Crafty McCrafterson

I’ve never really considered myself an artsy person… I can’t draw to save my life, and i’m pretty sure my middle school art teacher just gave me a decent grade because I was friendly and chatty (and I wasn’t quite as bad as the guys in there who couldn’t care less).  That being said… I love being crafty.  I am a novice seamstress (although that word sounds fancy… I assure you I am not) and I am addicted to my hot glue gun.  AND I have this unbelievable ability to think I can do anything, half the battle is just getting started.

So there is this store in downtown Lawrence, KS (home of my Alma Mater… Rock Chalk!) and its called Made, and its like a real life Etsy shop. Everything is home made and super cute, but I have a problem with it.  I walk in the store and think… I could make that! Don’t get me wrong… I’ve spent plenty of money in there, I mean, their stuff is super cute BUT if there is something I like that is too expensive or looks easy to make, I think I can!

I was in there with a friend a month or so ago, and she really loved a wreath they had.  It was selling for about $40 dollars, and wasn’t much more than a Styrofoam wreath covered in twine with some fabric flowers on it.  I had a ton of leftover materials from DIY Wedding things so I decided to see if I could make it for my friend! craft-wreath8

So I stopped by Hobby Lobby with a 40% off coupon for the Styrafoam wreath (I think it was bout $3 for the wreath).  And I had this ball of twine like material and so I put a dot of hot glue to hold the end down and then started wrapping.  And wrapping and wrapping.   craft-wreath11

I highly suggest doing this while watching a tv show or movie, because its a bit tedious.  It took me maybe 30 minutes to wrap the whole thing. I wasn’t too careful about wrapping exactly even because I liked the disheveled look of the criss-crosses.   craft-wreath7

I knew I had seen a post on Bower Power about how to do fabric flowers. So I brought that back up and watched her tutorial.  I mostly had leftover ribbon, which looks a little different than the fabric, but the different textures added some variety.

So one by one I twisted the little flowers and hot glued them on (I used hot glue, which the tutorial linked above doesn’t, but I felt like it kept my flowers in the shape I wanted)  craft-wreath6

After hot gluing each individual flower, I put a layer of hot glue and stuck it onto the wreath.

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The important trick that finally helped me understand how to make the flowers was to twist the ribbon AWAY from the knot in the center.  You can see below (sorry for the fuzzy picture, but I think you get it…) You tie a knot at the end, then just twist the ribbon away from the flower and continue until it is the size you want it to be.  Whenever mine was starting to get a bit unwieldy i’d just add a dot of hot glue to the back and keep going.  However… be careful not to burn your fingers.  Also BTW… if you bought your hot glue gun at Home Depot instead of a craft store it is 10x (scientific number) more likely to burn your fingers. And smoke. THAT SUCKER IS HOT.  craft-wreath4 craft-wreath3 Keep doing this until you have all the flowers you want for your wreath.  For the final step I looped a piece of blue and white polka dotted ribbon and hot glued it at the top so the wreath would have something to hang from.   craft-wreath1

The bottom flower in the picture above turned out really cool and is made from some ribbon that comes already bunched up… I love the added frilly-ness that it added.  craft-wreath9 craft-wreath10

 

And there is the final product! It cost me approximately $3 and a few of the materials I had on hand, but it would be a great way to use up extra fabric scraps or extra ribbon you had lying around the house!

I’m going to be making one for my front door very soon!

 

Dresser Upgrade

I know I haven’t really posted much on the master bedroom here on the blog yet.  I feel like it is one of my most unfinished rooms.  BUT I just finished one project for this room which definitely puts this room one step closer to being finished.  When my husband moved into the house we knew we would have to figure out some additional storage for our clothes.  I had two dressers, but I already had them packed to the max! Both were hand-me downs that I had refinished with Minwax Jacobean stain and put silver handles on.  But one of them was still in pretty bad shape from being stored in the back of a warehouse for a while (the top was warped and even though I had ‘repaired’ the bottom drawer, it broke again and was pretty much beyond repair).  So when a friend posted on Facebook about a dresser she had for sale I jumped at the chance to get it.  We rented a truck from HD (long story, but I don’t recommend it!) and paid her $200 for the solid wood dresser, but it wasn’t really our ‘style’…yet.  So I stored it in the garage (for about 6 months) until I could put the MJ stamp on it.  I planned on staining it with the same Jacobean stain I had used for the other dressers (one of which is still in the room with it).  But I read about someone using Danish oil instead of stain and thought I would try it out.  (bad blogger… I forgot to take a true ‘before’ picture, this is the one my friend sent when I bought it)  dresser-before

Fortunately the dresser was already mostly in a natural wood state so it wouldn’t require hours of sanding or using stripper, so to start out I just went over it once with a 220 grit sandpaper (its mostly what I had on hand and a good grit for ‘prepping a surface’).  FYI in case you aren’t a sandpaper aficionado, sandpaper has different degrees of roughness and most that you’ll see at your local home improvement store are from 80 grit up to about 220 (there is a superfine that is somewhere in the 300s, but I don’t use it all that often). I have this cheap random orbital sander that I bought a few years ago and it works perfectly fine for most of my projects!

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So I sanded it down a bit while the hubby removed all those handles, they were wired in with rusty wires and the holes were only 2″ apart.  I discovered in this process that they don’t really sell 2″ wide handles, so I knew I’d have to drill new holes and because the old holes would still be there I needed a handle that would cover up the old holes too.  Fortunately the handles I had JUST BOUGHT for my bathroom cabinets (which sits adjacent to where this dresser would be) would fit the bill.

master-dresser-drawers1 Then we started applying the danish oil.  We used Watco Danish Oil in Dark Walnut that was somewhere around 8 dollars per bottle.  I thought I would only need one bottle, but with all the outsides and insides of the drawers I ended up using about a bottle and a half, so I had to go back to get another bottle before finishing up.

master-dresser-danish-oil I prefer to use these little disposable foam brushes for applying stain and things like that.  They don’t leave any brush marks and since stain and Danish Oil are oil based they are harder to clean up, and nothing makes cleaning brushes easier than being able to throw them away. (that’s the husband’s hand brushing the oil onto the top in the picture below)

master-dresser-in-progress The directions on the can call for you to put it on, let it penetrate the wood and then to apply a second coat after 30 minutes, then 15 minutes after the second coat wipe it down.  I use old t-shirts to wipe things like this down (I seem to have a never-ending supply of old t-shirts around the house!).  They say that after 8-10 hours it will be dry.  I came back 8-10 hours later and still had a few spots that felt a little oily and made me worry about putting all my clean clothes into it.  But since I finished up this project on my own and although I think I’m very strong moving this behemoth of a dresser on my own was definitely a no go, I just let it sit in the garage for a few days, and sure enough by 4 days later it had no oily feeling and left no residue on the white cloth I wiped all the surfaces down with just to be sure.  master-dresser-1

Back to the handles.  Sorry I seem to be skipping around a bit… hang with me.  After putting the oil on and letting it try a bit, it was time to drill the handles.  (you can see I already tried one out before remembering to take the ‘in process’ picture).  AAAAAND don’t mind the super messy garage.  In Texas we don’t have basements… so all that storage is either in an attic or in my case… the garage. I bought a template from Home Depot that helped you figure out where to drill the holes and the right distance apart for 3″ handles.  I just eyeballed the top to bottom height for where I thought the cup handles looked centered and found the closest set of holes. From there I lined the center line up with the center of my drawers (from side to side) and marked them with a sharpie.   master-dresser-with-templat The instructions said to use a 3/16th drillbit (and even came with one in the package).  It looked too big to me, but I trust that they knew what they were doing… so I went with it, and what do you know?! the manufacturers knew what they were doing, it was the perfect size.  You can see below that the new holes were slightly wider and set down a bit from the previous holes.  That was what looked most centered and what would also cover the other holes up.

master-dresser-drilling Rinse and repeat on all 8 drawers and this is what it turns out like! I bought these pulls from Home Depot.  They weren’t cheap, but they look great, and match the ones in the bathroom, so I went with them. I feel like drawer hardware is a lot like area rugs… they are way more expensive than I think they should be and I’m not sure why… but sometimes you just have to bite the bullet and go for it.  master-dresser-garage

I let it dry for a few more days (mostly because we got busy and didn’t have the time to move it and switch out all our clothes).  But once we got it moved in it made a huge difference! (I’ll try to find a before picture with the way too small dresser in this location).

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For the first time in our married life we have places for all our clothes to belong, which definitely helps with the clutter in the room and keeping up with laundry. The pictures on the wall were all there before in a sort of random gallery wall design.  I’ll show them in more detail when I show you the rest of the master bedroom, but the ones in the brown frames are all from a trip to China I took with my graduate school program, and the ones in the silver frames are from my trip to Japan to visit our foreign exchange students (we had two from Japan when I was a little girl and we still keep in close contact with them and their families).

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I love the way it turned out and I really love the extra storage!

 

The House List

One of the quirks my husband is learning to love tolerate about me is my tendency to come up with new projects whenever I have any downtime.  We’ll be laying on the couch talking… and I’ll be planning what the room would look like if we painted it and added crown molding.  He’ll inevitably ask… what are you thinking about? and when I tell him, he rolls his eyes and just deals with it.  But I think it might actually be a sickness! I love thinking about and brainstorming new projects and I feel like every layer of beige paint I cover in some other color makes the house a little more ours and a little less ‘theirs’ (i.e. builder’s, previous owners, etc).

So here goes… my list of what I think I want to change about the house:

Living room:

  • PAINT!! (but this also includes painting a very long hallway)
  • Crown Molding
  • Paint the white fireplace with a glossier white (its very matte and dull right now)
  • Fix the curtains
  • Build built ins where the tv is?
  • More pillows

Kitchen:

  • Double Ovens (and thus figure out a Microwave solution)
  • New light fixtures: over the table and the long florescent lights
  • Crown Molding

Dining Room:

  • New chairs
  • Build a table?
  • Crown Molding
  • Paint the front door
  • Hang something on the wall by the door

Guest Bathroom:

  • Crown Molding
  • Replace Light fixture

Master Bedroom:

  • redo the larger dresser
  • hang art above bed and on side wall
  • Fix curtains
  • build a header box for curtains
  • paint?
  • Crown Molding

Master Bathroom:

  • Paint Cabinets
  • Paint White
  • Add tile accent?
  • Frame out Mirror?
  • spray paint gold accents on shower/replace shower door
  • Built-in closet
  • Hang things on walls

Office:

  • Crown Molding
  • Document the house for insurance
  • reorganize craft area

Guest Bedroom

  • Paint the bookshelves/build new more appropriately sized bookshelf
  • Frame Husband’s Diploma and CPA Certificate and hang
  • Crown Molding
  • Change out artwork

Laundry Room:

  • Replace shelves with cabinets
  • Get rid of the linoleum
  • Get a water sensor for the washer
  • Paint
  • Build a drying rack

Hallways:

  • Redo shelves in the closet upstairs
  • Board and Batten on the hallway downstairs

Garage:

  • Figure out a better scrap wood storage
  • Better storage for under the workbench
  • Cover the garage floor
  • Organize/construct the shelves

Some of this might change/other priorities may come up, but for now this is my go to plan list for what I want to get done long term on the house!

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