with pillows and embroidered Ralph Lauren pillowcases. Ms. Foster built the china closet using scrap wood and French doors she found at a yard sale.

Was she ecstatic when it was completed?

“Yeah,” Ms. Foster said. “I was. I remember the night I finished as clear as a bell: November 1. I was listening to Rush at very high volume over and over, it was freezing cold, I was starting to paint, but the moon was out. I looked up at the moon, twirling, with my arms out. I was ready to cry.”

Does she plan to install plumbing and turn it into a real house?

“Not really,” she said. “It’s just my little studio. If I add on to it, I have to pay taxes. It might be nice to have a fireplace, but do I want to live with Todd up here? I would probably have to clean up after him. What’s the point? It’s a tale of two cities.”

Ms. Foster cannot yet fulfill her dream of living in the country full time — quitting her job and trying to find another would likely mean a pay cut — so she makes the four-hour drive back and forth from the city every weekend. “You have to be self-sufficient in this world, a woman especially,” she said.

Finally, it was time to go back down the hill and across the stream to the trailer, where her husband came through the door with a surprise: freshly baked rolls, still warm from the oven.

He placed them in a basket and put them, with a bucket of margarine and cups of green tea, on the coffee table. Surrounded by four dogs — two from Mars, two from Venus — everyone ate.


Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Designing Your Craft Room

I have been having so much fun refurbishing our guest bedroom into a craft room and have been pouring over creative and functional ideas. Here's what I have learned.

Whether it's your hobby or your livelihood, crafting requires space.

A creative soul needs a creative environment and yours may be a dedicated space in your home or you may be fortunate to have entire room devoted to your crafts. Either way, try to surround yourself with things that inspire you, and organize your workspace around decorating solutions that do double duty without doubling the volume.

Seek balance between the inspiring materials that stay out for full viewing pleasure and those elements that go undercover. Doors and drawers, unlike open shelving and counter space, can be closed to help maintain a sense of order. Assign each craft supply to it's own container (inexpensive canning jars offer a pretty way to view embellishments); and beautiful "makings" grouped by category will help keep you organized.

Here are some simple tips to get you started:
1. Set a budget. Furnishings, trims and accessories can be handmade or repurposed from thrift store finds. Invest your money in adequate storage systems and comfortable seating. If you are using an area in a common room, consider getting some shutters or old bi-fold doors. Hinge them together, splash some paint on them that will compliment your room and now you have a screen to section off your craft area!

2. Eliminate Clutter. Your craft room or space should be for crafting only. Resist the urge to use it for exercise equipment, a place to drop your mail, etc.

3. Add color. Your craft space should have splashes of color that reflect your style.

4. Make the most of natural light, and supplement with adequate work light. If possible, arrange your work space by a window to allow fresh air, light and a view.

5. Consider storage options. Floating shelves and bookshelves function well in a craft room because they allow quick and easy access to materials. Use small baskets, cans, boxes and other vessels to sort and hold objects. Gift wrap, paint or collage designs on the containers and label them.

6. Add a gallery space to your work area. This may be a dedicated shelf or a wall; but display some of your finished products.

If you are dreaming of a craft room that is a perfect mix of fabulous and functional, these fresh and fun ideas and photos may turn your dreams into reality. Whatever it takes, enjoy designing and organizing a space a space or decorating a room to inspire your creativity!


Credits:
Images (2 & 3, 5) via Better Homes and Gardens
Image (4) via Squidoo
Image (6) via Debs Country Crafts
Image (7) via Lurvely

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

More Nesting Theme Shower Inspiration

I was just so beyond inspired by a previous post I did on a nesting theme shower. I keep thinking about how charming the whole concept of a "nesting shower" is; which led me to do more scouring for inspiration. Robin's Egg Blue just jumped out at me as the perfect color palette for a mother bird/baby bird nesting theme.

So I pulled together some inspiration boards I found on line and then got my creative energy flowing to find some Robin's Egg Blue DIY projects to incorporate into any tabletop decor.

Make sure you get all the way to the bottom of the post for free DIY Momma Bird Shower printables compliments of Hostess with the Mostess!


Image found via Bride Chic


Image found via Brenda's Wedding Blog

Image found via Tara and Thyme

How about giving a face lift to an old pair of candlesticks by painting them Robin's Egg Blue? You could use them as candle sticks or for the base of a DIY cake or cupcake stand!

Or how about painting some hard-boiled eggs to add to your centerpieces?


the preceding (3) images found via Accent The Party

Image found via Create My Event

Click here for your FREE DIY Printables with download and printing tips.

Happy Nesting!

Sunday, June 13, 2010

DIY Project ~ Basic Terra Cotta Cupcake Stands

I am always looking for new ways to use old things, or creative ways to make new treasure out of something you would have never expected. When I ran across this DIY tutorial on Once Wed for stackable cupcake stands out of basic terra cotta plates and saucers - I knew I had stumbled across a project I will definitely be trying soon!

What you'll need:

(2) terra cotta saucers (Laurie used a 7" and a 10" saucer, but you can use any size you like). You can find these readily available at most nurseries or home and garden stores.

(2) terra cotta rose pots (Laurie used 5" and 6" high pots You an use any size as long as they are taller than the height of your cupcake and frosting)

(2) yards ribbon (or what ever it takes to make it around the circumference of your saucer)

Decorative or scrap book paper

Acrylic paint

Hot glue gun and glue sticks

Sponge paint brush

Scissors

Cupcakes


Instructions:

1. Begin by painting both sides of your terra cotta saucers and only the outside of the terra cotta rose pots with your acrylic paint and sponge brush (see figure 1 and 2). Paint a second coat if needed.

2. Allow the paint to dry completely

2. Turn the saucers upside down and glue the bottom of the rose pots to the back of the saucers using your hot glue gun. Use a generous amount of glue. (see figure 3)

4. When the glue has dried, turn your cake stands right side up and carefully glue your ribbon to the edge of your saucers. (see figure 4)

5. Cut (2) circles out of your paper to line the inside of the saucers (see figure 5)

6. Stack stands and arrange your cupcakes.


Project created by Laurie Cinotto for Once Wed

Friday, June 4, 2010

Easy Summer Craft Series - DIY Blackboards

As the first in my {easy summer craft} series I wanted to share this adorable DIY blackboard idea. Not only would it be cute as decor for your kitchen, but a perfect party decor element to include for a backyard bbq, a school themed party, a summer picnic, or brunch at home.

You can transform any object with a flat, smooth surface into a blackboard. Here, enamel bakeware was used, but you can make use of anything that strikes your fancy, such as an old mirror or a salvaged window.

Directions: Apply two coats of chalkboard paint using a small sponge applicator or roller, as the fibers in regular paintbrushes tend to leave behind streaks. Chalkboard paint comes in both liquid and spray versions. If you try the spray, be sure to cover the surrounding area carefully to prevent spatter.

Image and post credit Country Living

Thursday, May 20, 2010

DIY Vintage Apothecary Jars - Free Labels

Inspired by vintage apothecary labels, I found these decorative labels designed by
Eat Drink Chic. Simply downloaded and attached them to beautiful colored glass bottles!


Instructions: Print out onto glossy white stock and cut around the edge of the labels. To stick them onto the bottles, use double-sided tape.

These glass bottles were purchased from Ikea, however, you can always find apothecary jars at flea markets, antique and thrift stores.

The bottles can be used for a variety of reasons including flower vases as part of centerpieces.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

DIY Colored Vases

World's easiest DIY: Colored Vases via Your Home & Garden Magazine

Materials needed:
*glass jars and bottles
*oil bases emulsion paint
*turpentine

Directions:
1. Take a selection of empty jars and bottles in various sizes and shapes and soak off the labels in warm soapy water.

2. Mix a little leftover oil paint (choose your color) with a dash of turpentine so your paint is of a good pouring consistency.

3. Pour a small amount into your empty jar and swirl around carefully until the paint covers the entire inside surface. Pour away any excess paint.

4. Once the paint is thoroughly dry, use the jar to display cut flowers. Mix different shapes of jars and coordinating colors for the best effect.

5. Have fun!

Friday, May 14, 2010

Posh Tots

I thought I would post the link that was *the* inspiration for me when my husband uttered the famous last words..."find a playhouse online and I will build it".

I have always secretly adored the magnificent eye-candy at Posh Tots whose brand is
"The Most Extraordinary Children's Furnishings in the World".

They sell high-end custom children & baby furniture, luxury baby bedding, nursery furnishing, designer diaper bags, playhouses and even fantasy beds, just about everything you'd ever need to pamper your child (boy or girl) and feather their nest in custom luxury. It's always been a dream, of course, that anything on Posh Tots would ever end up in my home!

Then I happened to find it...and it just so happened to be on Posh Tots. Imagine that.
I fell so *in love* with an adorable Victorian cottage on Posh Tots, and it was only $24,000.00, but there has never been anything wrong with my taste!

So I found the plans online for $29.99 ~
and my husband built it.

Here is the playhouse vision that I shared with him, and you'll have to check out my daughter's Playhouse Warming / 4th Birthday party to see just how close he came to the original. It's remarkable, and let's just say I'm extremely impressed and grateful for my husband's talent...and willingness to make one of my dreams come true.

...and he saved us thousands...and thousands of dollars! =)

I also posted some other custom items they sell - and added the price tags just for fun. Enjoy!

Victorian Playhouse - $23,4000.00

Baby Doll and Me Rocking Horse - $140.00

Destiny Gown - $695.00

Mosaic Garden Versatile Dresser - $3,900.00

Sweet Slumber Bi Level Versatile Dresser - $5,000.00

Sweet Slumber Bi Level Versatile Dresser - $3,400.00

Sweet Slumber Armoire - $3,900.00

Madison Mosaic Desk with Optional Chair and Hutch - $2,850.00

Guinevere's Chiffarobe - $2,200.00

Guinevere's Four-Post Bed and Bedding - $4,200.00

Cherub Dreams Round Crib II - $1,350.00

Mirabelle Convertible Crib - $3,200.00

Princess Coach Iron Crib - $3,700.00

Fantasy Carriage Crib - $19,995.00

and just for kicks - the Fantasy Coach - $47,000.00!!

I'm sure my husband is hoping I *don't* find the plans to the Fantasy Coach online!

Dare to Dream.....