While my kitchen was covered in glue this week I made a little Halloween bowl. So easy and fun for the kids to help.
DIY after the jump…
While my kitchen was covered in glue this week I made a little Halloween bowl. So easy and fun for the kids to help.
DIY after the jump…
Just because we live in different states (oh how I miss you Jaime) doesn’t mean we can’t get our craft-nerd on together. So this week, I made some doilie bowls too. As an experiment, I used All-purpose Elmer’s Glue instead of the Fabric Stiffener. My husband, Rick, says it’s not an experiment because something about having a “control”, blah, blah. Whatever dude, this isn’t NASA.
So basically, the glue worked well, especially for the small bowl. Very stiff. The large bowl is a little floppy, like a straw hat. Definitely fine as a decoration but I wouldn’t fill it with anything and probably wouldn’t gift it. It may have been the glue but it could have also been the large size and thinness/airiness of the doilie to begin with. Or perhaps it was that I couldn’t stop messing with it. Seriously, they need to dry overnight or even 24 hours. Just leave it alone.
My doilies were from Jo-Ann Fabric.
Learn how to make butter after the jump…
(more…)
I gave Jacinda’s hooded towel how-to a try this weekend. This one is a gift for a BOY and my first boy project! It was easy-peasy and I took some different photos of the DIY that might be helpful if you try your own. And if you do, don’t forget to send it to us or post it in our new Flickr group.
Check it out and find out where I got the awesome chevron fabric after the jump…
1. I pre-washed, ironed and cut my accent strip of fabric as per Jacinda’s instructions. Then I cut my hand towel (bought on sale at Target):
2. I pinned my strip of accent fabric evenly one inch from the bottom of the towel:
and sewed it in place with a straight stitch:
3. Then I folded the towel in half lengthwise with the strip inside, sewed the right side, then the left side, and then flipped it inside out to get this:
4. Then I inverted the left corner into the right corner to get my cute little hood:
5. I folded my big towel in half lengthwise and put a pin to mark the center, then I opened the hood up and lined up the center seam with my pin. Then I pinned the back edge of the hood to the towel like so:
Then I sewed that in place with a straight stitch.
6. Then I rolled the top piece of the hood back over the seam I just made and sewed it in place so all the edges were trapped inside and all you could see is soft cuddly goodness. This is what it looked like from the front:
and from the back:
All done! I can’t wait to give it to Miles for his birthday this weekend! Sorry if I ruined the surprise Christine…
With the gray towel and the chevron accent fabric, there is something sort of Shark-like about this, no?
Prudent Price:
-One scrap Paula Prass Summer Soiree in Yellow $0 (a whole yard is $8.95 here)
-One gray bath towel $4.99 (on sale in Target store)
-One gray hand towel $2.99 (on sale in Target store)
Total: $7.98
The last time that I had sewn “home-decor” was in 7th grade Home-Ec. It was a shiny hot-pink heart-shaped pillow with lace trim. It turned out “wicked awesome” and made it’s home on my water bed throughout high-school until my water bed was popped by a dangl-y iridescent feather earring. Soooo, that’s how long it’s been.
Inspired by Jaime’s beautiful curtains but not quite ready to take on the living room, I decided to start with the closet. Yes, we have windows in our closet. Windows, just letting all my frocks bathe in that hot Texas sun. Weird, right?
And now, every time I open the closet, I smile at the pretty bit of happy birdie fabric looking down at me. Decorating a space that hardly anyone will see is such a fun project. It’s truly a little something just for you.
Here are a few pieces of inspiration for decorating a hidden space.
and more here
and more here
and more here
and a DIY for those easy-peasy curtains after the jump…
Measure you window, rounding up 1/4″ for flat panels that fit inside the window frame, or more if you would like them to gather & hang below the window base. The second option is a bit more error-proof for a first project, but the first option looks sharper.
Add 6″ to your horizontal measurement and 7″ to your vertical measurement
Cut a square piece of fabric to this measurement. This is tricky, and much easier with a cutting mat, clear ruler and rotary cutter but any right-angle tool will help immensely.
On both the left and right side of your square, with back side of fabric up, fold over 1 1/2″, pin through back, iron seam, fold over 1 1/2″ again, pin and iron seam again.
Using a medium length straight stitch, sew along the length of the seam, 1/4″ from the inside fold. repeat on other side.
Now for the bottom: with back side of fabric up, fold over 1 1/2″, pin through back, iron seam, fold over 1 1/2″ again, pin and iron seam again.
And for the top: with back side of fabric up, fold over 2″, pin through back, iron seam, fold over 2″ again, pin and iron seam again.
Once again, using a medium length straight stitch, sew along the top length of the seam, 1/4″ from the inside fold. repeat on the bottom.
Iron curtain and hang using a tension rod. So easy!