Tag Archives: coffee table

DIY: From Picture Frame to Coffee Table Tray, AKA Clutter Prevention Strategy

I’m feeling defensive after very basic DIY makeovers posted here. A doorbell cover? A soap dish? And today, a picture frame with scrapbook paper stuck in it? Really? Is that all there is to offer?

But this is so much more than a picture frame with scrapbook paper stuck in it. It’s the key to sanity. It’s a Clutter Prevention Strategy:

Picture-Frame-to-a-Tray-4

Yes!

Horizontal surfaces tend to collect junk. The old Chinese chest which serves as the coffee table in our family room collected junk real bad. At its worst point, it was home to:

  • Four remote controls, three of which I have no idea what they control
  • Sundance jewelry catalog from two years ago
  • Coffee mug
  • Gum wrapper
  • Furminator and cat nail trimmers
  • Jar of green dirt from New Mexico
  • Paint brush
  • Two Mod Podge bottles
  • Large bright “Hermes orange” tray

Total flotsam and jetsam, all jumbled together like the junk floating on the Pacific Ocean.

That Chinese chest and I, we battled for almost eight years. The Chinese chest fighting for its right to breathe and see the light of day. And me fighting to not let stuff collect there. But not wanting to spend time cleaning when things sort of … magically just appeared there. Yeah.

Here’s what the chest has looked like since January 8, 2012 — nearly a year now! — and I’m telling the truth, not just weaving a blog tale to make things look good:

Clean-Coffee-Table-Surface

How did this happen? And how did I maintain this control for so long, despite being someone who despises overly-controliness?

Well, what if I put something nice on the Chinese chest that would take up half the space? Like candles? Who would put junk on top of candles? Not even I would do that. So I made a tray from a picture frame to hold some candles.

Okay, don’t wear yourself out if you want to recreate this project. Here’s the steps:

1. Remove the frame from the backing. Lay the backing on the table.

Picture-Frame-to-a-Tray-1

2. Set scrapbook paper of your choice on the backing. I chose light paper to brighten the dark surface of the chest. Because my frame is square, a 12″ x 12″ piece of paper was perfect as-is. If you use a rectangular frame, be creative with your scrapbook paper shape. (Or, you could use a textile!)

3. Set the frame’s glass on the backing and scrapbook paper. Having the glass on top will protect the paper from wax drips.

Picture-Frame-to-a-Tray-2

4. Set the frame on the glass.

Picture-Frame-to-a-Tray-3

5. Now put your candles on your new tray.

Picture-Frame-to-a-Tray-4

That’s it! Like I warned, don’t knock yourself out doing this.

I didn’t permanently reattach the frame to the backing because the tray won’t be moved around, and keeping all pieces loose will allow you to easily change the paper if you want.

Having once worked in a burn unit, and seeing what happens when we play with fire, I gotta warn, please don’t move your candles around when they’re lit like this! I did it to recreate the steps for photos, but don’t recommend it.

BONUS! Candle Burning Tip: If you don’t want your candles to “tunnel” like the candles you see here, the first time you burn them, allow the pool of melted wax to reach the perimeter of the candles. You may need to let them burn for some time. A 3″ candle might take 3 hours to melt to the perimeter. Wax will melt only as far as the wax melted during the first burning. I let these tunnel on purpose because I wanted this “glowing within” look, plus this is slightly safer with furry cat and dog tails around:

Tunneling-Candle

But if you don’t want this, just let the melt wax to the edge during the first burn.

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How You Could Decorate with India Style Furniture

The last post here showed various styles of furniture from India. I understand it might be hard to imagine how to use these pieces in most homes. Like, you don’t find these at Macy’s or Ethan Allen or La-Z-Boy. But that’s OK. I think they could mix with lots of things. So here’s some moodboards I created at Olioboard to show you some ideas. These moodboards include some tables, chairs, daybeds and desks from my previous India furniture post. As you’ll see here, I do like a pretty eclectic mix: (There’s an ottoman under the desk because I like to put my feet up.) So if you find a piece of furniture you like, see if you can mix it in with what you have. You never know, it might just give your room the extra spice it needs!

India Furniture and Its Shapely Legs

Previously I posted furniture legs from our Chicago home’s living room, many with Thai or Chinese origins. We also have an empty apartment in India to furnish some day, during future trips there. Meanwhile you can see a few items we found already in Cochin. For more inspiration, here are some furniture legs from India …

Found at 1stdibs, these show you the variety and diversity of styles of furniture available in India, from the northern regions to the south:

All pieces are from dealers on 1stdibs:

  1. 19th Century Indian Carved Bed
  2. Anglo-Indian Solid Rosewood Daybed with Turned Legs
  3. Late 19th Century Anglo-Indian Mahogany Daybed with Newly Upholstered Seat
  4. Late 19th Century Anglo-Indian Solid Ebony Four Poster Single Bed
  5. Antique Anglo Indian Elephant Gueridon, Black Laquered
  6. Early 20th Century Anglo-Indian Teak Desk with Bobbin Turned Legs
  7. Glass Top Coffee Table Base from India, 18th Century (made in Bicaneer, the  legs were originally part of a charpoy, or Indian rope top bed, and were adapted into a coffee table base)

In a future post, we’ll look at how pieces like these can be used in rooms with mixed histories, not just in India.

She’s Got Legs, She Knows How to Use Them

While suffering from a bad cold recently, I wound up laying under-nourished on the living room floor with a box of Special K, shoveling grains from the box. No, not a drama queen oh-woe-is-me display. I was alone except for two cats, and though they were nearby and looking concerned (or maybe confused? unusual human behavior for sure), they don’t fall for human drama tricks. They’re far too smart.

While in this sorry state and unusual viewpoint, I noticed legs: sofa legs, chair legs, teak coffee table legs shaped like Chinese opium bed legs, Ming style table legs. And the differences and harmonies across all these legs.

Teak “opium bed” coffee table leg & chair leg – I love the light/dark contrast.

Our living room furniture’s legs were one reason for pairing the pieces together. But since then the legs have stood silent and still, doing their jobs all day every day without appreciation. They’ve become visible but invisible. Quick, right now without peeking first, could you grab a pencil and draw the legs of your furniture?

Now I’ve noticed that the graceful curves and shapely gams are still at their best. Here’s some shots of the various legs:

Painted cabinet from Thailand under a Ming console table.

Teak coffee table we found in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

Teak coffee table, pillow hand-sewn with Indian jacquard silk, leather sofa from Retrospect and a wood rice goddess that we found in Baan Tawai, Thailand.

Chaai, found and rescued in Chicago. His name is Thai for “boy” or “man.”

This guy didn’t let me out of sight during the entire photo session. Here his tail was thumping. Why so annoyed? I thought he’d appreciate that I’m interested in our home from his perspective, but maybe I’m discovering secrets I wasn’t supposed to know about?

Attention deflection strategies work on humans too. He takes me in this direction. Why? Let’s see …

Pottery from a Michigan artist, Thai baskets, Ming console table. And yeah the dreaded wall-to-wall shag carpet.

Brass rain drum and wood rice god converted into a lamp. Both found in Thailand.

I’ve never liked all the orangey oak trim/door/window stain around the house, but there is a lot of it all over the house and it’s a big project to change it. And I’ve never settled on curtain rods so you can still see the white slider-thingy holding the curtains. So instead, let’s focus on what we do like: I’ve always liked the mix of the chunky light table legs with the dark polished sofa legs.

Leather sofas and mirror from Retrospect, coffee table and rain drum and rice god statue from Thailand. Indestructible rug from Home Decorators Collection.

My husband’s mrindangum — a South Indian drum — from his childhood.

Now there’s some noise above me, and air moving. I look up and … hey ma, what are you doing down there? he asks.

Well, I’m just trying to understand the world as you see it, I say. Ah, I see, he says. Carry on.

The legs of a rice goddess.

Little Thai cabinet tucked under Ming console table.

Chunky candlesticks under the same Ming console table.

So lay down on the floor sometime, and look at your rooms from a different perspective. You may be surprised by what you notice.

(And what a fitting title, as right now I have ZZ Top’s raspy thin voice thanks to this cold. I was wishing for something more Lauren Bacall-ish.)