...because sometimes all you need is a little inspiration...

Showing posts with label sewing inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sewing inspiration. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

My Boys Room


This has been a loooong time coming.  When we bought our house, this room had clearly been a nursery because it looked like this:
And believe it or not, our Real Estate agent almost cried when she heard us say we were going to paint over this masterpiece.
  Our kids did, too, but they just had to deal because I had the most perfect room in my head and this just didn't go with the vision I had...plus, I had found the most perfect paint color and couldn't wait to get it up on the walls.
Valspar Woodlawn Sterling Blue
I may have hemmed and hawed about some of my paint colors, but this room was always this color, I knew I would love it, and I totally do.  It's perfect.

So, once painted and moved in, it honestly took a long time to just sit down and finish everything I wanted to be in this space.  And then it took a while to find the right moment when it was actually clean enough to photograph...but without further ado, here is my little boys room:



Shall we take a little tour?

It all started with this bedding I purchased long ago when my first child was graduating to a big boy bed.  I thought it was very normal bedding and didn't think I'd have a problem finding something close enough to match it.  I was wrong.
So after a pretty extensive search, I finally decided to go to goodwill and buy a bunch of plaid shirts that went with my color scheme.  That's right, I did.  I cut them all up into squares and ended up with just enough to make a quilt and pillow sham to "match" the set I had.  I am totally ecstatic with the way it turned out!  At first, I was a little unhappy with the way the stitching pulled the fabric in some areas, (I should have used a walking foot, they say) but it all looks great to me now, especially since I never get too close. :)
Top bedding was purchased, bottom bedding was made.  Tada!  You love it, right?

Moving on. 
This wall took the longest of all to figure out.  I kept getting random things and trying new ways to group them together.  I feel like I finally figured out a configuration that pleases me.  I ended up painting a few pieces: "Life is a Highway" just happens to be one of my son's favorite songs, so that ended up there along with the licence plates of where we've lived.  Found the map and route 66 sign at Hobby Lobby!  The airplane print I found on Pinterest, as well as the "Bring the World His Truth" printable which I love, and I might reprint to try to make it darker. 
The other two I painted.  I'm really in love with the Peter Pan quote at the top.  Just painted it right on an old piece of wood from our yard.  Love love love.

Right next to the beds, we put our old entry way bench.  It's kinda perfect for storing cars in, and also makes a great seating area for the books which happen to hang just above it in our pallet bookshelves my husband made. 
Aren't they the best!!?  They stack the books so kids can actually see them.  And not only that, the kids can actually stack these books themselves.  Regular bookshelves are just so hard...  They only thing I think I would have done differently is I would have left the wood unstained.  I like these, but I REALLY love the shelves on the other side of the room, and they make me wish we'd left these natural too.  Oh well.  Still great and cute and completely functional.

On the dresser, I have an awesome globe, their treasure chest that actually does have all their money in it.  And a few things they're proud of.  For one son it's a soccer trophy and a block he got from church, for the other it's McQueen and Mater.

This wall just makes me happy.  I am in love with these pallet shelves!  They could not be more perfect in my eyes.  I love the way they look, and the rustic style they bring into the room.
And I had all these things just waiting for shelves to sit on, so I was very happy when my husband threw these together for me one Saturday.  The Cougars printable is so great for our family since we are both BYU grads.  We hope our kids choose to go there someday as well.  The bear sitting next to it was a decoration from my room when I was little, so it has a special place in my heart as well.  
The dinosaur was from a great aunt, the lantern is from Walmart - it's one that actually works and was super cheap compared to the ones at decor stores!  Those suite cases have been with us for a while.  They are old and tin and totally falling apart from use, so now they're a decoration.  Winnie the Pooh, one of my favorite books, sits behind a wooden truck that their grandfather gave them.  Then there are the rocks they've collected.  can't forget those! 
 I made that airplane art piece using a frame, a piece of paper, and one of those wooden plane cut outs that I painted.  Cheap and easy and goes great with the biplanes I found at Ross.  The Mickey music box is from a great aunt, and the boys love it!  That tiny canister has been with me since my son's nursery needed decorating.  I actually painted those blocks when my first child was born, and I sell sets of these painted blocks in my {Little Craft Shoppe}.  I'm in love with this mission printable I found on Pinterest.  We are encouraging our boys in many not so subtle ways...  The firetruck is another music box I found at an antique store to round out the shelf.  And there you have it.  Decorated shelves!
This little nightstand didn't really have a place by the bed in our rooms, but we found a place for it in the wall between the window and the bathroom door.  It's kinda necessary because it holds all our dress up things.  I never thought I'd have so many dress up clothes with little boys, but I sure do!  These curtains I sorta made.  I found some ready made navy curtains and wanted to add a stripe to give them some character, so I bought a valance from the same set in a different color and cut the navy and sewed in a stripe of the khaki - no need to hem the edges down the side cause they already matched.  I love it when it's easy like that.
This little wagon I found at a thrift store and it's a perfect little decoration my kids can actually play with.  I've seen a few rooms with children's blocks displayed in clear canisters and when I found this plastic one at Walmart, I knew right away what I would use it for.  I think these blocks are such a cute decoration! 
Last, but not least, is my ABC wall.  When I created this in my last house, I had visions of it adorning the wall in my future playroom.  I guess that dream is still alive and well, but for now they adorn the playroom that is also my boys' room.  I really love it.  But, alphabet walls are hard.  It took a long time to collect all these letters and make sure they all worked well together!  I had to spray paint a lot of them and it all turned out well, but don't be fooled, it took a while.  Below that is just our toy box where we like to keep our toys "organized" because momma's OCD.

Anyway, it's been a long road, but I'm really happy with the way it all turned out! 

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Thanks & Giving Relief Society Activity

I got the inspiration for our End of the Year activity from this image I saw on Pinterest.
The holiday season is a great time to offer thanks for all that we have, but it's also a great time to serve.  And that's just what we did.
We started out the night by having a "Thankful Dinner" which consisted of 3 yummy fall soups: Butternut Apple, Cauliflower, and Potato Bacon.  We also served a bunch of different salads and some rolls.  I decorated using Thanksgiving decor including my {Thankful Banner I made and posted about here} which I love so much!
We set up the round tables in the Relief Society room and used real tablecloths and the real dinnerware out of our church kitchen.  We wanted this night to be special and using the real stuff just made it feel so much nicer! 
Different sisters brought centerpieces with the Thanksgiving theme for each table . 
And then we had several pies for dessert. 
Each place setting had a napkin tied with a dried grain of wheat and a tag that said, "So Thankful for You." 
So, the sisters came and ate and visited.  We invited the Young Women in our ward to join us for this activity which was great!  
And then we moved into the gym for our service project.  I found this great idea on Pinterest from {this Little Dresses for Africa blogpost} to make pillowcase dresses for {Little Dresses for Africa} an organization that makes and sends these pillowcase dresses to little girls in Africa and other countries all over the world who have never had a dress.  Thier mission is to give these little girls some self esteem.  I loved the idea of making things for some fellow sisters in need, and I thought there would probably be many sisters in our ward who had extra fabric they could donate to make these dresses. 
I was right!  We had more fabric than we could use!  Maybe we'll have to do it again sometime.  The {Little Dresses for Africa website} has a lot of information on how to make the dresses and how to determine sizes and package them up, etc.  
Here are the measurements we used for the pillowcases donated.

And here is the pattern for how to make these pillowcase dresses using just fabric donations.  Most of our dresses were made out of fabric scraps.  

Then, we just followed the instructions from this: 
So with the fabric scraps we were pretty much just making a pillowcase first by sewing up the sides before we were able to follow the rest of the instructions.

So, we had a cutting station, where sisters determined what size the dresses could be accourding to the size of the fabric or pillowcase donated.  Then we had an ironing station with tons of irons where the sisters prepared the pieces for sewing. 
And then we had a sewing station where ladies who had brought sewing machines stitched away and mad as many dresses as we could!  I called them my little sweatshop because they were working so hard. 
A lot of the dresses ended up being really cute! 
We strung them all up at the end just so we could see how many we had made. 
I loved how colorful it was!  So many fun fabrics made so many fun dresses! 
It was kind of slow going at first as the sisters got the hang of how to make them, but I was so impressed with how many dresses we were all able to make!  At the end my feet were killing me!  But my heart was happy!
39 Little Dresses for Africa.

Friday, November 15, 2013

Thankful

The older I get, the easier it seems like it would be to just skip over this Thanksgiving time of year and move right into Christmas.  I love Christmas!  And every year, the time left until Christmas seems to get shorter and shorter.
But, then I see a thankful display like this, and I am once again so glad we have Thanksgiving - especially right before Christmas! 
What a perfect time of year to remember all that we have been blessed with!
I decided to have a go at a thankful banner like this one I saw on Pinterest.
It turned out to be pretty easy!  We cut 8" x 4" pieces out of burlap, folded them in half and cut an inch high triangle notch out of the bottom, then zigzaged the edges.
And I ended up just sewing the flags to the ribbon so they wouldn't slide around - they're about 1/2" apart.
After that, we just cut out "thankful" on a cricut using glitter paper - "anu" were 2.5" tall and "thkfl" were 3.5" tall.
I glued them to the flags using a no sew fabric glue, but at our Super Saturday (craft day for tons of women) we realized that hot glue was just as effective and dried a lot faster! 
And I'm just loving the way it looks on my mantle this year!  What a great reminder it is every day.
After all,
This is the perfect time of year to focus on what we've been given, and all that we have.  As we move into Christmas, which can often be all about the things we want, it's nice to have a reminder of what really makes us happy in life.

Be Thankful!

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Pillow Pumpkins

A few years ago, I fell in love with these stuffed pumpkins and posted all about the original tutorial {here}
This year, I decided to have a go at them.
I found a bunch of fabric remnants and put together five coordinating fabrics, then got some pretty ribbon, and some curly cues from a past grapevine project and I was set.
The tutorial I linked above is amazingly easy to follow, and after making one or two, I didn't find it necessary to even measure anymore.
The hardest part was stitching up the bottom with the beanbag inside, but it was only hard because it took a while.
I was super happy with the result!
And love the way they're looking on my mantle right now.
Related Posts with Thumbnails