Chunky Wood Moooi Random

Way back in November, I attempted a wire version of the Moooi Random pendant.  I failed miserably.  After my failure, I brainstormed other DIY lighting options.   Then we got busy finishing our laundry room and my quest for a cool light fell to the back burner.  Ben bought a 250 foot roll of iron-on wood veneer edging for our laundry room shelving and drawers.  We tried it on one drawer and hated it.  Having used some of the roll, we couldn’t return it.  What’s a DIY gal in need of a light to do?  Use the otherwise unusable veneer to create a light, of course. 

So, I gathered supplies.

A hot glue gun, scissors, small clips and the veneer.  I also bought a ceiling canopy and socket kit, just like the ones I used to make my coffee filter pendant, from Home Depot. 

As my glue gun was heating up, I looped a piece of veneer until I liked the size, which is about the final size of the fixture.  Cut the end and cut about 20 more of the same length.  Overlap the ends slightly, about 1 inch, apply a large pea sized dollop of hot glue.  Press the ends in place until the glue has dried.  If you attempt this and use iron-on veneer, the heat from the glue will start to melt the glue backing.  This isn’t a problem, just something to be aware of.  If any hot glue seeps out, wait a few seconds, then peel the glue away. 

Glue the ends together of about 15 strips.  Now the fun begins.  Start by overlapping two circles, perpendicular to one another.  Glue at both touch points. 

Continue gluing, overlapping to create a random pattern.  Bend the veneer circles to fit in the holes.  They’ll pop back into shape. 

Make a smaller fitting triangle for the socket to fit into.  I marked mine with a small clip.  This will help keep visible seams toward the top, out of sight.  When your sphere starts getting full, it will be more difficult to place the circles inside.  At this point, start weaving your strips through the light to fill any large gaps.  Be sure to leave at least one gap that is large enough to get your hand and a bulb in, though. 

Cut a piece of coordinating cardstock for your socket.  Mark a circle at the center and cut a slit from one side to the center.  Place your socket in to keep the socket from shifting.  This is a super simple, cool (I think so, anyway.   Ha!) light.  It took me less than two hours from beginning to installation.  Baby breaks and all.  Stay tuned for pictures of the light installed. 

Anyone interested in giving it a try?  Or another DIY light?  Maybe you’ve already tried one.  Care to share some pictures?  Head on over to our Facebook page to show off your hard work.

In the Works

Gallery walls are all the rage right now.  We already have one in our main level hallwayI’ve been scouring Etsy lately to find the perfect art to fill a gallery wall in our basement.  I’ve finally found enough art to fill the wall.  Now, I’m fiddling with the arrangement.  Something asymmetrical containing all my bird, feather and tree art.  To find the perfect arrangement, I started moving the frames around on the floor in front of the wall.  One layout I liked, the other I loved.

Option number one:

Option number 2 is the winner!

With the layout decided, I traced each frame on newspaper and marked where to nail.  Seriously, this saves so. much. time.  After determining the center of the arrangement and the center of the wall, I taped my templates up. 

My frame arrangement as well as my drawing were close by for reference. 

Stay tuned for the final reveal.  In the mean time, I’m wondering how many of you have or would like to have a gallery wall?  Where do you have it?  Sprucing up a hall?  Meandering down the stairs?  What fills those frames?  Family photos?  Travel mementos?  Etsy art?

No Longer Homeless

Not me, but the cute little deer hooks I bought back in December.  Originally, I thought they would live in our entry.  Unfortunately, they were too deep and the door would have crashed into them.  Sadly, the little guys sat in the closet for months.  Finally, a light bulb went off.  We need towel hooks in the basement bathroom!  Now, the dudes have a home.  One lives by the bathtub.

He looks happy, no?

He’ll be happier if/when I get around to painting the screws to match.  His brother lives by the shower.  Well, where a shower will eventually be.

So, our friends are back, to stay.  A nice manly touch to the man cave bathroom.  Still have to find hooks for the entry.  Have you seen cute hooks lately?  Just pretty?  Animals?  Share your secrets.

Drop Your Drawers

Really though, you don’t have to.  Unless you’re into that sort of thing.  In which case, please keep it to yourself.  Hah.  Now that I have your attention, I’ll share our drawer situation.  Please note, no drawers, whether pants or the real deal, were dropped in the making of this post.  Last weekend, Ben finally built seven drawers!  Four are for my office, three for the laundry room.  Though, we still need two for the bathroom…  Hmmm.  For nearly a year, (351 days, but who’s counting) my office has been in need of a drawer stack.

The laundry room has been in need for a few weeks now.  Of course, because Ben’s office is the laundry room, drawers were necessary, stat!  So, last weekend, Ben built drawers a drawer city.  Seriously, it looked like Ben was starting a doll house hobby.

We considered painting the drawers (inside and out) Vermont Cream, the same white used throughout our house.  But, we decided against it, for a few reasons.  Number one, the drawers are built of cabinet grade plywood, so they’re not totally ugly.  Number two, heavy things will most likely do in the drawers, which would probably scuff the paint.  Number three, I’m lazy and in a hurry to get things done.  (You know the song, sing it!  P.S.  Can you tell I’m a country music lovin’ gal?  Well, country and old rock.)  Though, if number one didn’t exist, we would have painted the drawers, scuffing concerns and all.  To give the drawers a nice, cleanable finish, we used Varathane polyurethane in a satin finish, which we had left over from refinishing our bookshelf.

Two coats of polyurethane later, we hauled the drawers inside to install.

 

After the brief intermission, Ben got back to work and installed the remaining three drawers.

You’ll notice the spacing of the second drawer isn’t even.  I’m not going to lie, it wasn’t completely intentional, at first.  When building, we always leave wiggle room.  Turns out, we left wiggle room for our wiggle room.  I decided the second drawer should get that extra space.  Right now, it’s obvious because the top two drawers are the same size.  But when we add drawer fronts, the second will be slightly larger, covering the gap.

But, I’m totally psyched to start filling those drawers to make my space even more functional and organized.

Oddly enough, we still haven’t installed the laundry room drawers.  With good reason, not sheer laziness.  It’s a long story, so if you don’t care, we’ll see you back here tomorrow.  If you do care, I’m sorry, but you must continue reading for the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.

You see, we will eventually remodel our kitchen.  Ben wants to build the cabinets.  So, he bought three sets of drawer glides he thought he liked enough to use in the kitchen.  You know, try it before you buy it, so to speak.  Then, I saw the glides and how much space they would steal from our drawers and put the kibosh on their use.  Blum drawer glides (the tester brand we bought) mount to the bottom of the drawer and are 1 1/4 inches tall.  Add our 3/4 inch of material for the drawer base and we’re losing 2 inches of usable space.  Per drawer.  Ouch.

When we design drawers, first we subtract our material dimensions.  Then, I design drawers based on the tallest thing to go in each drawer, or the usable space I’d like per drawer.  I wanted three drawers in the laundry room.  Four, eight and ten inches of usable space inside.  Had we used the original drawer glides, we wouldn’t have the top drawer.  Long story short, we built the drawers based on the old style glides, (also used in my office) but we have yet to return the Blum ones and buy three more sets.  So there you have it.  Pot of gold for you.

As we work toward a kitchen remodel, we’re deciding on what stays and goes.  Anything you have in your kitchen and love?  Or hate but thought would be great?  Where do you store your tools?

Gimme a Giveaway: Crafterall

***This giveaway is no longer accepting entries, Thank You!***

It’s finally Friday!  (I’m free again.  (Come on, sing it with me!)  I got my motor runnin’ for a wild weekend.  It’s finally Friday.  I’m out of control.  Forget the working blues and let the good times roll.  Thank you, George Jones!)  Not long ago, I shared some of my recent Etsy purchases, including Great Lakes in Teal by Crafterall.  Marnie was kind enough to offer a $25.00 credit to Crafterall to one of our readers!  Whoever wins is a lucky duck!  If you’re not into the Great Lakes, Crafterall has some other awesome items, like Manhattan:

The San Francisco Bay:

Or your favorite lake, bay or shoreline:

Want a chance to win?  Here are the deets:

The Goods: $25.00 good for or toward anything in the Crafterall shop.

To Enter: Subscribe to follow Our Humble A{Bowe}d, if you’re not already.  To subscribe, click the “Sign Me Up!” button under “Be the first to know.”  Once you’ve subscribed, leave a comment, which can (but doesn’t have to) include our Just for Fun question.

Just for Fun: Comment on this post with the words “WATER WORLD” and tell us what body of water has a special place in your heart and, if you’re feeling wordy, why.

For additional entries:

1.  Add Crafterall to your Etsy favs, come back and leave a comment telling us what your favorite item is.

2.  Like Our Humble A{Bowe}d on Facebook, come back and leave another comment.

Contest Closes:  Thursday, March 24 at 9:00 pm, central time.

Number of Winners:  One!

Ships:  Anywhere in the U.S.

Other Info:  We will select the winner using random.org and announce on Friday, March 25th.  Good luck!!

All  images found via the featured Etsy seller’s listing as linked above.