As the old saying goes, "It's all about presentation". I plan to take
my time this year wrapping each gift in it's own special, unique way. This year I bought some thick mesh ribbon and white stripes on burlap ribbon from Hobby Lobby and added some accents I found outdoors. I collected some pinecones from my backyard, spray painted them silver and wah-la! The cute little reindeer stickers were a couple dollars at Michaels for 20 (I think) and will come in handy for gift tags. The package contained white sparkle, silver sparkle, and red sparkle reindeer. A quick, pretty addition to any package.
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Holiday Gifting
'Tis the season for all things festive and Secret Santa is no exception.
When I drew that name off the tree my entire work day went to waste. I
spent the entire afternoon daydreaming about gift ideas and wondering
how in the world I would narrow my Pinterest DIY gift list down.
Sometimes when there are just too many options you just have to narrow
down and commit. Here are several of the gifts I've dropped off at the
door of my "giftee". Dec. 19 is the big reveal...still thinking what
that gift will be.
Narrow down and commit.
Materials: Plain frame, scrabble letters, buttons, burlap scrapbook paper |
Wine bottle with stickers removed, spray paint, mineral salt |
After placing the buttons and letters, I hot glued each. The frame needed a little spicing up so I brought out the spray paint in holiday carnation red and away I went. |
Once I spray painted the wine bottle, I slathered it with Modge Podge and rolled it in the mineral salt. |
As simple as tracing letters onto scrapbook paper, cutting, and modge podging. Let it snow! |
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Easy Sisal Rope Vase
All I needed was sisal rope, a glass vase/bowl/basket, and a hot glue gun. I picked the sisal rope up at, of all places, the grocery store! It was around $4 for a ton of it <<<finger to chin- the possibilities are endless of things in my house I could add this to...>>>.
I took the rope and simply wound it around the glass vase 3/4 of the way (I personally wanted a little glass to show but you could wrap the entire thing) and hot glued here and there along the way.
Wah-la! God bless the easy makeovers. Still working on that trunk...
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Easy Lamp Makeover
Our poor master bedroom has been void of bedside lamps for years a while now so I set out to find some cute ones that fit my specifications: simplicity, color, pattern. Easy enough, right? Not so much. Turned out lamp hunting is no easy endeavor. Too tall, small, bright, dark, bulky...and expensive! Whether it's how my mama taught me or not, I know deep down in my bones that beautiful things do not have to be expensive. In fact, I thrive on taking an inexpensive nothing and transforming it to look like an expensive something. It's simply a matter of choosing the right cheap inexpensive things.
When I couldn't find the right lamps to fit my needs, I remembered a sad pair of black, beat up lamp bases I stored in my garage a while ago, plugged 'em in- realized they worked, and brought out the trusty spray paint.
Here's what I used for this quick, inexpensive face lift:
I started by wrapping the top with tape to protect the lightbulb socket. Then I sprayed Rust-Oleum's Ultra Cover Primer followed by Rust-Oleums Heirloom White spray paint. After a dry time of about 10 minutes I sanded the lamps lightly with 220 grit sand paper to get rid of any bubbles. I followed up with Rust-Oleum's Gloss Protective Enamel for a glossy finish. Add a couple Target lampshades and it looks like they came straight off of One King's Lane!
When I couldn't find the right lamps to fit my needs, I remembered a sad pair of black, beat up lamp bases I stored in my garage a while ago, plugged 'em in- realized they worked, and brought out the trusty spray paint.
Here's what I used for this quick, inexpensive face lift:
- Rust-Oleum's Ultra Cover Primer
- Rust-Oleum's spray paint in Heirloom White
- Rust-Oleum's (sensing a theme here) Gloss Protective Enamel Spray
- 220 grit sand paper
- Blue painters tape
I started by wrapping the top with tape to protect the lightbulb socket. Then I sprayed Rust-Oleum's Ultra Cover Primer followed by Rust-Oleums Heirloom White spray paint. After a dry time of about 10 minutes I sanded the lamps lightly with 220 grit sand paper to get rid of any bubbles. I followed up with Rust-Oleum's Gloss Protective Enamel for a glossy finish. Add a couple Target lampshades and it looks like they came straight off of One King's Lane!
An easy fix and beautiful transformation. Now to conquer the rest of the bedroom.
Come back soon to see my next undertaking- restoring a charming old vintage trunk.
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