Tag Archives: in my house

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:

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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.

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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.

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4. Set the frame on the glass.

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5. Now put your candles on your new tray.

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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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Strut Your Stuff Saturdays

 

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Let’s Talk About the Elephant in the Room

So many of you are liking the elephants in the current giveaway, I thought today that we could discuss the elephant in the room. Or, the many elephants …

Do you ever look around and suddenly notice a recurring theme? One day I noticed lots of big ears and stocky bodies around here. Not on the people, on four-legged creatures!

Here’s a bejeweled beauty on a frame from Z Gallerie. We’re shown in a happy vacation photo:

Peek inside this frame in our guest room, and you will see elephants on that map of Siam there:

On a Thai silk pillowcase from Jim Thompson in Bangkok. It sits on a chair in our bedroom. The chair is also upholstered in a heavy woven silk that we found in the Jim Thompson outlet in Bangkok:

I made this pillow cover with a wide elephant ribbon, below it a thin brown ribbon with beads, brown suede and gold silk chenille:

The big wood elephant is one of a pair of bookends, gifted by some business associates during a trip to Bangalore; the small bronze elephant is one my husband brought from India decades ago:

Erm, please excuse some dust on some things. I’d much rather blog than be a perfect housekeeper, wouldn’t you?!

Here, elephant drawer pulls from Anthropologie lay on a shelf in our guest room. With them are a tall raku vase from a ceramic show in Royal Oak, Michigan, a copper batik printing tjap found at Arhaus and a candleholder found at HomeGoods:

A stuffed elephant wrapped in Thai silk from Jim Thompson:

More elephants made of Jim Thompson silk:

I took a closer look at the textile covering our kitchen bar stools. And there, I found … little elephants:

Many of these elephants are from travel. And very appropriately, I have a few more elephants on vintage hotel stickers:

This is my most favorite elephant of all. It’s about three feet tall, ceramic with “dirt” texture on it, found at HomeGoods. It has the best profile:

This elephant will be traveling. It will be going to our apartment in Chennai some day, where it will live in the guest bedroom there.

Indian Wood Printing Blocks with Crusty Paint

Wooden printing blocks from India are pretty enough in plain wood, but they can be even prettier when crusted with old paint, showing off the bold colors of India. I recently scored this one with a fantastic circus of color (from eBay):

It makes me wonder, what did it make with all those colors? Who carved it? How long did it take? How many times did a block printing artist have to stamp it? Did he get these colors all over his hands too?

It will soon be shouting its loud colors from a wall. Until that project is completed, here are more wood blocks with paint …

Little old blocks from India, from Daydreams from a Handmade Prairie Life:

Colorful printing blocks shown at the Quilter’s Market:

Gorgeous!!!

Wooden blocks available from The Well-Cooked Life:

More blocks with color shown at Pascale’s Paintings:

I’ve posted this image previously. It’s from Soma, textile creators and exporters in India:

I like the wood printing blocks so much better when paint is left on them. It plays up the whole point of the wood blocks — to make pretty images.

Iris and Honeysuckle and Other Garden Things

While looking for one of my cats, who was hiding under my nose the whole time under dense daylilies, I snapped shots of things flowering in our gardens right now.

Here are irises, with Japanese hakonechloa aureola grass, weigela and peonies in the background. And way over to the far left is a river of blooming lavender irises.

Here’s my little guy hiding under the daylilies, just behind the irises above. You can’t see him in the photo above, can you? Neither could I. I like the yellow columbine flowers with the yellow grass in this area.

Geranium, hosta and columbine under the river birch tree, in the shade garden between the driveway and porch.

I’ve been growing sweeps of this golden grass under trees in the shady areas on the south side of our house. The sweeps are bright enough to be seen from the street. We’re on 1.5 acres so the street is pretty far away. This grass grows slow. This sweep here is furthest along, nice and full. It’s under a crabapple tree, and behind it is a sweep of grass under a hawthorn tree. You can also see in the background, big globes of allium are emerging.

Here’s clematis, russian sage and peonies. There are gold-flowered plants here that add a nice contrast to the clematis color, but they haven’t bloomed yet. The peony plant beyond is so large, it’s all held up with four peony rings. These peony flowers are enormous, heavy and floppy and I hope we don’t get heavy rain until they’re done with their show.

Here Chaai is getting a lesson on how to climb a tree. He doesn’t really appreciate it. Maybe we don’t want him climbing trees anyway.

And here’s my gorgeous Siamese Snowshoe who was out with me today. She follows on my heels all over, like Mary’s little lamb. I have to watch every step. She was stubborn and refusing to look at the camera at all.

Moving right along to the gardens behind the sunroom … honeysuckle! There are three vines all in different colors. The red and orange are blooming right now. Also in this corner is a dark tea color heuchera (I forget the variety) and a coneflower that will soon have deep orange flowers.

I love the colors of autumn fern. My ostrich ferns (gifted from a neighbor’s garden) are super big and impressive looking, but I appreciate all the colors in the autumn fern.

I’m euphoric over euphorbia! An uncommon plant in gardens around here. I think this is supposed to be a zone 6 plant, but we’ve been having zone 6 or higher weather lately in the Chicago area, so it’s been coming back.

See how the euphorbia glows in the sun. Love this stuff!

Iris next to an armillary sphere, which is sitting atop the base of a broken leaky birdbath. In the background are ornamental oregano that cascades over a little wall, agastache, and about a 5-foot row of catnip. For the cats, of course.

This is at the edge of a sitting area behind our sunroom. I love the combination of the iris, the bright green Irish moss and the wrought iron pieces that I got for a steal at a gardening center that was closing. The little frog tile from Detroit’s Pewabic Pottery likes this area too. Although I’d like things to fill in more so the plants touch and there isn’t so much mulch to see. This garden is in its second  year now, and I’m bravely planting it under shallow-rooted trees, so filling in will take time.

That Irish moss is pretty but everything gets stuck in it. It’s almost like a carpet you have to vacuum!

Outside our sunroom door, which is off the kitchen, is a hanging basket with newly-planted herbs. Although seeing how much shade they get here, they may need to move. We’re always snipping basil to throw on margherita pizza, cilantro to add to burritos, tomatillos to make green salsa, and jalapenos to put on everything. OK that jalapeno part is my husband, not me. Our neighborhood has no street lights so it gets dark here at night. Last year I had to download a flashlight app on my iPhone so I could snip herbs and veggies at night (because of course you can’t find a real flashlight when you need it). This year I’m keeping stuff I need to snip while we’re cooking dinner closer to the house.

This hanging basket was also a major score at a local gardening shop’s going-out-of-business sale. These wrought iron pieces are from A Rustic Garden in Sterling, Illinois, and I’ll collect more as finances allow. Top on my list is a candle chandelier to suspend from a tree branch over an Adirondack chair seating area. A perfect spot for some wine at night, after working hard all day.

And of course every gardener needs a garden-themed doorknocker.

It makes a heckuva racket, but whenever I accidentally lock myself out, does anyone ever hear it? Of course not!

This is all very pretty, but working out there isn’t very pretty. Lately I’ve spent many sweaty, grimy hard hours preparing a vegetable garden and transferring plants out there. We started plants in the basement and there’s no way two people need 50 San Marzano tomato plants, 75 eggplant plants or 100 red and orange bell pepper plants. So people who know me will soon be gifted with vegetable plants. Watch out!

I love to garden and watch the plants and the composition of them together grow and change through the seasons. And yes our India apartment has a garden too, mostly belonging to my in-laws, but they’ve been taking care of a few plants that we couldn’t stop ourselves from buying last December. See some glimpses of gardens in Chennai posted last December.

I also pin garden-related images on a Pinterest Garden Board – visit to see!