Wednesday, August 21, 2013

QUICK CRAFTS!

This title is FAR from decieving. All these crafts that I'll be showing you are quick and easy fixes to update some of the less fashionable items you may own. The first craft takes a little more time than the second, but is still very quick! I don't think it even took me an hour.
 
 
A bowl wrapped in twine! Okay, so maybe it isn't exactly twine..but its rope like and twine like so therefore to me it's twine.
 
 Materials:
 
  • A plain or ugly old bowl (Mine was a cermaic bowl I made in fourth grade. It was a horrible yellow-green color)
  • Hot glue gun
  • Hot glue sticks
  • TWINE
  • Raffia (or whatever you want your bow to made of)
 
 
See, the ugly color of this bowl. It needed updating and it needed it STAT. First off, add a line of hot glue wherever you want the twine to start. For the sake of this tutorial, I had already glued a little bit of the twine on. It was hard to get a picture of the inital step alone! Once you add the hot glue, just lay the twine over it. You will press on it gently so that the twine really sticks to the hot glue and it sets.
 
 
 
This is what my bowl looked like after a few wraps with the twine. I had just finished one row and was moving on to the next. All you do for this step is put hot glue AS CLOSE to the previous twine line as you can and the glue will need to be put in a slightly thicker line this time. The rest is easy! Glue, wrap, glue, wrap, glue, wrap! Simple.
 
 
When I finished gluing and wrapping I made a bow out of raffia. Now, don't ask me what raffia is. I really have no idea. The texture reminds me of dried grass. I did not buy this product for myself. It was part of a huge crafting bucket my aunt gave me. I liked the way it fit in with the earthy vibe of the bowl and decided it would be perfect for this project. I grabbed a couple strands and turned it into a bow and hot glued it onto the of my new and improved bowl!
 
 
 
Now, on to the next project!
 
 
 
 
We've all seen those plastic storage bins in Target and I had one that was representative of my junior high. That needed updating if I even imagined bringing it to school with me. This was quick. One of the quickest crafts I think I've ever done.
 
Materials:
 
  • Fabric
  • Scrapbooking paper
  • Tape
  • Modge Podge
  • Scissors
 
I didn't take very many pictures of this. Sorry, but its easy! Originally, I was just going to paint the storage container a new color but I had recently sewn some pillows and had excess fabric I was likely to never use again since I'm not really big on sewing. I ended up decopauging the fabric onto the storage bin using Modge Podge and a sponge brush! I cut out a piece slightly bigger than the back of the storage container and modge podged that on first. Then I modge podged the rest of the bin like a present. I layed the fabric over the top and modge podged that, then did the sides, and cut off the excess!
 
 
Customizing the bin was the easy part. There were a lot of tutorial on pinterest and the internet that explained this. Basically, all I did was cut out a piece of scrapbook paper and fold the bottoms and the ends so it would fit in the front of the bin. I then taped it and place and...done! It looks funky on the inside slightly, I know. However, from the outside you can't even tell. And you don't lose any space on the inside.
 
 
 
Super quick, super easy, and super cute! And super functional (;

 
 

Friday, August 9, 2013

Chalkboard Painted Mini Fridge

This was the big project I was SO excited to share with you all. It was a lot easier than I had expected it to be as well. Now, I took a BIG inspiration from Apartment Therapy. I saw it on Pinterest and figured I could try it! It's like a Pintrosity moment...without the pintrosity.

http://www.apartmenttherapy.com/how-to-create-a-patterned-chal-138804

Here's the original fridge. You'll later realize how much like it it truly is.
This is my journey making it though, so let's begin!

Materials:

Rustoleum Chalkboard Paint
Rustoleum Tintable Chalkboard Paint (Mine is in moonstone)
Sponge Brush
Foam Roller
Paint pan
Painters Tape
Cardboard/durable yet cuttable material to make the chevron pattern on
Chalk (NOT sidewalk chalk)



This was my fridge when I started. Yes, it was brand new. I didn't sand my fridge as some websites suggest but that's because it was new and I just figured I didn't need to. If your fridge is older, you might want to. I taped off the parts of the fridge that I didn't want to become chalkboard.

I did however, prime my entire fridge. I only needed one coat to cover it to my liking.
All primed up!
This was the chalboard paint I used to paint my fridge. This is the base color of the fridge.
All painted! Now, I knew I was going to add a second coat. I followed the directions per the paint and had to wait the allotted amount of time before I added the second coat. I don't know what would happen if you didn't wait the amount of time, but I also don't want to find out from personal experience! While waiting for the paint to dry and time to pass, I worked on making the base of my chevron pattern.
This next part was initially tricky! I had previously painted a chevron pattern once before on a wall in my room. It took FOREVER! I even swore I would never do a chevron pattern again. Well, we saw how that turned out. After reading Apartment Therapy however, (link is at the top of this blog) they eased my fears! Their method for it made so much sense and was truly easy.
Measure the width of your fridge (I skipped this step because it was on the box! Perks of a new fridge!) and divide that by 6. The number you get will be the dimensions of the squares you will need to draw. Draw 6 squares of those dimensions and two rows (see above). This will make your chevron pattern. On the top row, draw lines corner to corner. On the bottom do the same. (For a visual check out the link on top of the page, I never snapped a picture of it!)

When it finally comes time to paint your chevron, I found this the easiest way to do it. Once you cut out the shape per the template you made above it should look like this! I rolled up painters tape and placed in on the back of my chevron template so I could easily stick it to the fridge, tape off the shape, and keep both hands free.
See what I mean? Just place your template up there and get to taping! Now this is after I cut the shapes to how they should be. Notice the first chevron where the two pieces of tape are overlapping? That's how you should tape ALL of the pieces. Then with the template, hold it up to the peak and wherever the tape shows beyond that cut off using an exacto knife to get these sharp peaks.
This is the fridge all taped off and before I cut most of the peaks. Once cutting the peaks, I realized that I didn't want my chevron accent to be that large. I wanted the accent to be an accent, not take up most of the fridge. So what I ended up doing was adding tape beneath each chevron shape, lining it up right against the one on top so it was doubled. (I hope that makes sense I didn't take a picture....I'm awful, I know)
If you look carefully in this picture, you can kind of make out that second row of tape I'm talking about. I painted over most of it thought just by chance. I painted the chevron with the tintable chalkboard paint. I choose moonstone but there were at least 6 other color options to pick! I let the paint dry for at least two hours before I removed the tape.
 
 
The fridge once the tape was removed! I was so excited by how it turned out! Now, I waited four days before I conditioned my fridge. And when I finally did I made the mistake of using sidewalk chalk  (because my dad convinced me it would work). It does not work! At least not for me. It didn't erase well and I ended up having to repaint that side because no matter how many times I wiped it down it wouldn't even kind of get clean. Regular teacher's chalk is the way to go here people. Thank goodness it was just ONE side.
 
 
This fridge excites me! I'm in LOVE with it and my roommates seem to like it as well! I was so excited to share this with y'all!

Just a few new things...

I really am in love with these new canvas paintings. It's a shame only the first one is mine to keep. The others were requests made by friends and I have fallen in love with each of their canvases as well. I know they will just LOVE them! No tutorial here, just me showing off (;