The Happy Accident: How a mistake can make a project better

We have all been there… the moment when you are putting the finishing touch on a project and you sneeze or flinch and smudge a line. I had one of these moments the other night. I had decided to make up a little watercolor card for a wedding I was attending this weekend. Being a novice to watercolors, I thought I would test my limits with black lettering in the form of a monogram.

A  mistake was made!

I started in the middle. Worked to the right and then went back in to add the first letter before waiting for the paint to dry completely…

I panicked. I saw my life flash before my eyes (ok, maybe not that bad… but my heart sank). It was 11pm the night before we were leaving for the event and I had just spent hours painting beautiful flowers into a wreath on this card. I was NOT starting over. My initial reaction was to cover up the mistake with a cutout piece of paper, but was afraid it would look like I was doing just that. Covering up a mistake.

As I was brainstorming ideas to make this look intentional, I remembered a really posh wedding invitation I was sent that had gold-rimmed cardstock. I remembered thinking it was relatively “extra” at the time, but admitted it made the simple paper stand out. So I did a test on a tiny square of paper with gold nail polish and thought it looked pretty good. I tried again with the black lettering on the little piece and l held it up to the card. Now we were working with something. Naturally I couldn’t stop there, so I gold rimmed the entire card. Go big or go home, right? I will tell you, it took the project to a whole other level. Honestly, the picture doesn’t do it justice. I hope the recipients keep this card on their mantle for all of time.

I will now gold rim all of the things.

This outcome got me thinking about mistakes. I know you learn from them, but I never really thought about using them to your advantage in a creative setting. It if wasn’t for the little mistake, I wouldn’t have come up with a solution that ended up taking the card to the next level. There will be projects that cant be saved by gold nail polish (although I will likely try applying this technique to future mistakes because… gold rimmed, am I right?), but I look forward to challenging myself to continue finding creative solutions to problems that not only fix, but enhance a project.

For anyone who is curious, Martha Stewart watercolor brush pens and inexpensive “dry pan” style watercolors on Strathmore watercolor cold press paper were used.

~Sarah

 

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Creating a mood board for your space

 

After spending hours cultivating specific room decor boards on Pinterest, I realized I still didn’t have a clear idea of how I wanted my house to be decorated. I found that the best way to figure out how I wanted to design my rooms was by making mood boards. For mine, I found that Publisher, PowerPoint or even Word worked just fine.

I started out by taking screen shots of items I knew I wanted, or already had to use, for example a couch or TV stand you love. Next, I positioned them into the “room” and blocked in wall colors and a general floor color to get the “vibe” of the room. From there I went to my Pinterest boards and found room pictures I liked and cropped parts of images that had elements I enjoyed and placed them into my mood board in a general layout that was easy to visualize.

I had seen pictures of big white entertainment centers that housed a fireplace and fell in love with the clean yet cozy feel, so I looked up some IKEA shelving and found an electric fireplace from Overstock.com that I liked, grabbed screen shots of those and pasted them in, it helps to pull the whole look together. The TV, carpet and chair were pieces I already had on hand, so this helped me visualize the “wall unit” concept with my existing furnishings.

After making edits and finding an overall design I liked, I started shopping for pieces that reminded me of the items on my board. I like to shop second hand or discounted if possible, so I wasn’t likely to find exact matches. Still, I ended up with something similar to the original design. I love the way it turned out!

For before and after pics,  click here!

-Sarah

Three ways to make your home feel like new construction.

 

About a year ago, I made settlement on my quaint one story condo. The floor plan was everything I wanted and the price was right. I had thought about looking for new construction but knew that my budget wouldn’t allow it. And knowing myself and my DIY tendencies, I knew with a little elbow grease, and some hired help I could get this place looking ship shape in no time. These are the first three projects I did and MAN did they make a difference!!

Project 1: Replace grimy old outlets.

OK, here is where the Best Father of All Time award comes in. As a housewarming gift, my dad replaced Every. Single. Outlet in my house with brand spanking new ones. And let me tell you, this alone made me feel like I had purchased new build. Call me crazy but there is something so satisfying about fresh, white outlets. He swapped out most of the light switches too!

Project 2: Replace cheapy, flat apartment doors

Six panel interior doors. These stylish hinged beauties are the stuff of dreams, at least my home décor obsessed dreams. When I moved in, before me stood two doors. Behind door number one, I had the plain jane, distinctly “un” paneled doors that led to each bedroom, and behind door number two I had the terrifying, squeaky metal bi-fold doors that led into most closets. I hated all of them. Only one got to stay, her name is Lou, she’s the louvered door on the utility closet. She was kept for her function, and not her beauty.  Back to the point, I had my uncle come and replace all the doors with six panel wooden doors, and the closets all got “six panel” bi-fold doors (except for one, but that’s another story… hint: it’s a barn door!!).

Project 3: Paint all of the things

Here is where my patience as a new homeowner was tested. A few weeks in, my uncle (different uncle… I have a lot of handy people in my family) came and helped me paint the ceilings in my family room, dining room, kitchen, hallway and master bedroom as a housewarming gift. This alone made a HUGE impact because the previous tenants, or original owner decided a dingy shade of cream was a good choice for a dimly lit first story condo’s ceilings.

Now that I had a taste of what it’s like to have fresh paint, I wanted more! But quite frankly didn’t have the time or energy to paint the walls myself. To paint a picture, it took me 5 hours to paint the living room trim and one wall. This is when I threw in the paint covered towel and called my uncle to talk schedules. After patiently waiting a few months he was able to come paint some walls! I focused on the master bedroom and the living spaces (kitchen, hallway, living and dining rooms). This helped immensely! Having fresh clean walls and ceilings really helped make this place feel new and entirely my own. I know this one is the oldest trick in the book, but it really does work wonders! Its relatively inexpensive, can be done yourself (if you have better patience and a steadier hand than me), and is completely customizable.

So that’s it. Might seem silly and straight forward, but I would not have believed the transformation this place went through with just these three steps. I have since done many more fun projects, but that’s a story for another time.

-Sarah