Browsing the archives for the how to tag

Tackling Trim

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building, studio, tutorial

In case you didn’t notice when we painted the studio, we snuck some baseboards in on ya between the “during painting” and “after painting” photos.  Well, here’s a run-down of how we pulled that off.

When we first bought Heardmont, Stephen and I decided we’d replace and paint the baseboards as we changed out the flooring and that we’d paint the original wood trim around all the windows and doors to match.  Needless to say, we had never installed any kind of trim before this project, but it was pretty painless. Because we knew we’d be using any extra trim on other rooms in the house eventually, we decided buying in bulk was the way to go.

We picked up 8 – 16 foot long pieces of standard 3.5″ baseboards, some caulk, a miter box and saw, a coping saw, and some nails for our nail gun and then loaded up the Subaru.

First step was to measure the first wall we were trimming and then cut the trim to that same length.

Here’s the miter box in action.  We decided a $10-15 miter box and saw was more cost effective than a $80+ miter saw for our one-room-at-a-time approach to trimming.

Each piece after the first one also had to be coped – that is, cut to fit up against the piece before it with the coping saw.

We installed all of the baseboards by nailing them in place with our pneumatic air gun (on permanent loan from a friend).  We marked the studs ahead of time with blue painters tape so we knew we were nailing into the strongest parts of the wall.

As you can see we were no experts when it came to fitting those corners together, but that’s where caulk came in to save the day!

Now we promise there’s a reason we chose gray caulk over the typical white variety.  It’s because Stephen picked a slightly unconventional color for the trim in this room.  What color did he choose? Stick around for the answer and more progress pics!

Mental Health Day Results (or How to Cover Pillows)

9 Comments
Before and After, Crafts, Home Decor

Well I’m back from my Mental Health Day (as Casey calls it), and I’m ready to share some of the DIY awesomeness I accomplished yesterday!

First off, here’s a quick how-to for that springy pillow I showed you.  In case you missed it, these pillows are actually made from a shower curtain I found at Target the other day.  I spotted the pattern and loved the colors, and I’m so glad I snatched that puppy up!  I actually made two of these for our living room, and I’m amazed at how much they change the vibe in there.

Step 1: Decide how to orient the fabric on the pillow. I tried the fabric two different ways on the pillow form I would be using and decided to go with the X rather than the + orientation.

Step 2: Using the previous pillow cover, cut the square for the front of the pillow about an inch bigger on all four sides. Since this pattern was very persnickity, I had to make sure to line up the corners of the pillow with the green stems in the pattern.

Step 3: With the “right” sides of the fabric facing inwards, line up the pieces for the back of the pillow (there will be 2 since I made it an envelope-style pillow) with the pattern on the front.

Piece 1 (see how the pattern is lined up?)

Piece 2 (I snuck it under Piece 1 because the hemmed edge on that piece would look prettier on the outside.)

I cheated a little bit on this step because normally I would have had to hem the edges that would be facing out.  Luckily the pattern on the shower curtain matched up in the right places so that I could use the factory hem instead of having to sew my own.  Score!

Step 4: Pin the sides together, trim down the edges of the sides so they’re good and even, and measure out exactly where the seams should go (using the original – orange – pillow cover as a guide).  My pillow pieces were about 19.25″ wide and I needed the finished pillowcase to be 17.25″x17.25″, so I measured in an inch on all four sides.

Can you see where I trimmed the far side already?

Here’s where I marked the corner for the final seam.

Step 5: Sew mama, sew! I made sure to backstitch for reinforcement where the sides of the “envelope” joined the front of the pillow.

Step 6: Trim edges, zig-zag stitch to prevent fraying, cut corners (no, I don’t mean “cheat”, I mean snip those corners so your pillow has nice sharp edges when you turn it rightside out.)

Step 6: Flip it and reverse it and put yo pillow in it!

Here are a few shots of our new pillows in their native habitat.

I actually made all the pillows on this couch, I’m proud to say!  You might remember that blue pillow from this post, and here’s the low-down on how I made the white knit one (let’s just say thrift stores and I are like *this* – we’re tight).

Start with a clean knit sweater (the bigger the better).  This one was 1/2 off, so with a pillow form I already had, this pillow cost $2.25 to make.

With the sweater inside out, pull it down over your pillow form and pin the top and both side seams, being careful not to pin the pillow form inside.

Remove pillow form and sew seams for all three sides, trim and zig-zag edges to keep from fraying.

Turn rightside out, pull over pillow form, and hand stitch bottom opening shut.  (Google “ladder stitch” for great instructions on how to hide this bottom seam.)

Viola!  Instant knitted pillow.

I spotted several of these at Target and the like this winter for about 20 bucks.  Not bad for a $2.50 knock-off, eh?

So, along with some cleaning and movie watching, that’s how my day off went down.  I think it was a success!

For kicks, I’m linking to:

Frugal Friday at The Shabby Nest

The DIY Showoff Project Parade

Show and Share Day at Just A Girl

Link Party at Tea Rose Home

Metamorphosis Monday at BNOTP

The Mysterious Lumber Revealed

6 Comments
Before and After, Home Decor, Quiz, building

A couple weeks ago, we showed you this picture:

Then we showed you this:

Are you ready to see exactly what we were doing with all that wood?

(By the way, be sure to weigh in on what we should do with the finished project at the end of the post!)

It’s a little embarassing to admit, but the day we closed on our house, we took out a wall that was separating the kitchen from the dining room.  Nearly two years later, we were still looking at this.

The area where we took out the wall was clean and neat, but definitely, absolutely NOT finished by any stretch of the imagination.  I don’t know what took us so long to address the situation… maybe it was the $400 quote from a drywall guy to patch the walls, maybe it was us dragging our feet until we redid the floors.  Regardless, the urge to see something finished hit and we finally tackled the eyesore a few weekends ago.

All along, we thought a beam of sorts would look nice in the space and add a little definition without closing off the kitchen from the dining room.  Not to mention we have two different paint colors in the two rooms, and it would be nice to have a dividing line where one color could stop and the other start.

We started by measuring our ceiling and walls.  We decided we could build 3-sided boxes (like troughs) that would slide over the existing 2×4 in the ceiling and the 2x4s we would add in the walls.  First step: Add the 2x4s to the walls.

Those super scary spiky nails sticking down from the ceiling were just hammered and bent as close to the ceiling as possible so they wouldn’t interfere with the faux beam.  (Why didn’t we do THAT earlier??)

Next, we set about building our boxes.  We decided to do the ceiling box first so that it would be partially supported on the ends by the boxes we attached to the walls later.  The ceiling box was tricky because we couldn’t have bought boards long enough to make one solid box (no 16′ boards in the Subaru, no sir!), so we had to build 2 boxes out of our 8′ long 1x4s that would fit together like puzzle pieces.  Here’s a snapshot of our (very technical) sketch of how the puzzle peices would fit together.

First step, measure and cut.

Second step, line up the 3 sides of the first box with the boards of the second box, add a bead of glue to each side piece, and clamp.  We added the glue for extra security, but later on you’ll see the majority of this project relied on a handy dandy nail gun.

Thank goodness we are storing some tools for our friend J Rod in our garage.  We couldn’t have done this project without this guy:

Or this one, for that matter:

Third step, use nail gun pictured above to nail together the box.  Don’t forget your ear plugs and safety glasses!

Lather, rinse, and repeat for ceiling box #2.

After both boxes were constructed, we glued, clamped, and nailed the 2 together to make one long box.

Next, we sanded down all three sides of the faux beam, filled all the gaps with wood putty, and sanded again.

Here’s where it got tricky.

The plan was to lift the ceiling beam into place and for Stephen to prop up one end while I held up the other.  Then he would use the nail gun to attach the edges of the beam into the 2×4 in the ceiling.

In a perfect world, that would have worked.  Sadly, we didn’t even get past step one before we realized we’d need a third person to help.  The issue was that the center of the trough of the beam wasn’t quite wide enough to fit over the center of the 2×4.

Enter our friend Michael!

The whole process went much easier once we had Michael’s help!  While Stephen wiggled the center of the beam into place, Michael and I held up each end of the beam.

Once the beam finally slipped over the 2×4 in the ceiling, the boys went to work with the nail gun.

Thanks so much for your help Michael!

Here’s a look at the fit.  Not bad, huh?

I think he approves ;)

The last steps of the process were to build the two beams for the walls and install them.

And now, here’s a look at the improvements to date!

Whew!  A lot of work, but totally worth it!

All that’s left to do is decide on a finish for the beams.  We’re thinking of either painting it white to match our kitchen cabinetry (and trim, eventually) or dark to match the dining table (and floors, eventually).  The only thing we know we can’t do is stain the wood or leave it natural since we used so much wood filler that we definitely need to use paint to cover it. :o )

What do you think?  We’d love to get your opinions.  Should we go white or dark?  Thanks!

I’m linking up to the DIY Showoff Project Parade.  Go check out all the other great DIY projects!

The DIY Show Off

Fireplace Facelift

4 Comments
Before and After, Home Decor, Paint

You all probably remember when we took our fireplace from dated to dashing with a couple coats of paint.  This weekend, we got one step closer to completing the fireplace facelift by revamping the metal firebox cover.

Here’s a quick trip down memory lane for those of you who may have missed the progression so far.

The day we bought our house (dark brown brick and brassy brassy firebox cover):

Painted and decorated for Christmas (clean crisp white paint, minus the air intake grates and firebox cover):

You can see how we added the little square grates back on the fireplace after we painted them white to match in the edge of this photo:

And finally, here’s the beast with the firebox grate added back on, after a shiny new coat of rubbed bronze spray paint!

And the close up shot:

Here’s a quick run-down on how we did it.  First, we pulled out the old brassy cover and I started sanding the visible edges.

Then I took the side pieces off so I could slide out the glass doors for cleaning and sanding.

Take a look at what a little soap and elbow grease can do to a sooty glass door!  The one on the top is before cleaning and the bottom one was after I scrubbed both sides of the glass.

After I sanded and wiped down all the pieces, I carefully taped over any areas (including the glass in the doors) that I didn’t want to paint.

Have I introduced you to my best friend when it comes to spray painting yet?  It’s this little guy.  Say goodbye to sore index fingers forever!

This is how the grate looked after a couple coats of spray paint.

Then Viola!  I removed the paper to reveal clean paint lines…

… and put that puppy together!

Not bad, eh?  The last step was to carry the grate inside and have Stephen attach it with two hooks to the back side of the brick.

And here’s the finished product!

I am so glad we decided to fix up the old fireplace grate instead of buying a new one.  We priced a few at Lowe’s before going this route and they were going to cost over $200!  Our version cost us only $5 in spray paint and a few hours outside on a gorgeous Sunday and fits our fireplace perfectly.  What do you think?

(By the way, don’t worry.  I plan on telling you all about the colored glass bottles on our mantle soon.  We have a semi-makeover going on in our living room as we speak!)

I’m linking to this project at the DIY Show Off Project Parade and Frugal Friday at the Shabby Nest.  You should definitely go check out all the other great DIY projects!

Punny Love

2 Comments
Crafts, Holidays

We’re not that big into Valentine’s Day around Heardmont because we prefer to celebrate our dating anniversary (February 12th) instead.  This year was especially low-key since we were headed to Mountain Home to visit and get a trailer my grandpa was giving us, but Stephen and I still managed to get each other a little something sweet anyway.

Here is the card I made Stephen for our anniversay (5 years!).

I saw the “sew” idea online somewhere a few weeks ago, and since Stephen has such a good sense of humor, I knew he’d like it.

This was his perfectly fitting response.

If you can’t read that, it says “I love you a hole punch.”  That’s right folks, you got it.  With us, it’s not puppy love, it’s punny love! Hope you all enjoy your Valentine’s Day!

Vintage Printables

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Home Decor, Nature, What a Steal

Just chillin’ in Mountain Home this weekend, watching the Olympics and checking out the Vintage Printables blog.

If you haven’t visited this site before, you should!  The site is a bit tricky to navigate but full of all kinds of beautiful images, free for you to print for personal use.  Here are a few of my favorites.

(Find this German stamp here)

(Nest-y cuteness here)

(Peek-a-boo found here)

(Turquoise eggs photo here)

I promise it’s not all birds and butterflies.  This site has everything from snowflake geometries to vintage medical diagrams to portraits of people and animals.  Be sure to scour your favorite categories for series of prints that can be used to create mass displays as well.

Take a look at what The DIY Showoff did with a set of 9 botanicals she printed from this site.  What a way to cozy up a room!

Hope you’re all staying warm!  Catch ya on the flipside.

Master Bedroom Redo: Hanging the Mirror

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Before and After, Home Decor

You might not guess it, but it took more than a nail and a hook to hang that vintage mirror you saw above our bed in our master bedroom reveal.

When we bought this mirror, the backing looked like this:


We originally thought we’d leave the mirror intact and just add another wire across the back so we could hang it horizontally, but decades of grime and dust on this vintage piece forced us to take it apart for a good cleaning.

We were so relieved that we took the mirror apart when we discovered that only half of the screws holding the frame and glass together were still holding tight!  Imagine if a few more screws had come loose in the middle of the night and 50 pounds of mirror had landed on our heads!

There’s the inside of the frame.  Can you see where the little pegs broke off inside the frame?  Both of the pegs you see here were broken.

Here’s the back we took off of the mirror.  You can see pieces of the plastic pegs still attached to the backing board.

Needless to say, we couldn’t just put the mirror back together and hang it up.  No no.  This was going to take some clever engineering.

One trip to Lowe’s later, and we came home with this:

Loctite 1 minute Epoxy
5 mirror hanging hooks (we only used 3)
1 package adhesive velcro tabs
1 2-in-1 NoStud 200lb art hanger
1 package 75 lb test mirror cord

While we were out, Tina admired her reflection:

(Insert “You’re so Vain” lyrics here…)

Starting with the bare mirror, our first step was to arrange the mirror hangers around the edge of the glass in such a way that they would support the mirror as it hung.  We settled on two hooks at the bottom – for strength and balance – and one hook on the top – to keep the mirror snug against the wall.  Then we connected the hooks with the mirror hanging wire.

The next step was to glue the mirror hooks down with the epoxy.  (Side note, if you use this epoxy, PLEASE do it in a ventilated area!  We had to practically leave the house for the rest of the day just to get the scent of this stuff out of our noses.)

You might notice in the above picture that we found a faint stamp on the back of the mirror after we’d detached it from the frame.  Here’s a closer look:

Guess now we know exactly what year our vintage find was made!  If you can’t make it out, the stamp reads “BASSETT AUG. 2 1971″

Moving on, after the glue dried, our mirror was ready to hang.

Here’s a look at the mirror hanger we used:

The neat thing about this hanger is that it can be used with or without a stud in the wall, so you have total freedom to hang items wherever you want.  Of course there wasn’t a stud exactly above the center of our headboard, so we went with the non-stud option (using different nail-holes in the hanger than if we’d found a stud).  We nailed up the hanger…

and then the mirror went up!

When the mirror was hung, we noticed that while the bottom of the mirror touched the wall, the top was pulling away from the wall by an inch or two.

Leaving the mirror like this would have been fine, but we both wanted to make the mirror as level and symmetrical from all angles as possible, so Stephen rooted around in the garage and found a little square of foam that was just the right thickness…

A little bit of tape on the back, and this baby was ready to get stuck to the back of the mirror to push the bottom of the mirror out from the wall.

Here’s a side shot of the mirror after we stuck the foam behind it.  Can you see the hook at the top and the foam at the bottom?

The next step was to attach the frame.  We were lucky the frame was a made of a light weight plastic/ resin because our solution to the broken screws on the back of the frame was to attach the frame directly to the mirror with velcro.

This is the part where we tell you we should have gotten black velcro instead of white.  You see, the inside of the frame was painted dark brown.  I didn’t think the color of the velcro would matter, but when we stuck a little strip of velcro on the glass of the mirror and it’s complementing strip on the inside of the frame, the mirror reflected the white velcro all over the place!

What to do, what to do?  Color it black with permanent marker, of course!  (No pic of that, folks.  Sorry!)

After a stupid velcro / finger cutting incident, we matched up the velcro strips on the frame and the mirror and ended up with this:

What do you think?  Are you as confident as we are that it’ll hold and not crash down on us in the middle of the night?

I was actually pleasantly surprised at how much I like the dimension we added with that little piece of foam propping up the bottom of the mirror.  Not to mention the dimension any mirror adds to a room.  Yep, we’re pretty happy with how that one turned out.  Craigslist saves the day yet again =)

How to Build a Floating Picture Rail

6 Comments
Crafts, Home Decor

Well I told you I’d fill you in on two more projects after the master bedroom reveal, and here’s the first one: building the white picture rail we hung above Stephen’s dresser.

After looking all around town and even online for the picture rail I had in my head, I pretty much decided a 3 ft long, sleek and simple white picture rail didn’t exist.  At least, didn’t exist at a reasonable price within a 6 hour radius of Northwest Arkansas (IKEA, why oh why do you have to be in Dallas and not sell your stuff online!!?).

Enter Super Stephen!  I showed him a picture of what I was going for (I think from IKEA’s website) and his immediate response was, “We can make one of those, easy!”

A quick trip to Lowe’s later, and we came home with this:

A set of clamps ($10), some wood glue ($3), and two pieces of oak ($12), cut to 36″ long by the friendly folks at Lowe’s.  In case you’re wondering, the two boards were 1x2x48″ and 1x4x48″ when we bought them.

A bead of glue added to the edge of the wider board…

… and some clamping and wiping action later…

… and the shelf was ready to dry overnight.

In the morning, I removed the clamps and sanded it down and then gave it a quick coat of primer and then 2 coats of our white trim paint.

Once the paint was dry, we put the shelf in place above Stephen’s dresser, used the stud finder to mark where our screws should go in the shelf, and took the shelf out to the garage to pre-drill the holes for the screws exactly where the studs would be in the wall behind the shelf.

Here is Stephen with the shelf ready to go, screws in place and all, getting ready to drill those screws into the studs.

It only took two holes and that shelf was staying put for good!

Lastly, we needed to fill the holes where the screws went into the shelf with some putty and a bit of paint, and the finished product looked like this!

Not bad for $25 and about 30 mintues of work, huh?  The best part is we now own clamps and wood glue for shelves galore, so another shelf just like this one would only cost us $12 in wood! 

Booyah! Take that IKEA!  :P

Master Bedroom Redo: Race to the finish!

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Crafts, Home Decor

Holy Heardmont, Batman!  More than one post in a day?  And we still haven’t even done the big reveal??

We did four (count ‘em, FOUR!) more projects on our two week journey to a finished master bedroom that deserve a mention because they really “make” the room.  BUT, rather than leave you in suspense for four more posts before the big reveal, I’ll show you the two little projects now and then the other two after you see it all come together.  Cool?

The first was this sweet yellow pillow I made:

This one was easy peasy, I just recovered one of our original brown accent pillows and added embroidery thread and a fun blue button for some contrast.

The hardest part was hand sewing the part of the pillow I had to leave open to stuff it.

I created another accent piece for the other side of the room using an old canvas I had lying around and 3 colors of paint.  I took this blank canvas and leftover wall paint…

… and turned it into this!

This was a completely fun and free project and added a perfect pop of color to our little sitting area.

What do you think?  Are you excited?  Bursting with anticipation?  Just wish I’d quit dragging it out and show the room already?

Fear not, all will be revealed TONIGHT!

Master Bedroom Redo: How to personalize your curtains on a budget

7 Comments
Before and After, Crafts, Home Decor

So I had a dilemma.  Where to find breezy, floor-to-ceiling curtains for the master bedroom that didn’t break the bank and still had pizzaz?

My solution?  Start with the basics.  I took two pairs of $12 JC Penney curtains from this…

… to this!

Want to know how I did it?

Let’s start at the beginning.  These curtains were fine on their own.  They were nice and thick, but still light and airy and a huge step up from the black holes for curtains we had before.  I just had a couple of issues with them.

First, I wanted floor to ceiling drapes.  Of course the sale bin at JCP didn’t have 95″ drapes, so I grabbed two sets of 84′s, knowing I’d have to tweak them.  Can you tell in that “before” picture above that the curtains were several inches too short?

Second, they had tabbed tops.  Not my favorite style because I can never keep those tabs looking neat and orderly, but again, something I could work with.

My first step was to start at the top and turn those tabbed-top drapes into tabbed-back drapes (to look similar to the curtains I made for my craft room).

I ironed those tabs toward the backside of each panel, pinned, and sewed them down.

Presto chango!  Now they looked like this:

Big improvement, but wait!  Now they’re at least a foot too short!

Well, I had a plan for that, too.

Remember the fun blue and white bedding we scored on the cheap?  That bedding set came with a patterned bedskirt, which we decided to forego in lieu of a white fitted sheet for our boxspring.  What better way to use an unwanted bedskirt than to chop it up into curtain extensions?!

First step was to cut off the bottom hem of all the curtains (since I still wanted a white stripe at the bottom of the curtains) and sew it to a strip of the bedskirt material.

After those two strips were attached, I carefully pinned the whole section to the bottom of the hanging curtain, took down the panel, and sewed on the attachment.

The end result, I think, is pretty amazing and fun.  Aside from my time, these babies only cost about $25 for four panels and are better than anything else I could have found at a fraction of the price!

Can’t wait to see how the whole room came together?  Stay tuned!

(Psst!  Did you miss our other master bedroom makeover posts?  Check out the first, the one about paint and our fan, the one about our chair and bedding, and our accessory post!)