October 21, 2008

Fabric

Filed under: Headboards, Design Tips — Tracy @ 4:12 pm

 Do you have twin beds in one room? You can custom design these headboards with fabric to suit individual tastes and spruce up the room. All you need is fabric, measuring tape and a staple gun.

Here’s how you do it:

1. Lay your fabric out on the floor with the front facing down and lay the headboard on top of it, also face down.

2. Trim the fabric so that it extends 10-12 inches beyond the headboard on all sides.

3. Starting at the middle of the top edge, pull the fabric over to the back of the headboard and staple down using your staple gun. Repeat at the middle of the bottom edge, pulling fabric so it’s taut but not stretched.

4. Do the same for the side edges, stapling the fabric at the center point.

5. Working out from the center toward the corners, staple the fabric to the back of the headboard every 6-8 inches along all four sides.

6. At the corners, fold the fabric as though you are wrapping a present, then staple down creating one folded seam at each corner of the headboard.


 

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Small Spaces

Filed under: Design Tips — Tracy @ 3:06 pm

Decorating a small space can be a real challenge. If you use the design tips below,  small spaces don’t have to be a liability when decorating your home. 
1. Use light colors on upholstery, walls and all major furniture pieces, including entertainment units.  Use a monochromatic color scheme so that the space appears to visually flow without being obstructed.
2. Use glass top tables or acrylics instead of solid woods. Since the glass is “see-thru” it will give the appearance of space.
3. Opt for furniture that “floats” it will create the illusion of more floor space. No toe kicks, no sofa skirts or blank space at foot. Look for furniture keep in mind that size does matter. Small spaces will feel cluttered and overwhelmed with standard size furniture. Look for apartment size sofas, tables and other furniture. This will make it so easy to decorate small spaces.  Remember to take along a tape measure because what looks small in the showroom may be way too large for their home.  Know in advance the size of the space you have to work with.

4. Floating wall shelves are attractive and do not take up precious floor space.
5. Keep the space well lit because darkness makes rooms appear smaller than they really are. Use mirrors to bounce light around small rooms. The mirrors also multi-task as they create the illusion of more space by visually enlarging the room.
6. Plan for multi-purpose furniture such as storage ottomans that serve as seating, storage and as a table top. By purchasing the multiple use ottoman you have essentially freed up the space it would take for a small table with storage capability.

Mirrors

Filed under: Mirrors, Design Tips — Tracy @ 2:47 pm

 A full-mirrored wall will optically expand and add glamour to a room. There are some some things to look out for, though. A mirror is there to reflect what is in front of it, so be careful what you reflect. A mirror on a dining-room wall might be wonderful, but not so if it reflects dirty dishes in the adjacent kitchen. A mirror in a hallway might open it up a bit, but not a nice view if placed across from a bathroom door.

Mirrors spread light in a room and add sparkle to dark corners. Cut up strips of mirror placed adjacent to each other give a festive effect to the room as objects dance off the mirrors in interesting ways akin to a kaleidoscope.

A collection of small mirrors can add great interest to a wall. They can be of several shapes and sizes and, if framed, the frames can carry a theme such as sun, moon and stars. All silver frames of various shapes or all wood frames of different sizes could be another unifying theme for framed mirrors on a wall.

A mirror on a mirror in a bathroom adds a feeling of creativity to the standard mirror-over-the-sink idea.

                                          

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October 13, 2008

Halloween Decorating

Filed under: Holiday Decorating — Tracy @ 8:01 pm

If you’re thinking about decorating your porch and yard for the spookiest night of the year, you can do it without having to spend a lot of money. Here are a few low-cost ideas for showing your Halloween spirit to the world:

You can get rolls of yellow Caution tape (the type you see at crime or disaster scenes to keep people out of certain areas) fairly inexpensively at most hardware stores, and if you put it up around the perimeter of your yard, accompanied by a sign that says something like “Fright Scene: Enter at Your Own Risk.” You can enhance that spookiness even more by replacing your regular porch light with a black light bulb. Adding a few Halloween-oriented items like skulls and ghost figures that glow in the dark will be even more effective.

If you want your pumpkins to last longer (and even to be reusable when you scrap your Halloween decorations and begin decorating for Thanksgiving), don’t carve them. Paint them with acrylic paint. You can create an infinite variety of faces or scenes, and your pumpkins will last much longer. There’s also none of the mess involved with carving them. Place your pumpkins in groups of three to five of varying sizes and shapes. It makes for a much more effective display.

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A little paint can go a long way in creating great-looking tombstones, too. You can paint simple boards grey and then use black paint to add silly or scary epitaphs that will delight visitors.  

You can create some wonderfully spooky scenes in your windows by cutting out silhouettes of the various Halloween icons, such as black cats, witches, and skeletons, out of construction paper. When it gets dark, your windows will take on a lovely macabre look when the light is blocked out by those eerie objects.  

Simple scarecrow-type figures, topped with rubber Halloween masks, can also be effective in adding some scare factor to your front porch and lawn. Just stuff a shirt and pair of pants with straw or leaves, add the mask, and you’ve got an instant horror figure for just a little time, imagination, and very little money. 

Seasonal Landscaping

Filed under: Garden, Green Living — Tracy @ 7:57 pm

Fall & Autumn 

There are many plants available that can stand up to a little cold or even a little frost.  The kinds of plants would be your more fibrous and woody plants.  With all the variety of all the tall grasses that have become available with in the last few years, would make a great addition to your fall gardening ideas.   The best thing about the grasses is that they are maintenance free.

If you would still like to enjoy some of you most favorite summer flowers, you could transplant them in containers and bring them in every night.  Or if you are not that ambitious you can cover you plants up at night to avoid the frost..

Another great idea for fall coloring is the trees that you plant in your yard.  You can go from bright yellows to fiery red.  Some of the best choices are sugar maples, birch, ash ginkgo, redbud,beech, hickory, butternut, honey locust and the tulip tree just to name a few out there.  Do some searching on the net.  .

With all the gourds, pumpkins, cornstalks, hay bales and potted plants you could have a lot of fun decorating your yard for fall.  You could make a straw or hay bale stack on both sides of the end of your driveway and set up an arrangement of the fall colors.  Go out and get some cattails, take a nature hike and see what could possibly catch your eye.  If it catches yours, more than likely it will catch the attention of others also.  If  you by chance have old farm tools somewhere this would be a fun time to put them out too.