Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Copy Cat: Look-Alikes for Less

I don't seek out Pottery Barn Copy Cats; they just find me! This one found me when I was shopping for a pair of sandals. I have no explanation for how I ended up browsing in the pillow department when I was supposed to be looking for shoes. My best guess is alien abduction. In any event, this was a happy discovery.

For awhile now, Pottery Barn has offered their Textured Solid Pillow Cover accented with one or more prominent buttons (pictured in first photo). The Pottery Barn pillow covers (which do not include a pillow insert) are currently priced from $25 to $29. I've had several clients who have owned and enjoyed these Pottery Barn covers.

Imagine my surprise when I stumbled upon a very similar pillow (pictured in second photo) at my local Steinmart for $14.99! The cover on the Steinmart pillow is not removable, but the pillow itself is down-filled! $14.99 for a down-filled pillow that looks like it just stepped out of the Pottery Barn catalog?! Sounds like a deal to me! My local Steinmart carried a square pillow in khaki and red and a lumbar pillow (pictured below) in pale blue. For local readers, I spotted these at the Morrisville, NC Steinmart (9529 Chapel Hill Road).
















Stay tuned for more fun Steinmart pillows!

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Simple Spruce-Ups: DIY Dispensers from Glass Bottles

Did you know that the screw-on plastic dispenser tops from store-bought soaps, shampoos, and lotions will often fit on glass bottles? Finding the right bottle may require a bit of experimentation, but once you find a bottle the right size, you can create a unique, eco-friendly DIY soap or lotion dispenser in seconds!

This pump top from a bottle of Trader Joe's hand soap fits perfectly atop a bottle that previously held lime juice. The "straw" inside is even the perfect length.To refill it, I like to use the handwash refill pouch from Method, which purportedly has an 83% smaller carbon footprint than a hard plastic bottle:This sparkling cider bottle pairs perfectly with a top from a bottle of liquid dish soap: The soap needs to be "shaken" out because the bottle can't be squeezed. An alternative option would be to use a spigot top designed for dispensing olive oil.

I can imagine lots of other potential applications for this idea. Classy possibilities would include using frosted glass bottles or antique bottles. If "campy" is more your style, how about making a beer bottle soap dispenser for your favorite beer-swigging hooligan hubby? Any bottle with ridges at the neck is a candidate for this easy DIY project. The only limit is your imagination!

This post has been linked to: DIY Day at A Soft Place to Land, Metamorphosis Monday At Between Naps on The Porch, Finding Fabulous, Thrifty Thursday and The Thrifty Home

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

A Few Neat Ideas from a Client's Nursery...And the Giveaway Winner!

My client Dana contacted me to help with her daughter's nursery when she was pregnant. When we met, she had already selected her nursery furniture and her crib bedding, which was "Garden Blossom" by Dwell Studio:She wanted help selecting a wall paint color that would work with the bedding, and she also wanted some ideas for a paint treatment to add a little interest to the walls. The bedding included shades of beige, chocolate, pink, and white:She wasn't wild about the idea of brown walls, and she knew that she didn't want pink walls, so we selected a warm-yet-neutral green for the walls--Valspar's "Martinique Dawn".

Next, we brainstormed ideas for a fun paint treatment. Our inspiration came from an unlikely source: a photo in a ten year old decorating book! The rocking-horse themed room in the photo was nothing like the nursery that Dana envisioned for her daughter, but it incorporated a unique feature: a wallpaper border at chair rail height framed by strips of molding (Photo credit: Southern Living Ideas For Great Kids' Rooms). Knowing that Dana and her husband, Steve, were very handy with do-it-yourself projects, I suggested that they paint a chocolate stripe at chair-rail height, frame it with white molding, and sprinkle it with stenciled flowers to match the flowers in the crib bedding. And by golly, that's exactly what they did! Here's a photo that Dana sent to me when the room was in progress:
And here's a close-up of the stencils. Dana shared that the stenciling was really time-consuming, but she also said that her daughter's love for the flowers has made it worth the time investment!
Dwell Studio didn't offer a window treatment that coordinated with the crib bedding, so Dana made this pleated window valance from a crib bed skirt! She reported that the valance was easy to make because the pleats were already built right in. What a great idea! This would be a neat way to repurpose crib bedding when it's time to transform a nursery into a "big kid" room.Dana and Steve also made these unique wall hooks by combining wooden circles with pegs. They were the perfect size for the stencils, and they're a great place to hang hats, sweaters, and those adorable hooded baby towels.Thanks, Dana and Steve, for letting me share these photos to inspire others!

On another note, the winner of the CSN Stores giveaway is commenter #60, KottageKara of Kara's Kottage. Congratulations! Thanks to all who entered for your enthusiastic participation in this giveaway. I wish that I had a prize for everyone!

Sunday, April 4, 2010

CSN Stores Giveaway!

CSN Stores recently contacted me to see if I would be interested in offering a giveaway to one of my Red Chair Blog readers. After browsing just a fraction of their 200+ online stores (!) which offer everything from TV stands to faucets to lighting, my answer was a resounding, "Yes!" One lucky Red Chair Blog reader will win one item of his or her choice up to a $35.00 value from any CSN store! Here are just a few possibilities to spark your imagination:Kikkerland LED Light Imperial Chandelier With Optional Adaptor ($35.00)

Trend Lab Vintage Two Picture Frame Set ($22.73)Dwell Studio Owls Boudoir Pillow ($34.00)
Laura Ashley 6 Piece Towel Set in White ($32.99)
Skip Hop Mod Dot Nursery Lamp ($27.00)

JoJoDesigns Sophia Throw Pillow ($17.99)Bai Design Too Cool For School Retro Modern Wall Clock ($32.99)
Artland Kingston Jar (16" high) ($20.99)

One lucky winner will receive one single item of his or her choice (up to a $35.00 value) from any of CSN's 200+ stores. You have an opportunity to earn up to five entries! Here’s how to enter:

1. For one chance to win, just leave a comment at the bottom of this blog post. Easy enough, no?

2. If you’d like a second chance to win, blog about this giveaway and come back and post a link to your blog post in a comment.

3. Want a third chance to win? Tweet about this giveaway on Twitter, then come back here and include your link in a comment.

4. If you’d like a fourth chance to win, link to this giveaway on Facebook, then come back and include your link in a comment.

5. For a fifth chance to win, become a Follower of The Red Chair Blog and indicate that you're a Follower in a comment. If you are already a Follower, please indicate this in a comment.

Giveaway ends Wednesday, April 7th, 2010 at 11 pm EST. Winner will be selected using Random.org. This giveaway is open to residents of the US and Canada only, please.

A note for email subscribers: If you are reading The Red Chair Blog via email, please click here to be taken to my blog site in order to leave your comment(s) to enter the contest.


THIS GIVEAWAY IS NOW CLOSED. THANKS TO ALL WHO ENTERED!

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Light Switch Labels

My alternative title for this post was: "Let the Mocking Begin". Yes, I have endured lots of affectionate-yet-ruthless ribbing from friends and family members for my organizing systems over the years. The labeled freezer sections. The pre-printed grocery lists. The meal planning magnets. But I'll gladly endure a little more teasing if this tip can create a little more peace and order in one person's life!

The concept of labeling is nothing new in the world of organizing, but most folks don't think to use their label making machines to label...their light switches! In truth, I didn't think of it either! I was introduced to this idea when I had the pleasure of helping Linda Roggli transform an ordinary suburban home into the restful retreat center that is Garden Spirit Garden Retreat and Guest House. Linda, a life coach, ADHD coach, retreat facilitator, and founder of the ADDiva Network for women with ADD /ADHD, thought of every detail to make her guests more comfortable, including labeling light switches so that guests would know which switch worked which fixture. (Here's a quick ADD/ADHD self-test: Are you no longer reading this post because you clicked on the ADDiva Network link above?)

Labeling the switches next to your kitchen sink can save you and your house guests from grinding up innocent spoons in the garbage disposal in your attempt to turn on the light. Other good candidates for labeling:

  • Triple and quadruple switches
  • Switches connected to electrical outlets (For example, that one switch that you should never, ever turn off because it's connected to the outlet that powers your alarm clock.)
  • Switches in guest bedrooms and guest bathrooms
  • Indoor switches that work outdoor--and out of sight--lights

Label makers can produce water-resistant laminated labels (good for switches near sinks). You can also print your labels on a computer in a pretty font and cover them with transparent tape to make them more resilient.

And since light switches aren't exactly eye candy, here's a gratuitous photo of my daffodils for you. Happy spring!


This post has been linked to Works for Me Wednesday.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Dollar Tree...Literally!

If you've got a dollar and some basic craft supplies, you can "grow" a sweet little tree to celebrate spring...or "pre-spring" as the case may be!

Materials:

Small tree branch
Large, empty oatmeal container
Floral foam (or a chunk of Styrofoam)
Floral moss (or shredded paper in earth tones)
Book pages, magazine text, or sheet music
Raffia
Silk flower
1 packet of 12 small glitter egg ornaments (currently sold for $1 at Dollar Tree stores)
Hot glue
Scissors

Instructions:

1. Remove the lid and the label from the oatmeal container.

2. Following the illustration below, cut a strip off of the top of the oatmeal container. Set that strip aside for later.
3. Cut "petals" and then fold them down. (The deeper the cuts are, the more easily the petals will fold down.)4. Cut a piece of floral foam (or Styrofoam) so that it fits snugly inside of the oatmeal container. (Tip: a serrated bread knife is helpful for cutting foam.) Depending on how snugly the foam fits, you may or may not need to anchor it with a blob of glue.

5. Anchor the branch in the foam and top it with floral moss or shredded paper.

6. Tuck the cardboard strip (the one that you cut in step 2 above) along the inside rim of the oatmeal container.
7. Tie raffia around container and use hot glue to attach a silk flower. I used a gardenia.

8. Decorate your "tree" with egg ornaments and butterflies cut from book pages or sheet music.
This project was tough to capture on film--it's much more charming in person!

With some modifications, you can use this little tree to decorate when you entertain for a number of different occasions. Replace the eggs with baby booties and you'd have a sweet decoration for a baby shower. Add a few more butterflies to decorate for a bridal shower or even a casual wedding reception.

Looking for more branch-based projects? Martha Stewart offers instructions for these pretty paper cherry blossoms here.
This post was inspired by the 5 Dollar Challenge at Living With Lindsay and has been linked to Sew Dang Cute, Tatertots and Jello, The Shabby Chic Cottage, Fireflies and Jellybeans, Reinvented, It's So Very Creative, Today's Creative Blog, The Thrifty Home, and A Soft Place to Land.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Toddler Toy Storage Solution

Blogger's Note: This post was originally published in March of 2010 and was updated in November of 2015.  The updated post includes affiliate links.

On the day after Christmas, as I stood knee-deep in my daughter's toys, I decided that I needed to make a home for all of that primary-colored plastic...and fast! Since the last thing that I wanted to do on December 26th was to go shopping, I just used what I already had on hand. The picture above shows the result.

After pulling the wire storage cubes out of one of my closets, (the photo above shows 8 cubes, but you can buy a similar set of 6 on Amazon for around $30 here) I used plastic sand pails to corral blocks and balls, filled a coffee canister with foam alphabet letters, and housed finger puppets in an empty baby wipes container. I even used this plastic basin that the nurse sent home with me when I brought my daughter home from the hospital. Honestly, I don't know what its intended purpose is. Someone please tell me that it's not a bedpan. Because I suspect that it might be taboo for decorators to display bedpans in their homes.I originally thought of this storage system as a temporary solution, but then a funny thing happened. On three separate occasions, moms who were visiting my home asked if they could take a picture of our toy storage!
My first reaction was to think, "This old thing?" But as time has passed, I've discovered that these wire cubes really do work perfectly for toddler toy storage. Are they sophisticated and elegant? Nope. Are they functional? Absolutely!

I know that particle board cube organizers, such as the ClosetMaid Cubeicals 9 Cube Organizer below--currently around $40 on Amazon, are really popular for kids' spaces. My issue with them is that at 11.25" H x 11.25"W, the individual cubes are too small for many of the bulky toddler toys or larger hardcover books. My wire cubes are a generous 14.5" x 14.5", allowing ample room for...everything! Even this creepy guy:
These versatile wire storage cubes are the same type that I referenced in my earlier post about DIY Storage for "Transient" Items.

This system works well for us for a number of reasons:

1.The cubes can be configured many different ways. When bulky plastic xylophones give way to teeny, tiny Polly Pockets down the road, these wire cubes can just be repurposed for storage elsewhere in the house.

2. Coated wire grids and round, plastic corner pieces mean no sharp edges or corners for toddler head-bumping!

3. The low, wide configuration means that all toys and books are within easy reach of my daughter (now 17 months old). Better yet, she is even learning how to put her toys away! (Note: the cubes are not really designed to be "divided" as they are in the photo below. I had to use extra grids, ribbon, and some wire bookend-like parts to create these extra shelves.)
4. The low, wire cubes are very sturdy, yet lightweight in and of themselves, so I don't worry about the "tip hazard" risk that there would be with taller wood furniture pieces. I intentionally placed the heavy items: books, wooden blocks, and electronic toys, on the bottom and lighter items (such as foam letters and a foam farm animal cube) on top. The shelves have never budged, even when my daughter was first learning to walk and would pull up on them.

5. Labels on bins and buckets help with letter recognition.

6. When toys have consistent "homes", cleanup is quick and easy. No matter how "trashed" the play area gets, everything can be put back in order within 5 minutes.A system like this can also be configured to be tucked in a corner. Better yet, pull a sofa away from the wall and place the toys against the back of the sofa to create a separate play area and hide them from view!

November 2015 note: When my daughter was in preschool, I added another tier to this configuration to make it taller.  To keep visual clutter at a minimum, I concealed this whole structure with fabric as follows:  First, I used a pair of cotton valances (end to end) to cover the top and sides of the structure.  Next, I used wire to attach a narrow cafe curtain rod across the top, front edge of the structure.  Finally, I made a pair of cute, cotton curtains that could be closed across the front.  This kept my daughter's room looking neat and tidy, while allowing easy access to all toys and books when the curtains were open.

My daughter is now 7 years old.  It turned out that these cubes provided versatile, inexpensive toy and book storage right up until yesterday, when they were finally ousted by a tall, antique armoire!  The cubes are still in great shape and will live out their golden years as closet storage.

This post has been linked to Rocks in My Dryer and A Soft Place to Land.





Friday, February 19, 2010

DIY Book Wreath Tutorial--My Lazy Variation

If you regularly read decorating blogs, you've likely seen enough DIY book wreaths to make your head spin. Blogger Lindsay, from Living With Lindsay was the troublemaker who started it all with her fabulous book wreath made from a Dollar Tree book, a foam wreath, a little paint, and lots of hot glue:
I was intrigued, inspired, and impressed... but unwilling to risk hot glue burns in the name of bibliocide. Then I saw a post by another blogger, the super-creative Wendy at The Shabby Nest. She posted this book wreath made from folded book pages which had been threaded onto a coat hanger:
Did I have enough skill and patience to stab a bunch of book pages onto a coat hanger? I flattered myself to think that I did, so I set about destroying a book to make my own Wendy-style wreath.

Don't hate me, but I chose to use a book from the Chicken Soup for the Soul series to make my book wreath. I'm not anti-soul or anti-chicken; I just wanted a book with true white pages rather than pages that had yellowed. Plus, it was the only book in our "donate" box. As it turned out, the book was printed on paper that was more like heavy copy paper than the typical, "pulpy" paper used in most books, and when I folded the pages, they didn't fold gracefully like Wendy's had. Instead the pages flattened, making my wreath look like a Rolodex, only homelier.

I tried six or seven different paper folds, and each one failed more spectacularly than the last. Observing my mounting pile of rejected folded book pages, my husband quipped, "Hey, here's an idea! Why don't you put all of those pages together and make a book?!"

Once I finally found a fold that worked for me, I was able to whip out a wreath in the time that it took to watch a Netflix movie. Here's how I did it:

Materials:
  • Wire Coat Hanger
  • Wire Cutters
  • Book
  • Magic Marker
  • Thumbtack
  • Electrician's Tape
  • Ribbon For Hanging (Hanging the wreath, Silly, not yourself! Don't worry; this project isn't quite that difficult!)
Steps:
1. Open the "neck" of your wire hanger, and bend it loosely into the shape of a wreath. (Not pictured.)

2. Color the edges of the book pages with your marker. This doesn't have to be perfectly even--you're just adding a little contrast. I used a licorice-scented "Mr. Sketch" marker. The same type that I first used when I was in preschool. Yes, I own some truly sophisticated craft supplies.


3. Pull a few pages out of the book. Take one page, and fold it loosely the long way. Left-brained people: you'll be folding it into fourths. Right-brained people: fold so that you have a "mountain" in the middle and a "valley" on each side:

4. Keeping your previous folds loose, fold flat in the middle so that you have a "fan":

5. Use a thumbtack or another sharp object to start a hole about one inch from the base of your fan. (Note: your "fan" will be more fanned out than the one in the picture below, with only the base flattened):6. Thread the paper onto your bent-open coat hanger:

7. Repeat the steps above until you have a full wreath! I chose to thread the "fans" onto the wire so that the "open" edges of the paper all faced down (underside pictured below) and the fans alternated left and right, but once the wreath was full, this little bit of compulsion made absolutely no difference, so you can just thread yours on any old way you like. The "fans" spin easily on the wire, so you can rearrange at any point:8. The best part is arranging & fluffing up the paper fans once your wreath is nice and full. The pages make a nice rustling sound too, like a petticoat.

9. To finish your wreath, clip off any excess wire and use electrician's tape (I used white electrician's tape) to bind the overlapping pieces of wire. I wanted to hang my wreath with a wide ribbon, but I didn't like how "lumpy" the paper fans looked under the ribbon. My solution was to fold several book pages the long way and coil them over the overlapping wire to give the ribbon a smoother surface to wrap around. Here's a photo to show you what this looks like behind the ribbon. You can't see this when the wreath is hung because the paper fans on each side conceal it:
Finally, I added a large button to the ribbon. It's hard to see in the photo, but the top layer of ribbon is cut into a point right below the button. Voila! The finished wreath!

What do you think? I'm satisfied. Or, as my Italian grandma used to say after a good meal, "I'm sodispied."

My favorite part is the fact that the papers kind of look like ribbon candy. Festive, in a kind of anti-literary way.

Happy wreath-making!

This post has been linked to: The Shabby Chic Cottage, A Soft Place to Land, Twice Remembered, Cottage Instincts, Tatertots and Jello, Funky Junk Interiors, Beyond the Picket Fence and Finding Fabulous