Thursday, May 31, 2012

Mod Podge Goodies Unboxing Video

Hi everyone! I am so excited to be sharing my very first unboxing video with you! This little box arrived on my doorstep this afternoon, packed FULL of goodies from Plaid for an upcoming Mod Podge campaign that I am participating in via The Blueprint Social.

Before we get started, feel free to ignore my amazing workout gear, okay? I was just about to do my 30 Day Shred when the Fed Ex guy rang the doorbell. I decided that opening this package right away was waaaay more important and exciting! (If you love my "Strong Beats Skinny" tee, it's designed by my friend Jackie, and is available here).

Okay, on to the good stuff!


See, I told you there was a TON of great products in there! I can't wait to play with it! Stay tuned in the coming weeks as I show off some fun projects that you can make with it all!




Wednesday, May 30, 2012

The Graduation Tie


Sawyer's kindergarten graduation is on Friday, and his teachers have requested that the kids come in formal dress since they won't be wearing caps and gowns. Sawyer isn't too keen on the only tie that he has left that still fits him, so he asked me if I would make him a special tie just for graduation.

We went through my fabric stash, but he was feeling rather conservative in his choices and was worried that his friends might not think an airplane, rocket ship or owl tie would be cool (seriously though, what five-year-old wouldn't think that was cool!?). He had something quite specific in mind - a special tie with stripes that run horizontally and that matched his shirt really well. 


Luckily for him we found a blue striped summer dress in my pile of things just waiting to be repurposed into something else. Perfect colors, perfect stripes. I love that pop of polka dots as the lining too. I used this tutorial to make it, and it was ridiculously easy (though obviously I need to iron it a bit straighter since the bottom is just slightly askew and driving the perfectionist in me crazy!).

One super special repurposed tie, all ready for this little guy to wear as he moves up from kindergartener to first grader. If he doesn't die of stage fright first. He's introducing one of the songs that they'll be singing at the ceremony, and he's CRAZY nervous about it. Funny that someone who thrives on being the center of attention at home can be so nervous about public speaking! He definitely takes after me.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Easy DIY Family Rules Artwork


I've seen loads of family rules signs and vinyl available for sale lately, and while I really loved the idea, I found that many of them were too religious or just didn't really fit our family very well...so I decided to create my own, of course!

I started by choosing a size (24" x 36" - this baby is BIG!) and then setting up the layout in Adobe Illustrator. Choosing which fonts to use and how to lay it out was the most time consuming part! I saved my final draft as a jpg file so that I could cut it out in sections with my Silhouette. I didn't want our sign to have the look of raised vinyl on wood, so I opted to use my vinyl as a mask instead. I painted a base coat of white, applied my vinyl to keep the letters white, and then hit the whole thing with a couple of coats of dark grey paint.

When the paint was still tacky, I started to peel off the letters and then gave the entire sign some light sanding to distress and age it. Easy peasy! Since I live in California (aka earthquake territory) I had my hubby screw the whole thing into anchors in the wall since it's heavy. I still need to make some cute fabric buttons to cover the screw holes, but it's not exactly topping my priority list ;)

After all this time I finally have something worthy of hanging in our little niche off the kitchen! The background of the archway is going to stay yellow (it matches my kitchen), but the brown walls that you see here are soon getting a coat of dark grey paint (the same one used on my stenciled wall) - can't wait!



Monday, May 28, 2012

Royal Design Studio Stencil Review & Giveaway!


I have been wanting to create a stenciled focal wall in my home for a really long time, so I was beyond thrilled when Royal Design Studio sent me one of their stencils to review. I had grand illusions of a beautiful geometric design gracing my stairwell, but soon realized that the graphics would compete with our ornate stair ballusters, and I was worried that it might be a bit too crazy on the eyes.

I shifted my focus towards my master bedroom instead, and I'm so glad that I did! We're currently transforming our office into a craft room which means that I'm relocating of all the crafting areas and supplies that have taken over every corner of our bedroom. Adding some decorating pizzaz to the bedroom by stenciling the wall seemed like the perfect way to start taking back our space.

Look at what we started with:


This space was so sad and uninspiring. It pretty much looked just like it did when we initially unpacked our boxes after moving here four years ago. How embarassed am I to admit that I have a degree in interior design, and my own master bedroom looked like this? Time for a change, for sure!

We started by giving the wall a fresh base coat of flat paint (Behr Swiss Coffee). Next, we gathered up our featured paint (Martha Stewart Grey Squirrel) and stenciling supplies - pencil, small paint rollers, paper towels, a level, and low-tack green painters tape. The Eastern Lattice Moroccan Stencil that we used has an intricate and delicate pattern, so using repositionable spray adhesive to hold the stencil to the wall allowed us to have cleaner edges and sharper lines. A small paintbrush was also necessary to touch up the edges as needed.


I was eager to jump into stenciling right away, but learned that it is important that you practice on another surface first before diving right into stenciling your wall. Different paints and surfaces may work better with one kind of roller/brush or another, and you don't want to waste time having to cover up a bad stenciling job and starting over again. Ahem, don't ask me how I know that. We started by using the recommended dense white foam roller, but ended up needing to use a roller with slightly more nap (Purdy White Dove 3/8").

We have really heavy texture on our walls, which proved to be the only real downfall in stenciling. It took several coats of paint every time we moved the stencil to a new location, so we grossly underestimated the amount of time that this project would take us. The textured walls also required more touch-up than a smoother surface would, again taking up a lot of time. The next time we stencil a wall (yes, we'd do it again with a few lessons learned from the first time!) my husband and I agreed that we'd want to add a light skim coat of smooth texture on our walls first to avoid some of the issues that came up with our heavy texture.

Begin by placing your stencil in the center of your wall so that you will end up with an even and equal amount of pattern repeat leftover when you reach the edges.


Find your rhythm and start stenciling by using very thin coats of paint and building it up layer by layer...


...keep stenciling...

Day 1, Hour 1

...and stenciling...

Day 2, Hour 7

...and stenciling...

Day 2, Hour 15

...and then stencil some more!

Day 2, Hour 17

Yay, finally finished!!!

Day 3, Hour 23

See what I mean about the heavy texture on our walls - it was a killer!

It was SO worth all that time and effort! I still have a good deal of touch up to go back and do, but it looks great already (especially when you're not looking at it from 6" away!). I love, love, LOVE it! I'm inspired to makeover our entire bedroom now! Next up, an upholstered leather headboard :)

If you're feeling inspired as well, Royal Design Studio has offered to give away one of their stencils (priced at $50 or less) to one lucky reader!

Congratulations to Jessica W! She is the giveaway winner!

Just head on over to Royal Design Studio and come back here and let me know which stencil you'd choose. Giveaway will end at 9:00 PM PST on Wednesday, June 6th, and the winner will be announced the following day.

a Rafflecopter giveaway




Saturday, May 26, 2012

Fun With Paper: Lightsabers







Hope you're having a lovely holiday weekend as well!

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Best of the Web at Craft Corners


Hi everyone! Just a quick hello to say that I'm featured over at Craft Corners in the current installment of their "Best of the Web" series. Come stop by and check out the other great sites that were featured this week, and take a peek around Craft Corners to see all the fun ideas they have to offer!

Thanks so much for including me in the "Best of the Web!"


Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Make Your Own Fairy Garden



Interactive fairy gardens are a magical space for children to play and a lovely addition to any garden. Making one is quite simple and quick, but will bring hours of family enjoyment. The real imagination and magic comes alive when choosing the small details to place in your garden...with so many fantastic possibilities your garden will always be changing and evolving!


Start with a box for your garden - we used this gorgeous old wood reclaimed from a demolished home. Isn't the detail and character in this wood amazing?! Get creative with your box - old drawers, shelving units, and many other items are perfect to repurpose into your fairy garden! 

Next, add your dirt! This step is especially fun if you have a house full of dirt and digging obsessed boys like I do!

Start laying out your plants (we used a mix of mosses, grass, alyssum and succulents) and getting a general feel of how you want your garden to look. We decided on a "treasure cave" in the back corner, so I  partially buried a 2" pot and covered it with dirt. 

Be prepared for fairy garden making to be an all-day-long project! Playing in the dirt and arranging and rearraging the layout a hundred times is a big part of the fun! 

Friends and neighbors might even come over to get in on the garden-making-action. It's super fun! You can make a pond with a small saucer, a pathway with gravel (colored aquarium gravel would be really fun!), fairy houses and castles, a dining area, a dancing space...anything you can imagine!

All finished! Well, phase one, at least!

This garden has meandering pathways - one that takes you past the wishing well and gazing ball (hidden behind the wishing well) to a small bench and resting area (where Gnomeo is currently hanging out!); the other takes you to the hidden treasure cave. Along the way, glass gems are hidden throughout the moss. The boys love placing them in and out of the cave in hopes that the fairies might delight in their found treasure. 

My 5 and 6-year-olds put this garden together completely on their own (with help from their little friends, of course!). The back right corner has been deemed the "rock desert," the stacked pots in the back are a fairy castle (that will soon be painted to look like a real castle), and the front is a butterfly garden. You can see bumblebee Super Mario has stopped to rest in a nest in the "big bush." ;)

The magic of a fairy garden is in the addition of all those teeny details! At Sawyer's insistance, our wishing well is filled with blue glass gems to resemble water. If you look closely you can see the fairy's gazing ball peeking out in the background. Make your own by gluing a swirly glass marble on to a wooden golf tee. 

The boys' rock desert has its own silver gazing ball, glass gem stepping stones, a roadrunner, and a wheelbarrow full of garden tools. You know, for when the fairies feel like tending to the rocks or clipping the moss grass. That holey rock in the back corner is from our last trip to the beach, and the boys love that the holes are still filled with teeny tiny seashells. 

A mama quail (Sawyer's favorite bird these days) sits on a nest in the flower field next to a brightly painted wooden toadstool.

I love that the different plants resemble grass, bushes and trees. It really creates an inviting place for the boys (and the fairies, naturally!) to come and play. 

We added a few additional touches to our fairy garden area - this planted teacup is one of several that sit upon a built-out shelf on the fence near our fairy gardens. I love repurposing old things that have been sitting around the house unused into something fun and pretty!

All that's missing is our garden prayer flags over the fairy gardens...more to come on those later!
Hubby built this bench at a perfect height to allow our big boys to play in the gardens while still being tall enough to keep the curious toddler from destroying them. We still let the little guy play in there with supervision, but it doesn't last long before he wants to start throwing rocks and stealing glass gems from the wishing well. Maybe next year!

The big guys can't seem to stay away from the gardens though. I find them out there all the time moving butterflies around, hiding treasures and setting up places for the fairies to sleep and play. I love that it has really sparked their imagination, and we have big plans for lots more special fairy garden additions to come!



 
If you make a fairy garden of your own, be sure to stop by and link up at The Magic Onions Fairy Garden Contest!
 
 

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Pour Painted Pots


Look what I found, thank goodness! Bright and cheery felt flowers to go with our pour painted pots - yay! I was really worried for a minute there that we weren't ever going to find them!

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The boys saw the idea for these pour painted pots on In Lieu of Preschool a few weeks ago, and they couldn't wait to try it out to accompany their felt flower bouquets.

We taped up the holes on the bottom and they got to pouring the paint. Note: make sure your kid isn't wearing parts of his school uniform when you turn him loose with acrylic paint. Aye aye aye. 

It's really simple to acheive this swirly and marbled effect - just pour a bit of paint, and then keep adding new colors on top of the old ones until they drip off the edges and run down the sides of the pot.  

The colors were so pretty dripping and swirling down the sides of the pots. There are so many moments where I just wanted to freeze it and keep it that way, but you can't fight gravity! 

Sutton very deliberately chose to make striped paint drips on his pot (in the middle) instead of letting the colors mix and swirl. It was a really neat effect as well! 

In the end we only covered about 90-95% of the pot with paint, (mostly because it was bedtime, and we were all tired of getting eaten alive by mosquitoes!), but I still think they came out great! 

It took two full days for all of the paint to dry. We coated it with four layers of glossy spray varnish, and we were ready to add our felt flowers...well, after we found them ;)