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Thursday, March 29, 2012

Plantation Shutter to Corner Cabinet

This random treasure of a plantation shutter was discovered at the Habitat for Humanity ReStore several months ago. I had no idea what I would do with it, I just liked it and it was $2.  So even if  I tossed it, no biggie.  I finally decided that it would make nice doors to a corner cabinet/table.  With the assistance of my lovely power-tool saavy husband, we made this in about an hour and a half.  Hubby cut 2 pieces of "nice" plywood (it wasn't what I expected when he said plywood) the same length & width of the shutters.  He already had the wood from another project he did.  We joined the 2 plywood sides with screws at a 90 degree angle.  The shutters already had a hinge on one side, so we joined the shutters to the plywood with the pre-existing hinge. He cut the top & bottom pieces, each extending about a half inch over the soon-to-be cabinet sides.  I sanded and routered the edges of the top & bottom pieces to give them a little curve.  Then I pained them an off-white color.



I don't know how well it shows up in my pictures, but there was a little knob and latch on one side of the shutters.  While they aren't really functional, I thought they added to the look, so I spray painted them a brushed bronze & put them back on.  We are planning to add a shelf or 2 to the inside, so I didn't bother painting the inside yet.  I also need to get a magnetic latch so the door will be secure when I shut it. Overall, for starting some stuff that we had laying around, I think we ended up with a pretty nice corner cabinet for our bathroom.  It conceals the ugly stuff, like extra TP & cleaning supplies.  Total cost of this project: $2 plantation shutters, $3 for a sample size of flat ivory paint, I'm going to guess $10 for the plywood, power-tool know-how from my hubby (free!).  Bonus for the quality time spent building something with a loved one.  :-)




Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Spiral Topiaries aka Whoville Trees

Twas a few days after Christmas and all the stuff was on sale.  I found these lovely 4 feet tall topiary Christmas trees and decided that I needed some topiaries for other seasons, too!  I wanted spiral trees, about 4 feet high.  I found just that online for $300/each and I wanted 2.  Do you think I bought them?  Nope, I made them.  These were fairly time-consuming, but what they took up in time, they lacked in cost and they look amazing in our entry way.
 I found this really long stick in my yard, about 9 feet.  Don't ask me how you get a stick that long in one piece, I call it a sign that I needed to make these bad boys.  I broke said stick in half.  If you don't have enormous sticks in your yard, just go buy a $2 dowel rod, which is also 4 feet long (usually).  I ordered these very Roman-looking plastic flower pots from Amazon.  They were $9/each.  Great price, and where else can you find flower pots in December? A pretty pot will add a lot to the look of this project. Conveniently, Amazon packed these pots in massive amounts of brown packing paper, in sections about 20 feet long.  Originally, I was going to buy newspaper for this project, but the fine folks in the packaging department must have had their crystal ball out and read my mind, saving me that step and a few bucks.  I took large gauge craft wire (the biggest I could find) and put it in the center of several layers of packing paper.  The wire and paper were about 8-9 feet long at this point.  You are eventually going to curl the paper around your stick, so it needs to be approximately double the length of your stick to look right.  The craft wire helps the paper maintain shape & makes it a little more sturdy than it would be once you spiral it- thus get the biggest stuff you can find that is still flexible. I wanted the top of my topiary to be thinner & the bottom thicker, like a real tree, so I had only a few layers of paper at the top, adding more as I went down.  I wound the paper around the craft wire and secured it with masking tape.  It sounds more complicated than it actually is, but you can crunch the paper down tighter in the areas you want smaller and fluff it out where you want it bigger.  I attached what was at this point 'paper cones' about 5 inches from the top to the top of the stick with more masking tape.  Then I spray painted the paper cones green, just so the paper wouldn't show through. Try to keep the sticks (or dowel rods) brown for a more authentic look. It is ok if you try this and they look awful at this step.  Mine certainly did.

I bought 13 bags of green Spanish moss at Walmart for $2.50/bag.  I had some left over, but I'll use it for another project.  The moss was in clumps, so I stretched out the clumps best I could without tearing them apart and glued to the paper cones with hot glue.  This took a LOT of hot glue.  Surprisingly, the moss stayed very well.  I thought I was going to have trouble with it falling off, but not so.  After I had every inch of paper cone covered, in what was at this point, 'moss cone,' I filled up my plastic flower pots with plaster ($8 pail, enough for both flower pots) and stuck my sticks in the center.  Make sure your stick is straight up.  A crooked stick makes for a crooked topiary.  Luckily the plaster hardened within 5 minutes, so I didn't have too long to stand there waiting for it to do it's thing.  


Once your plaster is set with your stick firmly in place, spiral your moss cone around your stick.  Voila, you now have a spiral topiary tree.  I love these guys.  My husband calls them Whoville trees.  I guess they do look a little like something out of a Dr. Seuss book.  And they only cost me $55 to make 2 of them.  So we can eat this week AND have pretty decor.  Break out the Who Hash!

Monday, March 19, 2012

Spring Wreath on the Cheap




Seems like all I'm doing here is posting about stuff you can make for your windows & doors.  There really is more than that.  I made this Spring wreath using pipe insulation curled into a circle and taped at the ends.  This stuff is under $2 for 4 feet of it.  I cut it to about 2 & 1/2 feet long for a wreath form about 18 inches in diameter.  I'm guessing here, I didn't really measure...  I wrapped green strips of construction paper around the insulation, because it melts when you try to hot glue anything to it.  I used 2 bags of green Spanish moss ($2.50/bag).  I took the moss out in clumps, trying not to separate it too much & glued it to the construction paper.  The moss make a really nice setting for whatever you want to add to it. Once I had it all covered in moss, I glued on some faux easter eggs & wound a ribbon around it.  I think it would also look good with some dried flowers, a bird nest, or really anything you want to stick in there.  The pipe insulation & Spanish moss totaled $7.  The ribbon was about a dollar & the eggs were about $2.  So there's a $10 spring wreath!

Sunday, March 18, 2012

More window coverings...

liner cut to fit blind skeleton
After making the faux roman shades for our living room, I decided to keep going with that trend for our bedroom windows.  We painted our bedroom a very calm shade of turquoise that matches almost no other color, so picking out fabric that would blend was a task... I finally found some very pretty, but a pain-in-the- *edit* to work with crushed taffeta. I wanted something a little more billowy for these window treatments.  I liked the folds that the faux shades made when they were pulled up, but I wanted them when they were down, too.  I did the skeleton of these shades the same way as the others (you can find that  here) using black out liner fabric- my real job requires some late sleeping & the sun likes to blaze in my face at 6am...  Cut the liner to fit, then cut the outer fabric about an inch wider on each side, but added 50% to the length for my fluffy folds.
outer fabric- little wider, lot longer


pinning them together to make folds
Next, I started pinning the 2 fabrics together, pretty side out.  There isn't a pretty side to the liner, so one less thing to worry about.  My windows are about 56 inches long, so I made hash marks every 8 inches down the length of the liner. 
hash marks- where to sew the folds

 I made a fold, sort of billowing out the fabric, tucked it under and pinned the fold to the hash marks to know where to sew the liner to the pretty side.  I did this 7 times for 7 folds.  Then when I had it all pinned, sewed the liner straight across with the folds pinned.  Or, as you can see in the photos, not so straight across, but the way the fabric fell, you couldn't tell it was sewn sloppily. Since I used slippery, crushed taffeta that you can't get wet, I could not use fabric glue to attach the two because the glue would show through.  However, you could if you used a sturdier fabric, which I recommend.  I personally never want to sew taffeta again.



After attaching the pretty side to the liner, I glued the back to the skeleton blinds just like the other faux roman shades I made.  I glued the blind part right on the stitch line- well, where the stitch was straight, anyway.  Again, I used some random stuff I found around the house to weight down the plastic to the fabric as the glue did its thing.  After giving it a whole hour to dry, hung it up, and taaaaaada!  LOVE.  Again, sorry for my bad photos, I swear it looks better in person.


shade down
shade up.  previously mentioned blazing sun.
 Total cost: $7/yard taffeta.  I used about 3 yards per window.  $5/yard black out liner.  I used a little under 2 yards per window.   Plastic mini blinds- $4.  So, per window it was about $35.