Showing posts with label revamp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label revamp. Show all posts

Wednesday, 26 September 2012

What's-Making-Me-Smile Wednesday

Remember this?


 ...the free-from-the-dump suitcase,

and the inspiring magazine photo...


With your help, dear bloggy friends, I chose Liberty 'Lytton' - 

though in this colourway, 'Magenta Teal'...


..rather than the 'Rich Red' I had looked at previously...


( I do still love the red!  I just wasn't in a red and blue mood when I arrived at 'The Village Haberdashery' in search of a metre of Liberty loveliness.)

I saw Monday as my last chance of doing something crafty for a while, so decided to get on with it.  It was only going to be a quick job, after all.

Several hours of fiddly cutting later, this is what had been achieved...




(I had prised off the little badge...



...so it could be put back in place afterwards.)

Luckily the inside was still in great condition - a bit of light sponging got rid of a couple of stains.



These were the bits that caused the most grief...





All in all, for less than half a metre of fabric - so less than £7 - I'm pretty pleased with it!




Have you been watching 'The Great British Bake-Off'?  Well, needless to say it is required viewing in this household.  It does make me chuckle at times, and last night I followed a Twitter link to the website of James - he of the Fairisle tank-tops and trendily large glasses.   Though I would never condone mad drinking games, this really did make me hoot.


Let's face it, if you watched an episode and played along with the game, you'd be likely to require the ministrations of  Danny, the intensive care consultant/baker!

Hope there's lots making you smile today!


Thursday, 20 September 2012

Thrifty Thursday - Wallpaper Sample Coasters (a bit of a fail...)

Thank you first for all your kind comments about the bedroom revamp!  It certainly has been worth all the hard work, and this morning I actually got a cup of tea in bed!  

Now you might suspect from this that Mr U-t-B had read my blog and decided to surprise me, but no, it was only as he was drinking his own cup of tea that he switched his laptop on, told me that he'd started reading my post yesterday evening but had fallen asleep half-way through, (Oh they know how to wound, your nearest and dearest, don't they?) and hooted with laughter when he saw what I had written! It was a good thing I was still in bed as otherwise I might have fallen over!

One of the things about having decorated is that things that I previously didn't notice (because there was much more clutter, and things were an unholy mess  not quite co-ordinated) now grate on me.  Or on my eye, to be more precise.  So something as small as a coaster, in a room with fewer knick knacks, can look out of place.  I tried to tackle this by exchanging a few of these rather scratched and tired coasters...


...for these (which were a Christmas present last year)...


But the rosy ones look nice in the sitting room (and the gift-giver gets to see that I love them that way), so I wanted to come up with an alternative.

When I had been trying to decide on wallpaper, I got a good number of samples (as I'm a bit of a ditherer!)
The other day, Mr U-t-B had gathered them all up and put them by the back door to go in the bin, so I had to quickly spirit them away.  I'd had to pay for some of them, after all, so I wasn't going to just chuck them away!

So I thought I'd use some of them to give the old coasters an uplift.  Some PVA glue and a sharp craft knife, plus some matt varnish would be all I would need - stuff that I already had.

Soon I had created these...

Zoffany  'Meadow' wallpaper



...these...


Sanderson's 'Marney' wallpaper



...these...


Harlequin 'Iola Rose' wallpaper


...and this, which made use of a pretty birthday card I couldn't bear to part with.





So the Zoffany ones are now in our room, looking pleasingly 
co-ordinated and useful.  May I emphasise 'LOOKING useful'. But - oops - this is the problem we have...




Not so useful after all!  
A craft project to file under 'Needs Improvement'...
Probably NOT one to try at home.

If you know the solution to tacky varnish, do let me know!


Friday, 14 September 2012

Fabric-a-licious Friday


Today I am contemplating a little project for which I need to purchase fabric.  Yay!  Any excuse to browse the finest purveyors of fabric on the internet!


However, today I did not roam widely through the retail world wide web,  getting happily stuck in a familiar rut at 'Liberty'.  I have been a Liberty fan since my teens, when the only way to see a good selection of their fabric was a trip up to London to visit the hallowed turf of what I believe to be one of the most beautiful shops in the world.  Now things are so much easier!

I began by looking at the new Liberty Lifestyle Craft fabric.  This new range has been designed for craft uses, quilting and 'all sewing projects' and the collection is called 'Bloomsbury Gardens'. At £14 a metre, I feel they are quite competitively priced. My favourites are...

Red Lytton


Blue Charles


Red Dorothy

and 

Red Leonard



I love the names, all so evocative of a different time.  I have to admit I am ridiculously easily hooked in by names, hence in the recent decorating spree I nearly chose colours just because they were names of places I had lived (Mortlake Cream) or had associations with (Lulworth Blue, Oxford Stone) before realising that the more mundane 'Calico' and 'Bleached Ivory' (from Wickes) were actually a better match (and cheaper than F&B!)


I had also to consider some of my long-time favourites that might be suitable for the job I have in mind, from the Classic Tana Lawn range.  Under consideration are...



Red Capel



Wiltshire L

and

Strawberry Thief F

So what is this project? I hear you ask.

Well look what came back with me from the dump when we took our old bedroom carpet there...




Hard to imagine anyone was about to ditch it, eh?

And this picture, torn out from a 'Country living' some time ago, is the inspiration...


Which fabric would you chose?

Have a happy weekend!
x

Friday, 20 January 2012

Friday's (Brief) Flash of Inspiration

Take one beautiful old buckle (found in my Granny's button tin - see here for more of its treasures)...


Admire for several minutes and think how it could be better appreciated...


Hunt on the computer for a suitable photo and cut to size...

(This one of a nine year old Miss U-t-B at Roald Dahl's 90th Birthday Party
- yes, honestly! -
drinking some dangerously green frobscottle which had been created by Heston Blumenthal!)

Put together...



Hang and admire!


Thursday, 21 April 2011

Daftness explained...



Thanks for all the lovely comments about the makeovers I posted yesterday.  I will now give a few more details, though before I do, a warning! 

Since I made-over the radio, my highly active imagination has gone into over-drive - have I inadvertently turned my radio into a fire hazard?  

If I post these details, will I find myself at the centre of an enormous compensation case when fabric-swathed radios around the country ignite and cause devastating destruction?  
(I told you my imagination was, well, imaginative!)  

So you have been warned!  I have been watching my radio closely, and so far it shows no signs of spontaneous combustion, but you know...At your own risk as they say!

For both the worry-free drawer makeover and the radio I used...


Fabric glue from Hobbycraft - I have found this one very good so far!
Cutting mat, rotary cutter and ruler
Water soluble pen
Small paintbrush
Sharp craft knife



And a pair of sharp scissors too.

Then it's simply a case of carefully measuring up the surfaces you want to cover, adding between 1 and 2 centimetres to both length and width to turn over the edges, and cutting out the fabric.  I prefer to use the rotary cutter for speed and accuracy, but you could use scissors.  Whatever method you use, you'll have an easier job and a better finish if you  cut on the straight grain of the fabric.

Next paint the first surface to be covered with glue - make sure to give it a thorough pasting, but not too much!  It will probably look like it's drying before you've finished, but it will still be tacky enough to hold the fabric.

Grab your piece of fabric and centre it on the surface, making sure to get it the right way up if it is directional (I've rather too often put a fabric on and then realised it is upside down!) Gently smooth it onto the surface from the centre outwards, making sure there are no trapped air bubbles.  If it goes a bit wrong, you can generally lift it and reposition it if you're not too slow to notice.

Cut triangles from corners of each overlap, then paint a little glue on the adjacent surface and fold the overlap over, pressing down firmly.

If the surface you're covering has 'bits' to work round, you will need to mark these onto the fabric with your soluble pen (before applying the glue) and cut them partly away, then make little snips to allow the fabric to sit on the glued surface with an overlap onto the 'bit' that can be cut away with the craft knife.  I do the cutting away a short while after gluing the fabric so that the glue has dried a bit.


The front of my radio was way too complicated to try to do as one piece, so I simply patchworked it -top, middle and bottom strips, corner pieces and side strips.


When applying fabric onto an adjacent surface I don't fold the overlap over but press it onto the edge to mark it, then cut it off with sharp scissors.  It then lies over the overlap of the previously covered surface.

I finished off by painting a tiny bit more glue onto any raw edges - belt and braces approach.

Anyway, hope that helps! 

Oh!  And the wax I use on top of the Annie Sloan paint (no, I'm not being paid to promote it...) is Annie Sloan's Clear Wax.  I did try to use the 'Antique Pine' Beeswax I already had, but it turned the colour an unattractive sludgey hue.