Thursday, February 28, 2013

let me teach you how to pinterest.

I was early to the Pinterest party.  I joined back in the day when you had to wait for an invite like it was some sort of exclusive club, and I've been hooked ever since.  It seems like everyday, I'm surprised by the suggested people to follow:  Facebook friends I'd never dream had a creative bone in their body.  But Pinterest isn't just about creating, and there's no one right way to use it.  That's part of its beauty.  Regardless, after seeing the same silly things over and over, I thought I'd share some insight into how I get the most out of my endless time on Pinterest.

1.  Use the search bar.  Sure, it's great to see all of the inspiring things that your friends have pinned and tack the good ones onto your own boards.  It's even helpful to look through the categorized pins.  I might, for instance, check out the holiday section if I'm looking for Christmas inspiration.  But I know that I'm really looking for DIY Christmas decor, so I type that into the search bar instead.  I end up with pages and pages of pins that I want, rather than an assortment of projects, cards, landscapes, and the lyrics to Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer when I'm really just in it for the projects.  This is also the method by which I ended up with boards about gift wrap and centerpieces.  There's tons of good stuff out there, but you don't find much of it unless you know what you're looking for.

2.  Caption your pins!  When I repin something, it is going onto my personal board, which has its own unique purpose.  Why on earth should it not have a caption created by me to help me remember my intention  when pinning it?  A few weeks ago, I pinned this beauty:

My sister is planning a wedding and hoping for a niece that she can dress up as a flower girl.  I pinned this as a reminder of a lovely outfit that I'd like my (nonexistent) daughter to wear at my sister's future wedding.  I captioned it Susan's flower girl.  Since then, the pin has been repinned about fifty times, presumably, each time by a woman planning her own wedding.  Because I have too much time on my hands, I checked those repins out.  Know what the caption is on almost all of these women's wedding boards?  SUSAN'S FLOWER GIRL.  Come on, people!  Type something into that little text box when you hit repin!  I know you're not all named Susan.


3.  It's not just about pretty pictures.  Think of Pinterest as your favorites menu on your internet browser, only organized and visual.  When you pin something, it's like bookmarking a webpage on your favorites list, only you can put it in an appropriate group, and remind yourself what the page is about with a picture.  The remarkable thing about Pinterest is that it links all of these pictures to the original external site.  One of the Pinterest projects that I have on my list for the near future is this:

I think I stumbled upon it in my friends feed.  I have a few of those terrible grates in my house, and knew I'd want to remember this as an idea of how to spruce them up.  By pinning this, I not only remind myself of a project, I save the website that originally published these photos.  Usually, this means a blog with additional photos and tutorials.  When I click on this picture within Pinterest, it will bring me here, and I'll have everything I need by way of instructions for this project.  What's better is that I have an entire board filled with projects, their pretty pictures, and tutorials and details for all of them.  Take advantage of that!


4.  You can pin things from anywhere, not just Pinterest.  On the top right-hand corner of the site, go to the about tab, and click on Pin It Button.  Just download that bad boy, and you're good to go.  It will put a permanent button on the header of your internet browser.  When you're searching the internet and come to a page you want to "bookmark," click the button.  It will bring up all of the photos on the page, and you'll be able to choose which photo you want to remember it by.  Then you can pick the appropriate board, caption, and you're all set.  I do this all the time for recipes, because, let's face it, Allrecipes beats Pinterest over the head when it comes to recipes.  When I planned my Thanksgiving menu, I spent my time on Allrecipes, but pinned all of my ideas so that I could revisit them later using the Pin It Button.  This way, I get the quality recipes and reviews that I need, but I organize them in a much more effective way than my browser's favorite list.  Works like a charm.

So there you have it.. the way I make Pinterest work for me.  I am a creator, and I use it to organize my ideas, my inspiration, and the directions I'll need along the way.  I've also heard that it can be used to aid in fashion choices, and I'm working on that, too.. 2013 is a growing year, you know.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

falling in love with a john.

This week, I picked up a thirty second and six dollar switch that has sent me head over heels for my toilet.  You heard that right.

You see, there's not much that I like about my bathroom.  It's small.  There's only one sink.  The ivory colored vanity clashes with the pink tile.  And the pink tile is all over the room.  It's a step right back into the fifties.  So, when the opportunity arises to have something in there that makes me smile, well, I jump on it:


I've had my little crate on the back of the toilet for at least a year now.  It started with a candle in the middle.  Over Christmas, I had a baby Christmas tree.  This week, I figured it was time to clear out the holidays and make room for Spring.  I picked this bad boy up at the grocery store.  They say it's a mini rose plant, which I'm not sure I believe.  All that mattered to me was that the $5.99 price tag was acceptable for something that will likely soon fall victim to my green thumb.  Here goes nothing!

Saturday, December 29, 2012

crafty man cave wall art.

I know, it almost seems like that juxtaposition of words should not exist. In recent months, Bubba and I have been dreaming up plans on finishing our basement. Since he's such a sport and lets me do things my way above ground, I figured it's only fair to let him take the reins downstairs. And so the man cave plans were born.

 Anyway, my husband is a class act, and would never think of plastering posters of cars or girls in skimpy shorts all over walls that are still half-mine. I'm sure he's going to fill the space with dark leathers, faux furs, and coffee table books. But just in case, I figured I'd get him started with a piece of art that says, "I trust your judgment, but don't you dare hang ratty old posters in my house" all in one gift.

 If you're like me and type things like "DIY man art" into Pinterest, then you may have seen something like this or this or this.  I normally hate words on the wall, but loved the rustic and laid-back vibe, and thought it'd be just the right springboard for the beginning of the basement story.  So, on December 23, armed with an exacto knife and contact paper, I got to work.

It was a pretty easy process.  All I had to do was type my text into a word document, choosing different fonts for different lines.   I used Open Office, and exported it as a PDF afterwards, so that I could open it with my favorite photo editor to size to my preferred dimensions (what I actually wanted to hang on the wall).  Then I just uploaded it to Staples, had it printed as a poster, and got to stenciling.. for a long, long time.

Once I had my poster, I stuck a piece of contact paper to the front, and traced each letter out with my knife.  It took FOREVER.  I can't believe I'm saying this, but wine made it worse.  A couple of hours before midnight mass, I finished the cutting stage, and peeled each piece of contact paper from the poster backing.  Since my piece of plywood was already painted white, I could just stick the contact paper on wherever I wanted, and get to spraying the whole thing black.  Admittedly, I wish I'd taken more time to make sure everything was perfect, but it's definitely got that homemade vibe going on.

Here's the finished product:


Of course, it's not in its permanent home yet.  You know, we need stuff like drywall first.  For now, it's propped up on a shelf in our dining room.  I'm hoping to sneak it into a closet for the next couple of months, but we'll see.  I caught Bubba taking pictures of it on his phone, so I think he's pretty pleased.  Now if I could just get him to use those new running shoes I bought for him..

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Christmas Tree 2012

This is probably a sick statement:  there are very few things more important to me than a Christmas tree.  I know.  I mean, I value a lot of things:  education, faith, a solid foundation... but there are very few things as universally magical as a Christmas tree.

I grew up in a Christmas house.  I say that with careful tread, because if you asked my mother today, she might try to tell you that she did not necessarily care for Christmas more than any other woman or parent.  I grew up in an enchanted house.  A perfect, day-dreamy childhood home.  We had egg hunts on Easter, wore giant headphones on the Fourth, and decorated the tree together in December with rules that had been ingrained since we could walk.  If you're old enough to know Santa's nine reindeer, you're old enough to know that big, heavy ornaments go on the bottom.. dainty, glass ones up top.  Ornaments in a group are not placed right next to each other, but far enough apart in the same quadrant for spectators to realize that they're related, but not be overkill.  Tinsel is not clumped, and ugly goes in the back.  It's a lot of rules, I get it.  But life is full of rules.

When I was just starting out in my first post-college place, my mom and I went to Kohl's and bought the entire St. Nicholas Square ornament line.  They were on sale.  At the time, Bubba and I lived with his younger brother, and I gave the two of them the long-and-short of decorating a Christmas tree.  I snuck out of bed one night and rearranged.  On my wedding day, we had a Christmas tree, and after the rehearsal dinner, my bridesmaids helped me decorate.  Although I promised to relinquish control, still, they got the lesson.  Both trees, for what it's worth, were beautiful.

Anyway, nowadays, Bubba knows his place:  he follows me dotingly to the tree farm, tips the young man who ties the tree to the car with a manly bro-shake, finagles the darn thing in the tree stand, and then sits back and drinks whiskey while I fuss over whether or not we need more lights (for the record, the answer is always yes).  It may not be a perfect system, but it works for us, and it makes us equally happy.

Behold, the tree of 2012:
Yes, that is the Grinch on television.  It's tradition in our house to watch a classic Christmas movie while decorating.  Usually classic is a little more along the lines of Rudolph or Year Without a Santa Claus, but let's face it.. sometimes it takes me so long that I have to move along to the new age favorites.


Wednesday, October 17, 2012

stripes, stripes baby

Yes, I convinced my husband to let me paints stripes on the guest bedroom wall.  And yes, I convinced him to help.  All I've got to say is I'm one hell of a good cook.

The guest bedroom has been a work in progress.  Actually, that's a lie.  The guest bedroom has been a dumping ground so that we can make the rest of the house look nice:


I'm turning red just thinking of someone who's not blood-related seeing this.  This is basically everything in my house that doesn't have a home.  Except that picture of Remy above the desk.  Because I love that.. a lot.  I don't know what snapped inside of me that made me so determined to clean this room out, but it did.  And this is how it looks now:


Alright, this is how one wall looks now... but doesn't it look awesome?  The color is the same greige I've used all over my house (the dining room, our bedroom, and soon to be every other room I can sneak a paint roller into).  It's Valspar's Oregon Coast.  A year or two ago, greige cast its spell on me, and I picked up a swatch of Oregon Coast and tucked it between our headboard and the wall.  It lived there for at least a year, while I painted samples of countless other greiges on my terrible green bedroom walls.  I should've known that this first swatch would be the one to make its way into our home.

Anyway, the stripes could not have been easier.  They took a little math and a lot of dedication, but it was a relatively easy night's work.  I looked at about a hundred pictures on pinterest to decide the width and orientation that I wanted, and then read about four different tutorials before picking a method that would work for us.  We just painted the whole wall greige, and then purchased a quart of the ivory stripe color (for me, it was two shades lighter on the same card).  We measured out the lines at a few spots across the wall, and then Bubba just free-balled the taping.  Free-handed.  He's actually quite good at that.  Of course, we checked it with a level afterwards, and made sure to place the tape on the inside of what would be the greige block (under the line, followed by over the line, so on and so forth..).   A couple of coats later, and I've got my beautiful stripes.  Seriously, it's worse than when I first got my engagement ring.  CAN'T STOP LOOKING.

Sunday, August 5, 2012

home is where the heART is.

I am thrifty.  I love to create, and repurpose, and do-it-myself.  You might also hear that I'm cheap and poor, and well, that's true, too.  Luckily for me, building and crafting is surprisingly trendy, and I'm all that much cooler for it.

When Bubba and I first bought our home, we were prepared for the unexpected expenses.  We knew that being able to afford our mortgage wasn't going to cut it.  We were ready for the surprise water bills, the annual trash fees, the never perfect lawn remedy, and the timed-just-so furnace breaks.  The part that we weren't ready for, the part that nobody had mentioned, was the bug.. it was my absolutely insatiable appetite to prettify every single corner of our home.

Over the months, I've become pretty adept at decorating on a budget.  Sometimes that means pulling trinkets out of storage and rearranging a bookshelf.  Sometimes that means painting a wall, and sometimes it means dying an old duvet.  Today, it meant printing things off the internet and sticking them in frames.  That's right, I used my opposite-of-fancy-pants printer to make wall art for my guest bedroom.  And I love it.

Over the years, one of the goodies I stumbled upon was the NY Public Library's Digital Gallery (http://digitalgallery.nypl.org/nypldigital/index.cfm).  It is basically a cheap-o decorator's heaven (and also very valuable and significant vintage art).  Many of the images in the database are old maps or postcard-like landscapes, while others are songbook covers or fashion designs.  If you can't find inspiration in the many categorized images or just want to cut to the chase, you can just search for your own idea.  Like me, you'll probably find plenty:

I'm sure no one loves it quite as much as me, and that may be the best part of art like this.  It is so personal. The navy in the frames is perfect against the grey of the wall.  The chunkiness fills up the space just right.  The colors inside are a soft contrast.  The images, printed for zero dollars, are of my hometown, Bubba's hometown, and our current town, or more specifically (and respectively), Market Square, the Town Green, and Main Street.  I love that it is something special to us, but also feels vintage and universal enough to hang in a public space.  Oh, and I love that it was free.  We like free.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

spicing up the kitchen.

Sometimes, I have a tendency to take having a handy husband for granted.  Scratch that.  Sometimes, I have a tendency to take having a handy husband who succumbs to my every whim for granted.  So, what did I make Bubba do this time?

Well, it all started about three months  ago on one of my evening blog runs.  I was just making the rounds and minding my own business when I stumbled upon this beauty:

…and Holy crap.  I was infatuated.  No, no, let’s call it like it was:  I was in love.  I decided right then and there that I simply could not live without a built-in spice rack, and come Hell or high-water, I was going to have one in my kitchen.

Convincing Bubba to make me things is actually pretty easy once I threaten to tackle the project on my own. Usually, the closer I get to the point-of-no-return (i.e., cutting something from or ripping something off of the house), the more eager he is to offer his help.  Smart man, that Bubba.

Anyway, I started on my way with an old newspaper and some masking tape, and mocked up my space on the wall.  The size and location of our new storage solution was determined by a number of considerations.  The first, of course, was the number of spices in our cupboard (twenty-nine).  Second, I needed something that was going to anchor the microwave on the adjacent wall.  Too small would look silly.. too large, overpowering.  Third, we had to deal with the stud (no, not Remy).  You might notice the thick division between the two sides of my inspiration picture.  That’s their stud.  Nice and square and in the middle.  Mine?  A sweet twelve inches from the other side of the wall.  The way I saw it, we had two options: building a rack in the sixteen inches between that stud and the previous, or building an asymmetrical rack.  Heck, symmetrical is boring, and I sent Bubba on his way:

Yep, that’s one sixteen-inch shelf between the first two studs, and another five or so for a little pizzazz on the other side.  Pretty, huh?  I wish I could tell you that we decided on this particular placement after pouring over a wide array of sketches, mock-ups, and a thorough discussion regarding the golden ratio.  But for better or worse, like most of our projects, it was good old-fashioned improvisation.  One day, it’ll bite us in the rears.

Once we had our space defined, we were set to get to work on the shelving structure.  We built two boxes using 1/2” x 2” wood for the perimeter, and 1/4”x2” wood for the shelves.  On the back, we used some cheap, unfinished wainscoting.  Because the larger side of the shelf would house the majority of our collection, we measured three precise shelves based on what we had.  The other side was made to complement the first, and we opted for a four-shelved structure, and would find its fillers as the space dictated.  By the end of day one, we were left with two pretty boxes shoved haphazardly into some shaggy sheetrock:

                        

Truth be told, I’m a little smitten with even the unfinished product in picture #2, something I undoubtedly get from my dad, whose endearingly half-done projects are all over my childhood home.  In fact, I’m surprised it took as little time as it did to transition from picture #2 to picture #3.. all it took was some crown molding for trim and the same creamy white paint we’ve used on our cabinets and every other surface in our house:

Luckily, we are thrilled with the size and placement, and the new rack brings a certain always-been-there quality to the kitchen.  It feels fancy and custom and right at home.  Take a look at this baby all filled up:

Should have straightened out that Rosemary.  But otherwise, gorgeous, no?  If poor Bubba wants a break from projects, he’s going to have to stop putting out such a nice product.  One, sad day… he’ll learn.