Stripes on Stripes on Stripes

So I started a project last night…

Stripes.

Lots of them.  In our entryway… what do you think?

To be honest, I’m not 100% sure about them.  I did about 75% of the walls before deciding to think about it some more.  Imagine Kris’ surprise when he came home to lots and LOTS of stripes.

He said he felt like he was in jail.

HA!  Little does he know…

Can you guess how I got these stripes up??  Tape!!  I used 3″ black painters tape (easily ordered from Amazon), and it took me only an hour or so to get all of these stripes up.  Measure… tape… measure… tape.  Tedious, but simple, and best of all, very temporary, so if I change my mind, it won’t be a huge task.  I’m going to live with it for a few days before making up my mind.

The pros:
  – These stripes make the space feel larger
  – The visual impact is really stunning, and the lines are perfectly crisp
  – It doesn’t look like tape in person… it actually looks like paint or wallpaper

The cons:
  – The HUGE contrast between the entry and the living room feels disjointed
  – The narrow stripes make it a very busy pattern… too busy perhaps?

Here the view from the living room… even with the unfinished wall, you still get an idea of how it will look. Sorry for the low light, and crappy iPhone pic.  It was late, and I was very into Real Housewives…

So… what do I do??
The entry is connected to our kitchen, and living room, and without any windows it’s dark, and without the stripes, it is VERY blah.
See this before:
Blah.  So… what to do?  Keep the stripes or ditch them for something else??

DIY Art – Wishbone Replica

Ok – a really quick update on a small DIY I took on last night…  Remember this piece of art I found yesterday?

Well I successfully made a small piece of my own, and am very pleased with how it turned out!!

I had some extra paint laying around from projects I’d done – black from painting the bedroom furniture, a little brown from painting the top of the console table, and some gold leaf paint left over from painting the shadowboxes for the sea fans.  Nothing fancy at all… I actually painted my masterpiece on a sheet of printer paper, ha!
Best part?? I didn’t pay a dime for my little work of art, and I think it’s pretty close to the original inspiration!

The Little Hallway that Could

Ok – no judging allowed, but just wanted to share some updates on our hallway.  I swear I’ve been doing work on it, and not just having fun – this means coming home at 10pm, and working until bedtime.  It’s getting old my friends… real old.

That said, I’ve made some serious progress!  You all remember these sad “before” pictures right…

Brown on brown on brown… GROSS.  I mean, it was just depressing!

There is still work to be done, but here is some preliminary “afters”:

Actually, let’s call this a “during” since we are still working on it…
The updates??  Most obviously removing all that was hideous and brown – repainting the console, and bringing in my new rug.  Love looveeee that rug.

It’s a little hard to see clearly in some of these (sorry, iPhone pics in early morning light before work = grainy snapshots), but after painting the console, I roughed up the edges with some trusty sandpaper.  Focusing on the areas that would get the most natural wear, it made some of the details pop back out, and gave it a nice antique feeling.  You’ll also notice that I decided to paint the top (instead of keeping the super shiny faux inlay), but before painting, I took a hammer to it, and really banged it up (aka took some aggression out on it).  Aside from being extremely fun and therapeutic, I think I succeeded in making it look genuinely old antique.  Kris said so himself, so it must be true 🙂

I’m still going back and forth on spray painting the hardware a brushed bronze… the silver looks much better than I thought it would, so I think I’m going to hold off making any decisions on that for a few weeks – see if I change my mind.  Besides, my can of Rustoleum isn’t going anywhere…

In addition to my freshly painted console (the least labor intensive part of this whole deal), the door, the built in linen closet, and the crown molding got a little makeover with some “Decorators White” from Benjamin Moore.  Trust me when I say, adding white paint to the dingy hallway, and defining the trim have made the largest impact of anything I could possibly do in here.  It creates some much needed architectural interest, and a point of reference for the ceiling – it feels taller!

The linen closet still has zero character, so painting it fresh white is probably the best I can do with it.  Some battles I’m willing to let go of… we are renters after all.

Let’s do a side by side comparison for fun… shall we?

The light in this “before” photo isn’t great, but you can see what I’m getting at – you couldn’t even see the trim before! It totally blended in with the walls.  Woof.  Now the clean white is bright, and it just makes me happy…

The window is waiting on a new fancy treatment… another DIY on it’s way with my new pretty fabric  (hopefully not an epic failure)!

Also, you can see that I’m now trying to decide where to hang things on the wall (thus, the lonely square of painters tape).  Last night when I was measuring out the tape, I felt that the 20″x16″ filled out the space, and anything more would be too much, but now, looking at this from a distance in this photo, I’m wondering if it would benefit from a few more smaller frames on the side.

Also, I think this sunburst mirror is too small for the wall, and we need something larger to fill the space – especially next to the built in that goes up to the ceiling.  There is just a lot of wall, with a cluster of “stuff” down near the table, and in the small space, I want to draw the eye up as much as possible.

*Side note: this photo is really washed out from the direct light… 
the walls and linen closet are distinctly different colors

Right??  Lots of wall… that mirror will find a home elsewhere – not to worry 🙂  Also… just realized that the rug needs to come closer to the entryway… easy changes…

The Hallway is Getting some Love (FINALLY)

There are a few changes taking place in our home right now, and most of them involve a bit of paint.  In this month’s issue of House Beautiful, one designer was quoted saying that paint is the cheapest and easiest way to update a room.  I couldn’t agree more!!
The first face-lift on the list is our small hallway that leads from the front of our apartment (living room, dining room and kitchen) to the back (bedroom and bathroom).  The hallway isn’t long – it’s maybe 15 feet, and it’s main feature is the large linen closet that takes up most of it.  As you can see from the photo’s below – it’s less than attractive.
As it stands, the hallway is monochromatic – the walls, ceiling, trim, and linen closet are all currently painted the same color of blah off-white, and with the wood floors and wood console table, it feels dark, drab, and utterly boring.  To make matters worse, the runner we’ve got in there right now is also brown. The hallway is brown on brown on brown.  It really can’t get worse, so my plan is to transform the space with a few cans of paint.
*View from the Dining Room                                                             *View from Bedroom

Brown on Brown on Brown…. so ugly!!

Anyway, the main changes will be to our existing console table that is in serious need of some TLC.  I found it on Craigslist a few years ago for around $20, so since it’s not a priceless antique, I am very excited to slap some paint on it.  The table has great lines, but the overly shiny finish makes it look cheap.  It’s not good.  
I did a little research into removing lacquer and it sounds like A LOT of work, so instead of bending over backwards to refinish and re-stain this cheap wood console table, I’m going to paint it.  Easy.
*The faux inlay isn’t bad… but the shine!!  Oye!                                 *It’s like a mirror!!  Woof!

Luckily, the console table has really great lines – it has a pretty carved apron and cabriole legs that give it a French Provincial look, and I think it’s going to make a really great makeover.  
The top of the table has a faux herringbone inlay which I had originally planned on painting, but I haven’t FULLY committed to covering it up yet.  Perhaps the inlay will look much better once the varnish is gone?  Who knows, but if it still looks god awful, my plan is to distress the wood – aka really ding it up with a hammer and some extra gritty sandpaper.  Once it’s distressed I have a dark taupe paint called “Squirrel” that my sister will get a kick out of (side note: she is deathly scared of squirrels, so as soon as I saw that the paint was named “Squirrel” I had to have it)  The plan is to paint the legs and apron first and tackle the top afterwards.

*Look at these great lines! I love the turned legs, the scalloped apron, and detail on the drawers!
This is the console table set up in the garage, ready for it’s makeover…
Aside from some paint on the console table, I’ll be painting the walls, trim, and linen closet to brighten up the space.  The walls will get a warm creamy color and the trim, doors, and linen closet will be painted a glossy bright white.  I think the color is actually called “Decorators White” so I can pretend I’m some sort of professional.  Ha!
Here is the inspiration board I built around what I hope to achieve:

Finally, that awful brown runner is getting the heave-ho, and my newest purchase from Ballard – the Saybrook Indoor/Outdoor runner – is going in it’s place.  I actually got this runner several months ago, but it’s been waiting for the rest of the hallway to catch up in terms of aesthetics.  I love the calming colors, and since our dining room (that is adjacent to this hallway) has a lot of the same colors, it will make for a pretty seamless transition from room to room.

I once read that in small spaces, it’s good to repeat similar color palates from room to room, as it makes the space feel larger.  We will see if that is true….

Stay tuned for updates!!

Bedroom Makeover: Painted Trim

So, last week I had been agonizing over paint colors.  Which shade of Beige / Oatmeal / Desert Wind / Sherwood Tan would I choose to saturate our bedroom walls.


Well it turns out, I found a shortcut, and I’m not going to paint our bedroom at all.  Yep – I discovered that our landlord had painted every surface our our apartment such an “off” off-white, that all I needed to do was paint the trim pure white.  Voila!  All it took was a few coats of semi-gloss in Whitest White – a “custom” color the hipster guy at the Benjamin Moore in the Marina mixed for me (side note here: there was nothing custom about it… while you won’t find Whitest White on any paint chips, it consists of the base color that comes in the can with a single drop of blue to “brighten it up”… alrightyyyyy then).

The result is shocking.  I have the least observant boyfriend in the world, and even he immediately noticed the difference when he came home from work.  He thought I’d painted all the walls, but really I’d just painted the trim.  After work.  And made us dinner.  I’m THAT good.  And modest.

Anyway, since everyone loves a good before and after, here we go:

Before: Blah “Off” Off-White Everywhere

 
After: Crisp, Clean, Contrasting Trim
You can still see out in the hallway how the trim is monotone with the walls – the hallway is next… and then the dining room… and then the living room… and then the kitchen.  I’m on a roll!!

Also, look at the first “before” picture – those were the temporary curtains we had up until recently.  WAY too dark for the room, but I still love them… just not in here.  Those will be fabulous in my one-day office.  Anyway, seeing the dark curtains hanging, don’t you think the light silk ones are the the winners??  What a huge difference already!

Looking at the progress that I am slowly but surely making on the bedroom, the walls and trim are done, curtains are done… now we have to sort out the bed / bedding situation.

Quickie Makeover: Etagere and Side Table

Since I’m still sick as a dog, I’ve been taking it easy which means staying at home, and resting.  Unfortunately, I’m not very good at that (you can only take so many naps) so while loafing around the house yesterday, I decided it was time to do a little sprucing up around here.
Right now, our nedroom is very dark.  Not only does it not get a ton of natural light since it faces another tall building (love city living) but the bedroom furniture is also dark (remember my struggle to refinish my armoire and nightstands last fall?)  Anyway, it’s bugged me for months, and since a total bedroom makeover hasn’t been on the agenda (or in the budget) just yet, I want to start making a few small changes to help lighten things up.
    

Which brings me to this black shelving unit, aka: the etagere (well that’s what I’m going to call it).  This beast was one of the first things I bought when I moved to San Francisco over five years ago… perhaps I thought it was elegant at the time (woof), and as much as I’d love to give it the heave-ho, we need it to house all the things that we simply don’t have storage for – aka, my jewelry, accessories, books that don’t fit in our bookshelf, etc.
These are the few “before” pictures I could find of this cheapo metal shelving unit.  I didn’t want to put a lot of time or money into this project since it was dirt cheap to begin with, and it may not even be here three months from now, so I grabbed a can of spray paint from the home depot (Rustoleum’s metallic gold) and went to work.  
I also did a small side table that goes in our living room – here are the before pics of that:
    
I dragged these bad boys out to the garage, and went to work.  The guys at home depot took pity on me (granted, I probably looked somewhat lost in the aisles of power tools in my leopard print flats), and they sent me off with a super cute face mask and gloves.  Double score! Aside from the fumes which would have made me hack up a lung from this sexy cough, I would have ruined my manicure – a true tragedy (I mean, look how cute the neon pink is):
Anyways, back to the point… here are the “during” pics – super exciting:
      
And finally, the afters.  The whole project took maybe 45 minutes from start to finish – from dragging the furniture to the garage, to the actual spraying, the dry time, and clean-up.  
               
Not bad right?!  Keep in mind, I snapped these pics with my iPhone, so they aren’t the best quality…
You might look at the “etagere” and think, “Storage? What storage“, but it looks somewhat dwarfed in this photo – there are two boxes on the second the bottom shelf, and they hold all my jewelry that doesn’t look very nice on display (bangles, long strands of necklaces, chunky earrings, etc) along with hair “stuff” (headbands, pins, velcro rollers, a bump it – don’t ask).  I also have a tray that holds my pretty statement necklaces (below) and another dish for my dainty pieces (studs, rings, and small chains).

  

This was my first time spray painting, and aside from feeling like a badass (I totally wanted to tag the wall with some white girl graffiti… perhaps a knee jerk reaction from holding a can of spray paint??) I learned a thing or two for next time…

Key Learning #1: Hold the bottle far away from the piece, to avoid heavy coats
The shelves don’t look so hot close up because I didn’t hold the can far enough away – they are blotchy. There are also a few drip marks from being too close.  This stuff dries fast… really fast, so by the time I noticed the drips it was too late.   Oh well, live and learn.

Key Learning #2: Spray multiple thin coats.  
This ensures even coverage, and fast thorough drying time.

Do I care that I messed up?  Not really… Is that bad?  Eh… not at all!  They were both dirt cheap finds to begin with, (the shelf was originally from Ikea, and the table was from Craigslist) so the mistakes don’t faze me at all.  My guess is that within the year, both will be either left on the street corner for some other 22 year old to find, or back on Craigslist for $5, but while they are still here, I think they both look one-hundred-million times better.

DIY – No Sew Throw Pillows

The living room has been getting a gradual face-lift, and while we haven’t gone so far as to buy new sofas (a major purchase off my growing apartment wish list), the addition of a new rug, curtains, potted succulents, and some sea fan art have helped re-vamp this room.  The throw pillows on the sofas have been mismatched since we moved in (last November), and while this has bugged me endlessly, I hadn’t gotten around to replacing them… until now!
I’d been looking for throw pillows, but since they run anywhere from $30 (on the low end) to $100 (on the high end… well, MY high end) I couldn’t commit!  It started feeling like a big purchase, and I didn’t want to make the wrong decision.
Finally, one of the mismatched throw pillow covers ripped, and that was pretty much the straw that broke the camel’s back.  Hallelujah – a good excuse to get some new (matching) pillow covers!  
Since I’ve been such a commitment-phobe over buying throw pillows, I decided that I’d make them – a pretty aggressive decision since I do not know how to sew – I don’t even own a sewing machine.  I thought to myslef, how hard can it be??  Famous last words, right?  Wrong!  If you have a hot iron, you can make a throw pillow – I promise.
Read on for my crafty tutorial!
Step I: Buy Fabric

I am admittedly frugal – always looking for a way to save a few dollars, even though I like nice things.  Interior fabrics that have a good weight AND an attractive pattern can get pricey pretty quickly.  Enter my solution – the shower curtain.

I was at Target, when I stumbled upon this shower curtain – it measures 6’x6′ which means I have plenty of fabric to mess up a few times, and at $20, you can’t beat it!  This pattern in particular picks up all the colors in the rest of the room – blues, golds, and grays, on a creamy background – just what I was looking for!  I told my best friend that I bought a shower curtain to make pillows and she laughed so hard.  Little did she know what a genius I was… after showing her the finished product, she’s not laughing anymore.

Step II: Measure fabric 

Since these pillows are “no sew” there are no zippers.  An envelope pocket on the back makes this work, so this means that for each pillow, you will be cutting out three pieces of fabric. The front panel, and the two back “envelope pocket” panels.  Knowing that my pillow insert measured 20″x20″ I wanted to be sure I cut out plenty of fabric to account for the seams.  After messing up my first few pillow covers, I figured out the right measurements to make a tight fit.  I learned the hard way that if the pocket pieces aren’t long enough, the fluffy pillow pops out of the pocket (fail) so the key to making this work is having the pocket flaps overlap by at least 8 inches.

  – The front should measure 22″x22″
  – The back pocket panels should measure 22″x17″

(for those of you who know what you are doing, you can probably make the front panel 21″x21″)

Step III: cut out all the pieces you’ll need

I like to work in assembly line fashion – cut out all the pieces you’ll need at once, so you can move on to the next step – it’s just faster this way… trust me.

Step IV: Gather your supplies

Once the pieces are cut out, get everything set up to make these pillows.  Make sure your iron is filled with water for the “steam” function.  Plug it in, and get it hot.  Pull out the ironing board, and grab a damp washcloth, and your iron on fusing (aka the glue that holds these pillows together).  I used Singer Regular Hold Iron-on Fusing Web – grabbed it at Target (conveniently located in the same aisle with the ironing boards)

Step V: Assemble

Take a look at these diagrams – it will make it a lot more clear when assembling

Lay the “front” pattern side up, and lay the first envelope flap on top of it pattern side down (patterns should be facing each other.

Measure out the fusing web, and place it between the two panels of fabric.

Take the damp washcloth, place it over the fabric, and press the hot iron for 20-30 seconds.  The combination of the moisture and the heat will make the fusing web melt and bond the fabric.  Do not just try to use the steam from the iron – it’s not enough!

At this point, the fusing web should have connected the front panel to the first envelope pocket flap on three sides – see dotted line int he diagram below:

Lay the second panel face side down on the other side, and fuse to the first envelope flap and the pillow front.  The panels will (and should) overlap.  See diagram below:

Once the fusing is done (it takes deceivingly longer than anticipated), let the pillow cool (so the “glue” doesn’t come apart) and carefully flip pattern side out.  Put the pillow in, and voila… insta throw pillows – no sewing required… they look pretty good!  Best shower curtain EVER.

Succulents

Trader Joes – one of my FAVORITE places in the world – had these sweet little succulents out front for $5 each!  Who would I be to pass up these adorable little guys.  Extra bonus: they came in these cute little creme colored pots!  Super duper bonus: zero maintenance (so they say!)

It’s nearly impossible to see from this photo, but the pots have an awesome engraved detail at the bottom.  Can you beat that?!  Didn’t think so…

Let’s see if I can keep these alive now.  Watch, I will be the only person in the history of the world who will be able to kill these guys off.

Wish me luck!
xo

Sea Fan Shadow Box: DIY

This DIY project has been a long time coming – mostly because I was too lazy to hang hooks on the wall (shameful, I know).  After lusting over this sea fan shadow box on Etsy for several months, I finally emailed the seller to find out how much she was selling it for.  I won’t totally throw her under the bus, but it was about 4x what I was willing to spend.  Eeps!

After the initial shock, I decided it didn’t look so hard to me, and that I could fairly easily re-create it on my own!  What do you think – pretty close!
Inspiration:

Sea Fan Shadow Box

Reality:

Bound and determined to recreate this project, I did a Google search for “sea fans” and found a little online shop, Sea Side Inspired, that sold the exactly what I was looking for: sea fans between 12-18 inches.  At $22 each, I was sold!  All the sea fans I’d seen online were dark – almost black – so I had resigned myself to the fact that I would be spray painting these suckers a light grey or buff.  To my delight, when they arrived, they were a perfect sandstone color with tinges of pink and lavender!  So pretty – no spray paint needed!
To be honest, the hardest part of this project was finding shadowboxes that were large enough to accommodate my sea fans!  I hunted around, going to Target, Aaron Brothers, and a few small frame shops in San Francisco.  What did I learn?  Shadow boxes are hard to come by, and custom framing costs an arm, a leg, and your first born child.  (Do people actually pay for that?!)
Anyway, after I was about to give up, my mom gave me the idea of Michaels, and with a coupon in hand, I headed over there.  
Bingo!  
I found 20″ x 16″ shadow boxes with my name written all over them.  The problem??  The only colors they came in were black and this awesome terracotta color (why god, why?!).  I ended up picking up the terracotta color because they were the cheapest, and I was going to have to paint them no matter what.





Don’t you just love the little cherub on there?  He says, “this frame is classy… trust me”.  I told him, “agree to disagree.”
A little painters tape around the edges, and I was ready to rock and roll.  The trick to taping it off well is wedging the tape almost underneath the edges between the glass and the frame – this way the paint won’t bleed onto the glass and you won’t need a razor to scrape it off later.

I liked the aged gold look of the frame in my Etsy inspiration, so I thought, “I’ll gold leaf it!”   I wasn’t born with the patience for gold leafing, so I got got gold leaf paint (same thing, right) – Martha Stewart calls it liquid gilding paint… potato potahto.  
I picked up a cheapo foam brush and used a left over birthday cake plate as my palette – hey, it was easy clean up (throw it all in the trash and call it a day).
The first coat went on splotchy, but this stuff dries fast (by the time you finish the final side of the frame, the first side you painted is dry).  Since it was so fast drying, I was able to do all the coats without stopping for a break (the picture below shows after one coat).  I ended up painting three coats in total – the first for a base, the second for coverage, and the third for artful imperfections.  I really should have sanded them for the paint to stick better, but I felt lazy, and it worked just fine without sanding.

For coats one and two, I brushed the paint on, but on coat three, I used the sponge to stipple the paint.  Some may not like the look, but I happen to really love it.  It created texture, and made it a bit more interesting.
I wish I had an up-close “after photo” of the painted frames, but the light was bad, I was tired, and I forgot.  Oopsy.
Final steps: I bought half a yard of dark grey blue linen to back the frames.  I just used fabric clue to adhere the fabric to the backing – very technical.  I think the Etsy version uses plaster – if you look closely you can sort of see the texture, but fabric was easier, and I was ok with that.
After getting the fabric on there, I positioned the fans on the backing, and used small silver sewing pins to secure them in place – you can’t even see the pins, and it works just fine!  I put the backs into the shadow box frame, wired the backs for hanging, and got a few picture hooks in the wall (after about a month and a half of these sitting on the floor in the dining room).
Originally, I toyed with the idea of tacking decorative frames onto the facade – something with a bit more ornate detail (see the terrible quality iPhone picture  here.  I love the look, but these frames are likely not made of wood, and after all the work of taping and painting, the idea of securing a heavy facade to the front seemed like a lot of unnecessary work.
My mom said she likes them better without the facade, so I’m going to go with that.  Simple is also probably better so this wall doesn’t look like there is TOO much going on.  If we move into a larger place, I may append a more ornate frame like this, but for now, I like them as they are.
Anyway, here they are hanging in the living room, and I’m pretty happy with the final result.  
I HATE that you can see my reflection here, but there was no other angle where I could avoid the glare from the windows… dah.
So here it is at dusk – I love how the room looks all lit up at night.  The tones of gold, creme, and amber really comes to life, and the cool greys and blues act as a nice balance (at least I think so).
Finally, just wanted to toss in a close up photo of the new throw pillows I picked up randomly.  I had been agonizing over pillows – what colors to go for, what patterns to get.  I picked up the gold and grey ikat from Cost Plus World Market of all places (do you remember this post on my debate over a grey / brown and yellow Ikat… hey now!), and the grey and white pillow from Target (oh, how I love Target.  I went in for toilet paper and came out with throw pillows).

I think they work well together, but I’m a bit worried that its a lot of pattern next to each other.  I’m actually looking at a taupe linen pillow to pair up with the Ikat pillows (there are two), and the grey pillows may live on the sofa.

Anyway, our little home is coming together, and I’m so excited for my honey to come home and see the new sea fans, framed, and hanging in our living room!

Improvements in the bedroom

      Before:                                          After:
I would like to preface this post by saying, our bedroom is nowhere near to being finished.  I had become so fed up with the glaring white walls, and the hideous $10 blinds that our landlord lovingly installed… so I made a few changes.  Admittedly, we still need a lot of work… A LOT of work.  The real transformation has been in the dresser and nightstands (original post found here).  You can hardly tell the dis-repair of the nightstands in this very poor “before” picture, but they were no bueno.
Still on the agenda is a new mattress.  Ours is just terrible, but the decision between queen or king is holding up the rest of the room’s progress.  Once we decide on a mattress, then I can move onto upholstered headboards, bedding, and wall decor.

Really, not much has actually changed – I got new lamps which I LOVE, and hung a few mirrors, along with a few picture frames (remember those lovely french photo’s from this post) and some curtains.  I look back at the old lamps and think how teeny they look.  The new ones are much more substantial… really liking that.  I hated the idea of just throwing them away, so I am in the purpose of re-furbishing them – that mini DIY project to be posted soon!!

After all the toil to get those quatrefoil mirrors, I am not loving them above the bed.  I think they may be better suited in the hallway or above the TV.  I also think that the row’s of three (three mirrors, three picture frames) is just too matchy matchy, but alas, they will have to stay until other changes are made.

And do you like the new bedding?  I should say… “new” bedding.  Just flipped over the old duvet, stole the chevron pillows from the living room, and laid a cozy throw over the bed (originally because we needed a bit more warmth at night, but it has stayed).

I’ve already got a few ideas cooking, and have been working on a new inspiration board for the bedroom based on my biggest pet peeves and some of the challenges this space has.  Since it’s one of the darker rooms in our place, I’ll need to be strategic… keep your eyes peeled for some ideas here!