Monday, April 16, 2012

Spring Cleaning

Saturday morning I was honored with the opportunity to share in a class called Cheaper and Better at my neighbor's church.  What a fun group of ladies was present!  And I learned a lot, got to bring home more cleaning recipes and ideas, plus helped the ladies make a powder sink/ tub cleanser along with a Soft Scrub imitation cleanser.

I wish I had brought pictures of our garage sink.  I did not take notice of the sink since early fall, so when I actually stopped and looked at it last week I was grossed out.  It was disgusting.  But on the bright side, a fun project because it was so gross.  I decided to use my homemade cleanser and see how it cleaned, although I was tempted to jerk the sink off the wall and take it to the dump.



This DISGUSTING sink....


Plus homemade cleanser - recipe below - and a cloth.....

got the sink this clean.  Good, but not good enough....



So I used a little more cleanser and a green scrubbie to finish it up!
This is an old, antique sink and in our over-used garage.
This cleanser is super!  See below for recipe:
Recipe for imitation Soft Scrub:
Plan to mix this in a good sized bowl, as it will fizz from the baking soda and vinegar combination.  And storing it in a squirt bottle is a good idea -it will be thicker, like Soft Scrub.  (If it thickens, then just add a little more water and shake it up.)
2/3 c. baking soda
1/2 c. Castile soap (liquid)
2 T. vinegar
1/2 c. water
a few drops of tea tree oil

Use a funnel to transfer from bowl to squirt bottle and clean away!

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Revisiting Mom's Comment

Back at Thanksgiving, my mom made a comment about a corner cupboard that I had purchased and placed in the dining room. She wasn't wild about it.  Actually she said she'd get rid of 'that thing' if she were me.  It was dated and a little out of character for our house and decorating.  Oh, I liked that cupboard, though, so I decided it needed to become a priority for a redo.


During the short, bearable winter here in northern Michigan (that's the first time I've ever had the privilege to express those feelings about our winters!!),  Anthony hauled the cupboard downstairs to the craft room for me.  The inspiration I was getting for the cupboard would have it end up in Laney's room, which I have decorated with black and cream toile for bed clothes and curtain.  Laney is using a den-type room as her bedroom, so it's not really decorated for a young girl, but it's pretty and comfortable, and her own!  


First I lightly sanded the cabinet, since the previous owner had toiled on handpainted florals along the top.  Then I applied a gloss cream paint.  When dry, I applied a 'crackle medium' which is clear and dries quickly.  Once that's dry I painted black acrylic craft paint carefully but quickly, watching the 'crackles' appear as it dried.  It was exactly the look I was going for!  


I had some black and cream toile left over from the curtain, so I stapled it where the glass would have been in the doors of the cabinet.  


The family gave it mixed reviews; but Laney loves it, and I do, too!  The whole toile obesession thing - not sure if it's ever going to end.  Fifteen years ago when we built this house, my husband suggested I not commit to any of the toile fabrics or dishes that I had selected, since I would probably 'grow tired of them.'  Ha.  I am still wild about them - and they've come very much in style, too. 








Lord willing, we have another project coming up - a house project - and just maybe I'll do some toile things there....

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Babes and Buffnesses

Heard of the expression, "Out of the mouths of babes..."??  Once upon a time I was creative.  I even used to have a few good design ideas.  Somehow as time has passed my ability to eye things for size, fit, color match, and other design elements has dwindled.  So sad.

Take for instance the plate and bowl tower that I tried to create for Autie's Open House.  The middle part - the champagne flute - really should have had a wider rim to hold the bowl.  But it looked good to me, until Autie pointed out the obvious.

There was more 'obvious' to be found with the second attempt on a tower, but advice coming from a boy 'babe' (he'll KILL me for calling him that).  I found another champagne glass - not a flute this time - at the Goodwill.  I really liked its empty stem - looked like it was calling out for a stem of daisies to dress up the tower.



Anthony was eating (again) at the kitchen nook and watching me.  I dropped the stem of three daisies into the stem, smiling and gloating a little, exclaiming how much I loved the glass, especially how it held the flowers.  As I placed the bowl on top - Squish went the flowers, completely out of sight by the bowl.  Oh, the laughter from Babe Buffness.









He sauntered over, took the bowl off, flipped the champagne glass over, and placed the bowl onto the bottom (now top) of the glass.  Yeah, he was smiling and gloating the whole time, too.





So now, thanks to babes and buffnesses, we have a few cute raised thing-a-ma-jigs for the Open House!

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Pre-planning for Another Graduation Open House

Autumn Jean-Marie is graduating June 1st and sometime in June we hope to have an Open House to celebrate.  We've pulled off two Open House parties in the past, so how hard can it be??  Well, it can be a real challenge to think up fresh ideas.


Has anyone heard of Pinterest???  Autumn has!!! So she has lots of great ideas for decorating the tables and feeding the masses.  We girls in this family already love to put on a shin-dig and having a few really awesome ideas really helps to inspire.  I always have my eye on the bottom line in terms of cost, though, so I have been the Squasher of Many Good Ideas.


Autumn picked two colors to work with - lemon yellow and apple green - and she's fine with using the fruit to match, plus daisies and white lilacs (if they are in bloom), to work into the decorations. Hopefully the weather will be pleasant the evening that we select, so the fun can be outside.


After making a Pinterest board that Autumn and I share for ideas, we talked about the favorites.  Expensive things or super-time-consuming things got nixed, especially since we are going for country charm (things that cause one to say, "Awww")  and country elegance (things that cause one to say, "OOooo, I like that!) combined.  But the number one thing we hope is that everyone is comfortable and having a great time enjoying some good food and fellowship.


I stumbled upon apple green plates and bowls at the Dollar Store this week.  I'd like to do some raised plates, some with foods, some with candles, some with flowers.  So I purchased a champagne flute to hold a bowl above the plate - perfect size for a floral arrangement.  The Dollar Store had the wet foam I would need, perfect size for the bowl and sold in a two pack.


The flute was glued to the center of the plate, then the bowl onto the top of the flute. The glue wanted to drip a couple times, but a quick wipe cleared it away and the bowl adhered solidly to the rim of the flute.


I am going to post the pictures, but with a disclaimer.  Autumn isn't wild about it!!  She would like a margarita glass, instead of  the champagne flute, since the rim would be wider and the bowl would nestle down in there better.  After she said this it's like scales fell off my eyes!  I agree with her. I truly tried the bowl out on a margarita glass first (when I was in the Dollar Store), but cannot remember why I didn't use it. So I am going to ask my handy husband to try to salvage the bowl and plate but get that flute out of there.  So if anyone wants to make one of these, try out different "pillars" with your plate or bowl (and ask the design-minded teenager, when possible).  I am pleased with the overall look and delighted with the price - not counting the fresh flowers, these cost $3.50.  I've seen raised decorative pottery or glass items for $20 and $30 and up.  If we never use these again after the Open House, it won't bother me a bit. 


Inside the flue is a pretty real looking silk daisy.

Wet foam - two pack for $1.00, preserves the fresh flowers.

These flowers were $4.00. 

Finished product minus the edible goodies.

The plate held more than two dozen cookies.
This is what I pictured in my mind - we'll see after we use a margarita glass how it looks.
We hope to use real daisies, or even better, white lilacs for the floral arrangements.