Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Hide Cords with a Curtain (Tutorial)

My husband has this large entertainment center and it was obviously designed when big screen tvs were well GINORMOUS. The shelf that our little flat screen tv sits on is supposed to be a shelf that goes above the big screen but as times change we adapt and overcome. Yes, I really did just say that...

Here is the before.

The underneath has become toy storage. Those toys have since moved into little A & J's rooms, which is where they actually belong. But then you are still left with unsightly cords. Enter sewing machine and fabric.

Supplies: 

Home Decor Fabric large enough to cover open space plus several inches
General sewing supplies and machine
Shower curtain Rod

Instructions:

1. I don't wash my fabric. I know I probably should but for me it is easier to work with straight from the bolt. I used home decor fabric because it comes in a wider width and it is thicker and provides the texture I want in a curtain. 

2. Iron and cut the width of your fabric. Take the width of your space and add at least 6 inches. 2 inches will provide fabric to create an edge and the additional will allow the curtain to drape nicely. 

3. Hem the two cut edges. Use a ruler and iron to fold the fabric over 1/2 inch. Then fold the fabric over itself and pin. 
 
4. Sew. I used a blind hem stitch and white thread that didn't blend well with the pattern on the front. I should have used the blue color for it to blend nicely. Luckily it isn't noticeable when it is hanging. Sew both edges.
5. Decide which unsewn edge is going to be the top. Measure around the curtain rod to find out how wide your "pocket" will need to be for the rod to slide in easily. Add 1/2 inch just to be on the safe side. Measure that length from the top of your fabric and fold over. Iron and sew with 1/4 inch seam allowance. As you can see I left the selvage so I didn't have to do additional hemming.

6. Make sure the shower rod slides in easily.

7. Hang the shower rod and determine the length needed to reach the floor and add 1 inch. Using the same hemming technique as before. Measure 1/2 inch and iron. Fold the fabric over itself, pin and sew. 

8. Hang your finished curtain and enjoy not seeing cords! The space can be used for additional storage! 

Do you have unsightly cords in your home? What do you do to hide them?

Thanks for stopping by!

Creating,
Leilani









Monday, August 5, 2013

10 Need to Know Painting Tips

Now that I have painted two walls a very dark color I feel like I should compile a list of tips that made life easier. I learned quite a bit between painting the red wall (read about it here) and now painting a midnight blue wall. Now I'm no professional so take my advice with caution and make your own judgement.


1) The first is don't buy tape. It is a waste of money. Don't buy a brush to "cut in". Trust me. Unless you know how to cut in and are comfortable doing it, don't. Just don't. Instead spend the 5 to 10 dollars and buy yourself an edger, you can get one here. If you have textured walls you're screwed. It's just the way the cookie crumbles. But below is proof that an edger is worth it. Red wall is with tape and brush, blue wall is with edger and yes my walls are textured. If your walls are flat, the edger does awesome work.



2) Buy paint tray liners. They are less than a dollar a piece. Saves you an unbelievable amount of time with cleanup. You just painted a room, do you want to clean up, no. So just take the liner and throw it in the garbage. Voila.

3) Use Floetrol. It is a paint conditioner. I used it on the second coat. You just mix it in with the paint and it does not affect the color. It made the paint thicker and easier to work with, it also helped it dry evenly. I highly suggest it. Although it is not a complete necessity, I know I will never paint without it again.

4) Get yourself a kitchen sponge. It is easy to use for little oopsies here and there. Rinse and repeat.

5) I didn't use drop cloths while painting in a room with a hard floor. I let the paint dry and scratched it off. Or if I saw it in time I wiped it up with the sponge. However, when I paint the kids room I will be using an old sheet. Most of us have those lying around so why not use that instead of buying a drop cloth?

6) When painting a dark color do not try to see how far one roller dip in the paint will go. Dip your roller, do one roller width top to bottom and repeat. It might seem like you are using more paint than necessary however what you are doing is helping the paint coat the underneath color and saving yourself a third or fourth round of painting.

7) If you are painting RED, first paint the wall with one coat of gray. You still end up doing three total coats of paint (one gray, two red) but at least after the third coat it will look good. I did three coats of red over white and in some places it is still a little streaky. I couldn't bring myself to do a fourth coat, that is what wall decor is for!

8) If you are painting a dark color. Let the paint dry overnight before you do another coat. It allows the paint to fully dry so that when you do the second coat you aren't moistening the first layer and spreading nonsense everywhere. The paint also has a boatload of tint in it which I think may affect the drying process, the people at home depot weren't detailed about it but insisted that I wait overnight.

9) So you're waiting overnight for the second coat. Don't waste your roller! The guy at home depot told me to saran wrap it. I didn't have the patience for that nonsense. I put it in a doubled plastic bag, tied it up and stuck it in the fridge. Good as new the following day! Do the same with the edger!

10) If you have kids. Paint while they are sleeping. Save yourself the trouble of little hands wanting to "help".

Do you have a favorite painting tip or trick that isn't listed here? Leave a comment, I'd love to hear!

Thank you for stopping in!

Creating,
Leilani







Friday, July 26, 2013

Picture Frame Redo

I purchased these picture frames a while back when I thought they would be perfect for little J's room but as it turns out his favorite color is orange. I still love them but obviously they aren't going to go with my country warm feeling kind of theme. Time for a redo!


I had left over fabric after cutting out pillow covers from this post, and wanted to incorporate it around my home to give a little more cohesive feeling. I have a very open floor plan where my kitchen, dining, living and sitting area are all pretty much one ginormous room. I love how open it is, great for having people over!

All I did was take the frame apart, cut out the fabric to cover the lime green mat and then hot glued it on! Simple yet such a drastic change.




What do you think? Do you ever take items you have and do simple updates to change your decor?

Thanks for stopping in!

Creating,
Leilani

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Easy Pillow Cover Instructions No Zipper

Last night I had a crazy dream. I was assisting on a live tv show featuring a segment on a specific quilt. Well the person who was supposed to be featured never showed so they threw someone else in there to do the segment and literally 1 minute before we were to go live she had a panic attack and insisted that she could not do it. I stepped in and had about 30 seconds to figure out how the quilt was made. It looked simple enough so I courageously started and then out of nowhere it wasn't just the quilt top, batting and bottom. There were extra components that I had no idea how to explain. Thankfully I woke up. No quilting tutorial here yet. So on to the pillow covers!

We purchased a ginormous sectional for our living room and it came with three 21" by 21" inch pillows. I love the size but not the geometric pattern. At some point in my life I'm sure I would have loved them, however, after realizing that every home that I've walked into and immediately fell in love with had a country warm feeling I knew they had to be changed.

The first step is finding a fabric you love. This pillow cover is a "pocket" cover, no zipper needed here. In this case I was working on the little blue pillow it was 14" by 14" so I cut one square 15" by 15". The second piece of fabric needs to be longer to allow for overlap for your pocket, cut a 15" by 20" rectangle. Then take the length that is 20" and cut it in half so you have two pieces of 15" by 10"".

You will need to hem the edges that overlap (the half pieces). Take the raw 15" edge and fold it to the inside half an inch, then fold it over again then sew down the strip. It helps if you iron the seam and pin. Do the same for the other piece.

Once both back pieces are sewn take your front piece and lay it right side up. Then place both back pieces on top of it with the right side down. The right side would be the one with the pattern or design. Make sure your back pieces overlap. Then square up the fabric. Pin all the way around and then sew around the edge with 1/4" seam allowance. Flip inside out and voila! 

It's amazing how much personality a pillow can add to a room! Not to mention that fabric is cheaper than going out and purchasing new pillows. Now to decide on fabric for the other two large pillows!

Thanks for stopping by!

Creating,
Leilani



Sunday, July 21, 2013

How to Paint a Red Wall- Part 2

If you haven't read Part 1.... maybe you should. Did you read it? Good. Congratulations you have extraordinary taste! The only question is do you have the determination to make your wall the deep dark red or bold bright crimson red you are dreaming of?

I did or well I thought I did until I was debating on a 4th coat of paint. Yes I said 4th. My walls are a creamy color which aren't bad but I wanted some warmth to my home and my giant red wall gave me just that. I chose the largest wall in my home to paint red. Not so smart. The paint guy at home depot told me it should take two maybe three coats. Well, he was wrong.

Let me start by saying buy the BEST paint and primer that you can afford. I read some posts after already painting two coats that suggest that first painting your wall gray helps the red coat better. I would certainly take that in to consideration. I have a friend with a very gorgeous red wall. It took her two coats however she painted over green. Clearly I was doomed from the start.

So I taped off everything because I can't "cut in" with a paintbrush to save my life. Major Fail. My walls have a slight texture to them so even though I went over the tape and made sure it was stuck the wall, somehow paint still crept under it, EVERYWHERE. My friend with the awesome red wall suggested that I purchase a paint edger. It is a little pad with a handle and wheels that keep it an even distance from your molding, ceiling, trim, etc. I haven't tried it yet but I'll just take it from her that it works amazing. I'm kind of getting the feeling I should have asked her for advice before I started painting but hindsight is always 20/20.

So it took a gallon and a quart of paint. I used Glidden Paint and Primer the color is Martha Stewart Barn. On the third coat which was the quart plus a little from the gallon, I mixed about 3oz of Floetrol into the paint. It helped spread it more evenly before it dried. It dried darker than it appeared right after I painted it, thank goodness!

Below are the photos. The original wall color, followed by the first, second and third coat of paint. Finally, there is a picture with wall decor where you can see that it doesn't look too bad after all!







This wall is also EXTREMELY difficult to photograph because the light coming in glares on the wall and shines too bright for a good photo. I did the best I could.

Hope your red wall adventures are easier than mine were!

Creating,
Leilani

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

How to Paint a Red Wall- Part 1

Don't. Choose another color or hire a professional. 


If you're here because I required in Part 2 that you read Part 1 then you can bravely continue here.

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

6 Weeks of Paint and Projects- Painting Chairs

The amount of stuff I get done when my husband is away with work and the kids are in bed is unbelievable. I can prep most projects during the day during nap times and then work away at night, hence the 6 weeks of Paint and Projects!


The left chair is the before and the right is after. My husband built an awesome farmhouse table and we picked up chairs for a decent price on craigslist.org. I have this vision of a country home. So I decided to paint. I first tried to roll on primer with a small roller and failed so miserably that I didn't touch the chairs for another two months! Then a friend suggested I try Lowe's Valspar Paint and Primer Spray Paint, let me tell you it is a life changer. I have had some terrible encounters with spray paint but this one was amazing. Never rolling paint on to furniture again!



It is necessary to sand all the glossiness off of the chair otherwise the paint won't adhere properly, I learned this from experience... I used a coarse grit sand paper, it left lines in the chair and made for neat detail after it was painted. If you don't want lines or to see where you sanded then I suggest a finer sand paper. It took longer to sand than it did to spray the paint on! Only 5 more chairs to go!


Creating,
Leilani

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Banana Bread

I bake, I cook, I craft, I create, I am not a food photographer. My pictures are ultimately horrible but the food tastes delicious. Don't judge my inability to take a decent photo and use that for the basis of your judgment on how awesome my recipes are! I digress :)

My favorite recipes are the ones that have a story behind them. I love when someone can say this was my great grandmothers recipe and 100 years later people still rave over it. Well this recipe has a short story... my Jr. High best friend, who is still my best friend today- we'll call her S, shared this recipe with me. It originally came from her ex-fiance's mom (Mrs. M)... where it came from before then I don't know but it is an amazing recipe! Moist, fluffy and banana-ie, just everything I want in yummy banana bread. This is the first I've tried with shortening and I think it makes a HUGE difference.

Banana Bread

1/2 Cup Shortening
1 Cup Sugar
2 Eggs
3/4 Cup Mashed Bananas (Approx. 2 Bananas)

1 1/4 Cups All Purpose Flour
3/4 tsp. Baking Soda
1/2 tsp. Salt

Optional: Chocolate Chips (I prefer dark chocolate, yum!)

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

2. Mix by hand the first four ingredients in a large bowl.

3. Add the last 3 ingredients to the same bowl and mix by hand until combined. It will be somewhat lumpy DO NOT OVER MIX. Do not use hand mixer or a fancy shmancy Stand Mixer. I promise you if you do, you will regret it.

4. Grease or spray your loaf pan or mini loaf pan or mini muffin pan. Whatever you prefer. I have to say that I can't stand that I have to "nonstick" my nonstick baking pans... If I use a spray I wipe off whatever is not touched by batter otherwise you end up with sticky brown gross pans. Yuck.

5. Fill the pan of choice and bake! You can fill them 2/3 of the way or so.. they don't puff up like muffins because well it's a bread. This is when I add the chocolate, (if it's a big loaf I mix it all in with the rest of the stuff). I add a couple to each and then cover it with just a smidge of batter. It keeps the chocolate chips evenly distributed and for instance my almost 3 year old doesn't need a boat load of sugar so I add only one to each of his mini muffins. It's like a little surprise in the middle. :)

6. Cooking Times:
Loaf Pan (size is like a 9 by 5 or 8 by 4... whatever it's a loaf pan) 40-45 minutes.
Mini Loaf Pan 17-20 minutes
Mini Muffin Pan 10-12 minutes

7. Cool and Enjoy! Or cool briefly and enjoy it warm and delicious with a cup of coffee, tea or a large glass of milk!

Thanks for stopping by!

Sharing with you,
Leilani

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Pumpkin Bread Recipe

So. I'm trying something new. I attempted to run my OWN website here and after fighting with the darn thing every time I wanted to post something I thought to myself "There has to be an easier way." And of course there is. I always want to make things more complicated than they actually are :) Welcome to my life.

I realized two things yesterday while surfing Pinterest and just getting lost from one website to another. The first is that most houses are not "Pinterest Perfect" the blog My Life and Kids gave me some great insight into how messy peoples houses really are and it made me feel a tremendous amount better. And two, moms are not "doing it all", their houses are messy and their kids rooms you can barely walk through. The best part is that they are letting other things slide to do what makes them happy without feeling guilty about it. Not rocket science but I have been trying to do EVERYTHING and I'm exhausted!

So now for that Pumpkin Bread Recipe I promised you back in November.


Nothing beats picking a pumpkin and getting the puree yourself, it makes for a MUCH tastier bread. However, the canned pumpkin works just as well, just make sure it is pure puree not the one for pumpkin pie.





Pumpkin Bread Recipe

3 cups All Purpose Flour
1 1/2 cups Sugar
1 tsp Baking Soda
1 tsp Salt
1/2 tsp Baking POWDER

1 1/2 tsp Cinnamon
3/4 tsp Nutmeg
3/4 tsp Cloves
OR 1 tbsp of Pumpkin Spice (to replace other spices)

3 Eggs
16oz or 2 cups pumpkin
1 cup Salad Oil*

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
2. Mix dry ingredients.
3 In seperate bowl mix wet ingredients.
4. Combine wet and dry ingredients.
5. Pour batter in to a prepared (spray with cooking spray) loaf pan or mini loaf pan.
6. Bake 1 hour 15 minutes for loaf pan and 30  minutes for mini loaf pan.
7. Let cool and enjoy!

*I've used both Olive Oil and Vegetable Oil for this recipe and I prefer the Olive Oil :)

Thanks for stopping by my new blog!