Archive for the ‘project’ Category

fabric wallpaper

Monday, September 6th, 2010

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I did a little experimenting with fabric wallpaper the other day in my hallway. Above the doorways is this little square of nothingness calling out for some kind of decorating. I was planning to actually use wallpaper on the wall for once with a patchwork of scraps (not anything new in my home as evidenced on Layla’s dresser and my desk’s keyboard tray), but didn’t have enough on hand. Instead, I took the opportunity to try fabric in the space. It’s pretty easy – you simply make up a paste similar to that you use for papier mache, paint it on the wall then smooth over the fabric. You have to cut it pretty much exact, but there is a little give with fabric so you can stretch a teeny tiny bit.

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If I decide to keep it, I’d see about removing the side mouldings or putting a little border around the edges to keep them in place and also cover the wonkiness of the line, but for now I’ll keep it as is to see if I like it enough to go to that much trouble. I do like that there is something interesting in the hallway now! What are your thoughts?

You can find a recipe for fabric-wallpaper paste here. Being just cornflour and water, it’s highly likely you’d be able to peel it off the wall and throw it in the washing machine and reuse if you felt the need. Most certainly can’t do that with wallpaper can you?!?!

sneak peek: world’s girliest picnic blanket

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

picnicblanket

I’m so mean with all the sneak peeks aren’t I? That’s cause I’m incapable of getting myself together to finish a project. Things always get in the way. But this is one that I finished earlier than expected – because I ran out of fabric and so it’s not as big as I’d planned. Oh well. This is what I whipped up last night. It’s a pink and green and oh-so girlie picnic blanket.

After buying the little Ikea teacup set a few weeks ago we’ve had tea parties every. single. day. I got tired of the old cot blanket we sat on so promised the kids something prettier and tea-party-worthy. So it was to the pile of fabrics I went and this is what I came up with – just in time for our proper fancy-pants dress-up tea party for Ava – her story will break your heart. I’ll share our party once we’ve had it.

In the meantime, I got to enjoy a yummy chocolate roll and some quiet reading in the sun on a much-needed child-free day. I took a little break in-between glue-gunning Christmas wreaths and attempting to wade through my stupidly full unread-mail inbox and I’m pleased to say enjoyed it so very, very much.

roadside table makeover

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

sidetableafter1Everytime we have a council clean-up, I can’t help but smirk at the “vulchers” who start rifling through our junk while we’re still taking it out to the street. We’ve even had requests: “got any more aluminium?” “any other screen doors back there?” I smirk because I wonder what they’re thinking when they take a half-painted, water-damaged chipboard bookshelf with no shelves. Or the chair with the missing leg. Or the fridge that was so old and beyond repair and was so heavy we had to lie it on its side and drag it 50 metres to the street along concrete, almost tearing a hole in its side. But I guess they score the parts. Or maybe they just see something of decent-looking shape and are blinded to the rest of its poor condition and don’t realise this until they get it home.

sidetablebeforeThis has happened to me lots. I’m blinded by good intentions and great ideas, and have an inability to see it for what it really is: crap. Like this table, above. I nicked it from next door’s clean-up months ago and finally decided to do something about it at the weekend. I started sanding it back when I noticed the round bulbous parts on the bottom of each leg had completely rotted through and bits of them had snapped off. Then I realised the thin wood veneer on the top had bubbled from the weather and was not going to work with my plan to paper the top of it. So I got to scraping it off with a (blunt!) chisel at which time one of the legs got tired of the constant jerking and fell off. So I had a three-legged, rotting, bubbly table. Score! Gee, wonder why it was on the chuck-out pile. I was thisclose to putting it back on the roadside, but decided I might as well try and see how it turned out. I’d invested too many muscle minutes not too.

So I scraped the rest of the top off and smoothed it over as best I could. I glued the leg back into place and sawed off the bulbous bottoms. I painted it white and adhered my favourite-ever wrapping paper by Laikonik to the top of it. And… it’s still in one piece! It might not be the smoothest of tabletops, but it does the trick and it sure is pretty. It’s new home is in the cabin next to the ottoman (which doubles as a guest bed – it conceals a pull-out double bed). And also? I’m glad I kept at it – I quite like how it turned out.

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Quick tip for papering weird-shapes: The top of this was curvy so not the easiest of surfaces to decoupage. So, I used some chalk to outline the very edge of the upper layer, lined up my paper with the pattern in the middle then smoothed over the edge to pick up the chalk outline. Then I simply cut out the chalk outline, glued the top with Martha’s Decoupage Glue and smoothed the paper back on – perfect fit.

Another tip: Thinner paper is best for decoupage – this is quite thick, but I loved the pattern way too much not to give it a whirl.

Label love: Can I rave a little about Laikonik? Good. I have this thing about fabulous patterns in non-crazy colours. Like maybe two-tones. And if it’s chocolate brown, kraft-paper beige with white or black, even better. Everything Laikonik produces in its commercial range is subtle in colour; substantial in style. Which means that despite its folk-artiness, it’ll fit nicely into any style of home. Like the wall hangings; can you believe a wall hanging (traditionally – in my eyes – nanny decor) could be so beautiful? This one is anything but nanna-like. But if you don’t have $280 to spare, you could opt for the silk-screen gift wrap and frame it instead (I did it with a black version). Or use it in a whole host of other ways – I used it to make a birthday banner and colouring-in books for Layla’s birthday party. I’m also stocking up on the Photograms this year for all the grandparents for Christmas. And I think the owner/designer Kasia should hire herself out to paint wall-sized murals of this design in white on a dark-coloured wall – how  heaven would that look! Check out more from the pretty Polish folk-art-inspired range here, buy from here and be inspired here.laikonik

One more thing: A huge big thank you to everyone for your lovely comments on my pregnancy announcement. I feel very special and very loved. Thanks for being awesomely sweet readers x

Quick credits for the curious:
Ottoman
: Best double-duty buy. The top mattress can be used on the floor for kids (or short people) or as a bedhead for the pull-out double sofabed concealed inside. Brighton Ottoman Sofa Bed from Timberland Furniture
Lamp: Bolero from Freedom
Rug: Congo from Freedom
Vase: medicine bottle!
Buddha: House 2 Home
Striped cushion: handmade and hand-painted by me (and good god it took forever, too!)
Paper on tabletop: Silk-screenprinted wrapping paper in white on kraft (also comes in black, red, turquoise and mustard), $6.50 a sheet, Laikonik

{all images of table makeover by Belinda Graham for The Happy Home; product images courtesy Laikonik}

creative kids corner

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

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Another item finally crossed off my to-do list! While the cabin is hardly finished (the bathroom and doors need to be painted. I hate painting doors…), the kids at least have a little spot of their own to get creative. Particularly brilliant right now with all this rain around. I have Ikea to thank for pretty much everything here – the chairs and table revamp you’ve seen before but now they have a mini library (Zak has requested more shelves” all over the wall” for more books so this will be added to) and a little spot for all the crayons, pencils and textas. If only I could mount the Ikea paper roll holder on the wall too! Instead, I stapled a bit of ribbon the back of a watercolour-paper pad and hung that up so there is paper on tap.

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Along with rain comes bored children, so we did a little craft project in our new craft corner. Much to their absolute delight it involved glue! I found a use for my woodgrain contact paper – I cut out a tree branch, stuck it on the paper (I find watercolour paper is the best thickness for kids projects), cut out some leaves from scrapbooking paper and let them glue them in place.

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Zak appears to have been inspired by autumn and all the leaves falling to the ground (his is below), while Layla was much more interested in covering the entire surface with glue until it was a soggy mess. Then glued the leaves as well – just in case they didn’t stick – before slapping them on the tree. Cute.

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And, of course, with all their creating, I need a place to display it all so out came the nail, hammer and string. But nail heads aren’t the prettiest of things, so I glued some buttons onto the flat heads to dress it up a little. Coloured baker’s twine in two colours and some wooden pegs mean easy drying-and-display-rack in one. The glue was still drying on their tree collages when I took these pics.

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So there is one corner of the cabin finished – whoo hoo! Zak has taken it all very seriously and asks to visit the “library” so he can be the “librarying”and get some books to read. Even though he has a billion in his room. I should make up some library cards too so they play “libraryings” properly!!!!

{images by Belinda Graham for The Happy Home}

easy project: wood-stump vase

Monday, May 17th, 2010

woodvase

My project weekend was quite effective. I managed to get a fair bit done but there is still a lot to do. The one project I managed to start and finish entirely (and also the one that makes the least difference around the house. oops!) is this one: a tree-stump vase. Steve’s parents have a pile of tree stumps at their place (I’m not sure why) so I stole a couple. This little one was turned into a vase. It’s pretty simple if you have the right tools and are brave enough to drill into something that small without a clamp or vice thingymebob to hold it in place. Or, you could rope your husband into risking drilling into his hand and/or foot like I did. Thanks babe!

Toolkit
1.
Small treestump or large branch.
2.
Saw
3.
Electric drill
4. Wood spade bit
5. Hole saw bit
6. Candle

woodvasesteps

How-to
1. Work out how long you want your vase to be and mark where to cut. If your piece of wood is not flat at on end, you might need to cut both ends.
2. Cut piece of stump/branch at desired length so the line is as parallel to the bottom as possible. Mine isn’t quite even but it doesn’t lean too crazily when it’s standing up so is fine.
3. Using a wood spade bit in your electric drill, drill into one end about half way. BE CAREFUL! Chock it somehow if you can.
Alternative (like mine): I also wanted mine to fit tealights and thickish candles so Steve did another couple of steps: he used a wood saw to drill a larger hole about two centimetres into the wood. Because it didn’t go all the way through the wood, it just created a border for the circumfrence and he then used the wood spade several times to cut away the rest of the “hole”.
4. Drip melted wax from a candle into the hole gradually and swirl around the sides slowly so the wax coats the entire inside of the hole.  It’s now watertight and ready for flowers!

{images by Belinda Graham for The Happy Home}