I Steal Good Ideas

Archive for the ‘Crafting’ Category

Klepto Files: Second Edition

A few of the steal-worthy ideas I saw this week …

My friends at Prudent Baby showed up on Hostess with the Mostess and this super-cute tutorial for Mod Podge Coasters. Love!

My friend Bonnie’s blog got me turned on to Flourish Design. This is the post that won me over. Why doesn’t my house look more like that? Love that cream dresser with dark pulls. Hmmmm ….

There are some really gorgeous photographs on One King’s Lane this week by Marcella Echavarria. The one below is stand-out. One King’s Lane is such a daily addiction … and this week I ordered a blue and white garden stool for our living room with a $25 credit that was burning a hole in my pocket! Pics forthcoming …

You know I love Miss Mustard Seed? She’s doing an awesome give-away. It’s a box FULL of fantastic antique stuff. A whole box! Check it out. And congrats to her on 2000 followers!

My friend Eleanor gave me a beautiful Pewter spoon when I was the Maid of Honor in her wedding years ago. It’s monogrammed with a B for my maiden name and it’s way too pretty to stay in a drawer. Love this idea! Think just one would be too boring?

Eons ago, my friend Katie Hitt snapped this pic for me at a Flea Market and said that these were selling for $199 each! She rightly thinks that they could be modified to fit nearly any decor. I was thinking of a slim, gold-leaf frame and mounted on a simple linen background. Would a soft lilac be interesting in a room with dark walls and lots of blue & white? I’d love to introduce another unexpected color for accent but  just don’t know what …

That’s it for this week!

posted by Julia on Aug 1st, 2010 in Crafting, Decorating, Klepto Files
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Stylish DIY Bulletin Board Alternative

Project #2 of that famed flea market run from so many weeks ago has finally come to fruition, folks! Let me tell you, travelling for business does not a happy idea thief make! PHEW! Read on to find out how I’ve created this Stylish Bulletin Board Alternative (with custom decoupage clothespins, I might add)!!

Today I’m ripping off an idea from one of my very favorite catalogs – Wisteria. You see, my office is on a lovely sun porch which makes me feel like I’m working in an aviary (I adore this fact) but leaves little room for getting rid of clutter. So when the space between my lamp and my phone started to look like this ….

… I decided it was high time to find a place for all of my “fun mail”. You know all of the baby announcements, wedding invitations, sweet cards and photos that I just can’t throw away … at least not yet. But I didn’t want a traditional bulletin board that would block the view and the light. When I came across this on Wisteria …

… I knew I had found just the right concept. But I’m not crazy about chickens and $39 seemed a little steep. That is when the hunt for the perfect frame began and by golly if I didn’t find a beaut!??!

All the gory details on what you need to get from flea market to fabulous are just below.

MATERIALS:

Flea Market Frame
Needle-Nose Pliers
Sandpaper
Caulk
Spray Paint (I chose an Heirloom White in Satin finish and Gold Leaf for the clothespins)
Yard Stick
Hammer
Tacks
Floral Wire (mine was wrapped in neutral raffia from the floral department at Michael’s)
Mini Clothespins
Decorative Paper
Mod Podge
Foam Brush
Spray Enamel

STEP 1: PREP YOUR FRAME

I started by giving my frame a nice bath with a damp cloth. Next it was on to removing staples, nails and tacks with my handy needle nose pliers and below a screwdriver to pry off the name plate. I even sanded down the back of my frame since it was going to be hung on a window but if yours is going on the wall then why worry with that?!? My frame was super old so we put a little bit of caulk in the corners just to smooth things out a bit.

STEP 2: COAT THAT BABY WITH PAINT

Not much to say here except follow the directions on the spray paint can! And even though I’m painting at night here, the second and third coats had to happen during the day to get a nice, even spray on all of those little nooks and crannies. I’d like to thank my good friend John Deere and my husband for collaborating to make me this fancy painting platform.

STEP 3: MEASURE FOR YOUR “CLOTHES LINES”

I ended up spacing mine 10″ apart but it’s worth noting that I think it looks best to have the top one about an inch and a half from the top of the frame (it looks like 2 inches here but see how that lip of the frame takes up 1/2 an inch – that will make a big difference in the look). Wouldn’t want to waste a whole bunch of space up there but wouldn’t want it crowded either. Mark where your tacks will go on the backside of the frame.

STEP 4: CUT, WRAP & NAIL THE LINE

(Just don’t Walk the Line … that’s never fun.)

This floral wire wrapped in a raffia-like material that I was using was heavy-duty stuff.  I needed the needle nose pliers to manipulate it, no doubt. The idea is to create a little loop that you’ll wrap around the tack on one side and get that hammered in. Then, cut the line so it’s just slightly beyond your marked spot on the other side of the frame. You’ll use the wrapping action to wrap it just tight enough that the wire is taught. You can always give your pliers a little bit more of a turn if you need it a hair tighter. Pull, pull, pull and then nail in place. Here’s a shot of those tacks (available at your home improvement store) as well as what it looks like to wrap the wire around it.

Use your pliers to make a little loop that a tack can just barely fit through. If your raffia stuff starts to fray like this did, trim and secure with a piece of scotch tape. It’ll be on the back of your frame anyway.

Then slide that tack in there:

And nail that puppy in place (and I mean the tack, not actually the puppy! see my old boy snoozing in the background of the pic above – such a sweet guy he his):

You will notice that all of that care that I took to sand the back of the frame and paint it got just totally demolished by my hammer. Oh well. Our neighbors will forgive the ugly view. Oh and I suppose you could use twine and spare yourself all of this wrapping and pulling taught. But to me, it just seemed like the wire would provide a more sturdy foundation for the mail and keep things from tipping this way and that. I like to think my selection makes for a tidier presentation in the end but who really knows. If you’ve got the twine already, give it a whirl!

STEP 5: HANG ‘ER UP

Forgot to get a pic of this step but I happened to already have some hooks hanging in the metal frame of my sun porch for a Christmas stained glass window so I used some fishing wire to loop the frame to the hooks. If you are hanging your creation on a wall, you can easily add a picture hanger. Just choose the kind with the little jagged teeth that doesn’t use a wire.

STEP 6: SECURE YOUR GOODIES TO THE CLOTHESLINES

Clothespins are easy enough to find but with all of that fancy carving, a plain one just seemed BOR-ING. I thought of just giving them a coat of paint and calling it a day. But then I remembered seeing these cute clothespins on Etsy:

You can buy those at The Papered Crown on Etsy if you like. They are only like $8.

When I remembered those, I realized I could do anything I wanted to complement my new frame remake. So I purchased some mini clothespins, sprayed them down with a little gold spray paint (mostly just on the sides so there would be a little shine) and then decoupaged them with this cute, muted, floral craft paper that I found at Michael’s. Here they are on the tray drying after their decoupage treatment.

Kind of cute, huh??!?! And I had never decoupaged before but let me tell you it is really easy and really, really fun. I just used these instructions. I pretty much feel like a 1960’s housewife but I might be hooked on the decoupage now. Eeeks! We’ll see if it becomes a new blog category. HA!

So let’s have a few final shots of my Wisteria rip off before we close down this post. Hooray for cute, custom, DIY organization!

posted by Julia on May 22nd, 2010 in Crafting, Organizing, Rip Off
8 Comments »

Steal This: An Eggcelent Easter Idea

Ashblue, a fabulous locally-owned gift shop here in Nashville, sent me a postcard week before last inviting me to check out their annual egg decorating party (thanks, Mary-Michael & Marrah!). But this event far-exceeded the typical egg-dying party for three reasons:

1) the blank canvasses we were handed were OSTRICH eggs
2) the decorating supplies went way beyond the usual dyes and stickers
3) Faith Hill and her daughter were there bedazzling with us!

My mom, mother-in-law and I all attended last Saturday afternoon. We thought we would spend an hour or so … but two and a half hours later we were finally paying our bill and walking out with our prized creations. There were young kids, older kids (some who were serious artists and really making some amazing things), and adult kids like us. All were having an excellent time.

I made this which I was really quite pleased with …

Rubber bands created the curved lines in the center when stretched around a naked egg. I used blue painters tape to tape off the ends while I dyed the center pink. After a trip under the hairdryer and removal of the tape and rubber bands, I found that some of the pink had seeped though to the ends. Although it wasn’t what I was going for, I decided to embrace the marbleized look and I taped off the entire pink center band and used highly-concentrated dye and a paintbrush to accentuate my previous “mistakes”. After some more time under the hair dryer I decided to go a little glam and I added the gold paint and jewels.

My mother in law, Karen, made this …

Since she was flying back to Savannah after her Nashville visit, she assumed that the ostrich egg would not make the trip so she dedicated it to my husband and I with a monogram.  The monogram and fun pattern on the back were made with crayon.  Here’s the back:

Then she dyed the whole egg in yellow. Next she added some clear glitter that makes the monogram look almost frosted. Then she glued all of those cool little flat, glass pellets into each circle on her crayon’d pattern. Pretty cute huh?

My mom made one too but I don’t have any pics. In bright greens, pinks, and yellows, we decided it was Lily Pulitzer inspired. She’s using it as the centerpiece of her breakfast room table for the Easter season.

I think these are both going to be heirlooms someday. Can’t you just hear future generations fighting over the ostrich eggs that grandma and the great-grandmas painted??

I have NO idea how you might source your own ostrich egg if you wanted to replicate this project for yourself. But Nashvillians, if you are interested, Ashblue has offered this fun activity for the last 5 years. It’s $32 per egg and it’s a ball. You need to reserve your egg in advance … but don’t worry, I’ll remind you next year. And even though Easter is over for 2010, you should run on into Ashblue anyway because they have some great looking stuff. My favorite is probably the DIY succulent gardens … so cute. Get on over there and hoping you and yours had an eggcelent Easter!!

posted by Julia on Apr 5th, 2010 in Crafting, Decorating, Holidays, Steal This
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Steal This: Tree of Hearts!!

Although I love my job and I love seeing my awesome co-workers (hi guys!), at this particular moment I am terribly sad that I am in LA for work.  Because if I were home, I would gather up some Nashville friends and host a Tree of Hearts party straight away!

How beautiful is this!?

I’ve got to credit the photo and the backstory to one of my favorite blogs, Style Blueprint.

But before I go there, let me tell you how crazy the blogosphere can be.  The tree pictured above is just around the corner from my house.  Notice the sweet little twinkle lights?  Across the neighborhood and through the leafless branches, these twinklers had been taunting me.  Why?  We’ve joked in our house that we are cruising for a red neck ticket because our white icicle lights are still hanging from the gutters of our house, as if it were December 24.  Obviously, it’s February 10 and WAY past the acceptable time frame for Christmas lights.  But it has just been so cold in Nashville that the idea of heading down to our neighbor’s house to borrow the ladder, dragging it back to our yard, and pulling down those lights has been just way too much of a chore to even consider.  So when my hubby saw those twinkles from across the neighborhood and through the leafless branches, he decided we were in the clear.  If they can do it, so can we.

But a few days later when I drove down Leonard and saw how this home owner had augmented her white Christmas lights with hearts I understood that they were indeed not cruising for a red neck ticket as we are.  I thought it was super cute and my thief’s brain immediately got to chewing on how I could hang hearts from my gutter line to get some more mileage out of the white lights ritual.  As my mind’s eye shuffled through all of the store-bought heart options I could dream up, nothing really looked fabulous to me.  Considering that this idea would most likely send my husband up the ladder once again, I decided I should take a pass.

Until today.

Because now I understand that the heart decor is about so much more than just looking fabulous.  It is about being a fabulous friend and sharing love on Valentine’s day.  How do I know?  Enter Style Blueprint.  My neighbor’s blog featured this awesome post with the so sweet back story of a Tree of Hearts ritual that started in the northeast to cheer a friend who had breast cancer.  In the middle of the night, a woman snuck into her dear friend’s yard and hung hand-made hearts all over the tree to cheer her when she saw it in the morning.  The tradition caught on and now it’s an annual ritual there.  The house around the corner with the darling heart tree is a transplant from that very neck of the woods!

Style Blueprint is calling for this to become a Nashville tradition and I have to agree that it is fantastic and absolutely should.  They are even suggesting that a non-profit should take on the preparation of Tree of Hearts kits as a fundraiser.  Genius!  So in the spirit of blogosphere stealing, I mean sharing, I’m posting it right here even though my work schedule this week prevents me from participating.  But 2011 will be the year for my first annual Tree of Hearts party and you’ll have to tune in here to see the results.  Nashville readers, if you want to be on the invite list, let me know in the comments below!  For those of you who are in town right now, there’s still time to make it happen!

posted by Julia on Feb 10th, 2010 in Crafting, Entertaining, Holidays, Random
1 Comment »

Commemorate with a Cork

Will and I got engaged in November of 2007 on a magical European vacation with our families.  The day of our engagement, we opened up a bottle of champagne in celebration and I’ve been saving our treasured cork ever since.

Er, um, ok so that’s not exactly how it went.  We did get engaged on a wonderful Mediterranean cruise with our families.  And we did open a bottle of champagne not long after Will popped the question.  And I did save the cork.  And then I lost it 36 hours later.  But, in true glass-half-full style, we just used that as an excuse to order more champagne and do more celebrating.  ;)

But what to do with them?   I came up with an idea that I think is totally genius.  Christmas ornaments!  Don’t you love to go through the ritual of pulling out your Christmas ornaments each year and remembering who gave them to you or who made them for you or where you bought them?  Well now you can remember those special occasions by immortalizing your champagne cork as a festive ornament for your tree.  Here’s how:

Champagne Cork Ornament

1.) Start with a clean, dry cork with the muselet still attached.
The muselet is the wire cage that secures the cork to the bottle (I just learned that term tonight – fancy, eh?).  If you want to work with a wine cork that naturally does not have a muselet, you might try threading some fishing line on a needle and pushing it through the cork.  I haven’t tried this, but it seems like it would work.

2.) Shape a bow using some cute, festive ribbon.
I chose ribbon that’s Christmas-y but it would be just as cute to match the ribbon to the occasion.  So if you opened a bottle of champagne on the day your baby girl was born, make it pink.  It it was the day your hubby got into business school, find ribbons in colors that match the program.

3.) Shape a bow, don’t tie a bow.
I’m using grosgrain ribbon here and it doesn’t exactly make the most gorgeous bow because the ribbon has so much body.  But it’s just too darn cute to pass up.  So, I shaped the two “ears” and two “tails” of the bow and pinched it with my fingers.

Then I used a stretch of fishing line to tightly cinch the center of the bow.  Next, I used a 1-inch long stretch of ribbon and a little crazy glue and covered up my fishing line.  Grosgrain ribbon will fray so don’t forget to singe any loose ends with a lighter so that the fibers melt together just a bit.

4.) Attach the bow.
Bend the muselet back to make a little spot for the bow to rest.  Give it just enough room so it’s snug.  I added a little crazy glue to the cork right where the bow would fit to keep it extra snug.

5.) Make it hang-able.
I used some fishing line to make a loop through the ring of the muselet so it can be hung from the tree!  Our tree is already down for the year so here it is, hanging from a nail in my office wall.  Trust me, this will be WAY cuter once it has a Christmas tree limb to dangle from.

I’m going to try to remember to do this as a follow up from showers, weddings, engagement parties, New Year’s Eve parties, and the like.  Wouldn’t it be such a fun idea to steal a cork from a party you attend and surprise the guest of honor with a little momento at Christmastime?  I could kick myself for not nabbing a cork from an engagement party I went to this weekend.

One of my favorite blogs, Young House Love, does a similar application with the chop sticks from their ritual New Year’s Eve dinner.  You can read about that here. They also mention framing their old house keys in that post but wouldn’t old house keys make great Christmas ornaments too?  Maybe with a sweet little hand-written label that gives the address of a much-loved house and the years that you made memories there.  Such a fun thing to pull out every holiday season.

So Corks for Christmas – totally a Julia Original!  Enjoy!

posted by Julia on Jan 19th, 2010 in Crafting, Gift Giving, Holidays, Julia Original
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