Showing posts with label DIY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DIY. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

"Why do two colors, put one next to the other, sing? Can one really explain this? No. Just as one can never learn how to paint." - Pablo Picasso

Welcome back to Love Your Space Blog! 

I am so excited for what's to come for this blog that I have created. I know that it will stretch it's definition, that's for sure. I will be sharing opinions, inspirations, DIY projects, budget ideas, and the creative processes towards any and all of these topics. 

Check out the About section of this blog to find out more about where I have been and the life journey I have taken to get me where I am today...which is now sunny Orange County, CA!!!!!! 

This post is a re-introduction to Love Your Space {Yay!}

The following pictures were taken by myself while traveling from Canada to Southern California. They are in no particular order of travel. But please, just enjoy the pictures and the colors I created from Sherwin William's ColorSnap app for iPhone. I am really into finding a picture that I love, then creating the colors, then creating the mood, then creating the Space from it. It's all a process...Please enjoy! 




Friday, December 9, 2011

"I never thought it was such a bad little tree. It's not bad at all, really. Maybe it just needs a little love. " - Linus

DIY Friday!!!

The supplies from last week:



My 2011 Christmas tree:






I was working on this and I got so excited. I know it's not a real tree, but I was thinking that was exactly what I had wanted to be doing. I have always wanted to decorate my own tree with my own style. And right now that's all on a few buck$ of wood, and I am completely content with it. 



I decided to kick the clothes pins that I painted to the curb, along with the magazine clippings of ornaments. I had a coworker give me some of her old ones. There just so happened to be little gold ornaments in the box she gave me...perfect! I also went and picked up a $5 bag of rafia. I knew I would want to hang my pinecones and other things with it. I like rafia in this case because it is a little closer to 'natural' looking then anything else. I was also thinking hemp could be a good replacer of the rafia. The rafia came into play a little more when I realized I got too short of nails for the arms of my tree. They barely go through to the post, and I was not in the mood to go to Home Depot for a third time on this project. I tied the rafia around the posts in a way that keeps them in place. VOILA.

My second trip to Home Depot was because I took back one colored lights box and exchanged it with white. I wasn't feeling the multi colors on my mostly nature friendly tree. I think the white ones were a good choice.


1. Spray paint: dark brown and let it dry (in the snow.) I sanded them to make them feel rustic. This worked in my favor because I could sand down my "messed up" parts. 
2. Posts and "tree limbs": mounted the arms with the nails and rafia. 
3. Pinecones: put them in a cardboard box and painted them all with the dark brown, making sure they still looked like they had color and so that they all match, then did one quick sweep with gold. 
4. Top peice: the star was from my co-worker and it was red, so I just spray painted it gold to match everything else. I basically took three pinecones and wrapped them around the top with the rafia, adding the pine needles and then the star. 
5. Lights: stringing them on the actual arms didn't work so I placed them just on the center post, which works out with a nice glow showing the other ornaments. And I think it keeps it fresh and clean. 
6. Ornaments: I just tied rafia around the top part of the pinecones, stuck the pine needles in the knot, and made another knot at the top to have them hang from. I also picked up the letters from Hobby Lobby for $2 each and spray painted them gold and tied them up with rafia. Letters and numbers are in these days, so I figured it couldn't hurt and added another element. 


That's it! Done! 

She's little and simple and hardly takes up any space in my little room, and she's perfect.


Friday, December 2, 2011

"The perfect Christmas tree? All Christmas trees are perfect!" - Charles N. Barnard

DIY FRIDAY!!!

Buying or getting things that are already made for us is a time saver, no doubt! And sometimes, that's the best road to take. But SOMETIMES it's much more fun and hopefully $$ saving to Do-It-Yourself. Being a part of something that you see from scratch and then it comes to life is such a rewarding feeling. It's accomplishment within yourself that you are able to come up with something, or even copy an idea, get the peices of it, and build or create it to be used and enjoyed in your space.

This week, in honor of the fresh new month we are in, I am doing a Christmas tree!! 

I am so excited for it! I am not wanting to spend the money on a real or fake tree and the ornaments and the lights and such. Moving to a new place means that, sadly, I did not bring my holiday decorating with me. The place that I live in is much too small to be filled up with a tree anyways. BUT I do need a little bit of something reminding me of the tradition and heart-warming appearance of a beautiful tree in my home growing up. 



The origin of the Christmas tree origionaly was recorded back in the 15th and 16th centuries by Livonia and Germany. Of course, it came out of the church. The symbol of the tree around Christmas time was for the religious feast day for Adam and Eve, being December 24th. That's the day that they would decorate the tree with apples (signifying the forbidden fruit,) wafers (representing redemption,) and a star on top (symbolizing the Star of Bethlehem.) The evergreen tree was called the "Paradise tree." Once the tree became more popular in court yards and wealthier Protistant families, they would put candles on the trees, when candles were expensive and hard to come by. Growing in popularity the trees then began to be decorated with candy canes, tinsel, paper flowers, nuts, lights, etc. for the children. The decorated evergreen trees then progressed to department stores and then into homes. 

Here are a few images of some of the early Christmas trees and then some more modern ones. And then some great DIY trees for smaller spaces. 
                           


Now, here are the materials for the tree that I will be making over the next week:




What kind of ideas do I have floating around with all of this?! 

Either way, it all cost me $44 from the Home Depot!!!!

More to come next week for DIY Friday

See you next week





Thursday, December 1, 2011

"Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without." - New England proverb

THRIFT STORE THURSDAY!!!

Finding gems at the thrift store is a pretty rewarding feeling. Walking out with a bargain price and something good is rare. So, here's an ode to the things we can find at consignment stores for a SUPER great price but we only 1/2 like them. Let's re-do them! Let's recycle objects or throw-aways or thrift store finds and alter them to fit into the spaces that we live in every day. Finding things for a bargain price in the world we live in now is not only a service to our wallets but also to our landfills and debt. 

SO....Let us get started with some simple chairs this week! 


I found these babies at Goodwill. I love how the fabric on them already matches the Santa Fe Southwestern  feel. But the chairs themselves are pastel lime/Florida green. BLEGH!!! These squaty chairs are going to be going in the kitchen with the little table I have. Each chair was $14 each. A little steep, but going to be worth it I believe. 
1. The fabric I chose has colors that are in the kitchen. (The sweet lady owning my place doesn't want big changes happening, so painting the kitchen won't be happening.) That's ok! I'll just match the things I put in it to what I already have to work with. This fabric was 30% on sale. I got one yard of it, hoping that I don't mess up anything and need to go get more. 

2. I got Krylon Satin Black spraypaint. As long as I clean and lightly sand down the plastic, the spraypaint should be good to go on my little chairs. 


So, spraypaint, sand paper, and fabric, that's $22 + $28 for the chairs. A re-do for $50!!!! And all of it at Hobby Lobby!

NEXT THURSDAY: The reveal of the brightly colored Goodwill chairs!! 

See you next week