Etsy Favs: September

As promised this morning, we’re back with our Etsy favs.

Beautiful art doesn’t have to cost an arm and a leg.  Just look at the Abstract Ikat paintings by Chris Loves Julia, ready for framing.

If you know a bicycle enthusiast, this Iron Bicycle Decor from Bacon Square Farm is perfect.  And, the holidays will be here before you know it.

Monograms are a quick and easy way to personalize a space.  The T2 Typographic print at Nicole AP is one of many designs.

Yellow and gray are a classic color combo.  Bright yellow fields off set by a dark, gloomy sky in this Modern Neon Landscape by Lucy Snowe Photography is simply stunning.

Herringbone makes me weak in the knees.  Why would this Herringbone Patterned Bowl from E Benotti be any different?  Ha-ta!

This Traditional Floral Fat Quarter from Stefanie XU reminds me of snowflakes and the approach of winter.

Smile all through 2013 with this Mod Pattern Mini Calendar at Monkey Mind Design.

Neon is still going strong.  Add a splash with this Neon Waves Notebook by Les Miniboux.

I know I already shared this print this morning, but Always be Kind print at Scissors, Paper, Mouse is just pretty.  I’m a sucker for the chalkboard looking background.

Do you have a favorite?  Or maybe something I didn’t mention?

Our Humble Sponsors: September & A Survey

Our sponsors help fund little projects around the house.  And we’re grateful.  You should be, too.  Not only do they help cover costs, they have great products and ideas to share with you.  Check them out.

 

Quirky, unique, and fun prints abound in the Scissors, Paper, Mouse shop.  Stop by the shop and poke around; I’m sure you’ll have a giggle.

1.  Always be Kind

2.  You’re the Only Fish in the Sea for Me

3.  Stand and Fight

Sick of wondering, “What’s for dinner?”  Emeals to the rescue.  Emeals offers a variety of meal plans, low carb, gluten-free, vegetarian, organic at many different stores, taking sales and coupons into consideration.

1.  Selection by Store

2.  Diet Specific Plans

3.  Family Menu Plans

Amy at Woodlawn Lane recently started blogging, sharing fun, simple ideas with the world.  And she sells cloth diapers.  What’s not to love?

1.  Making an Upholstered Headboard

2.  Adding Nailhead Trim

3.  Cloth Diaper Discussion

S and S Babee is a small shop with hand sewn baby goodies.  Quality is top-notch and the patterns are so fun.

1.  Towel Bibs

2.  Burp Cloths

3.  Cloth Wipes

Jen at IHeart Organizing happens to be my blog bff, but that’s not the only reason I love her.  She has an Etsy shop stocked with goodies to keep you organized.

1.  Personalized Meal Planning Printable

2.  Personalized Cleaning Checklist

3.  Customized Children’s Chore Chart

Interested in advertising with Our Humble A{Bowe}d? Here’s some info to get you started.

P.S.  As usual on sponsor shout out days, we’ll be back with our monthly Etsy favs.

P.P.S.  I’ve been working on changing up the blog a bit.  Want to help us improve?  Take our survey to let us know how we’re doing.  If the button doesn’t work, click here.

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Brass Be Gone

Let me preface this by saying I don’t hate brass.  At least not aged brass.  I can’t stand the bright/shiny/fake/80’s brass.  Don’t hate me for doing what I’m about to show you.  Last week I had to run to UPS to send my felt leaf bowls to Germany for a photo shoot.  While waiting for the main UPS to open at noon, the boys and I stopped at a park to play, bought groceries, and popped in a Goodwill.  Not needing anything in particular, I puttered around the store and saw a brass bar cart.

I shoved a little lady to get to it…in my head.  In real life I patiently waited for her to pass and then snatched it for, wait for it… 13 bucks.

Because it was a decent size, I rationalized we could use it just about anywhere, and not only as a bar cart.  Yeah, Ben’s jug-o-wine wouldn’t look too fancy on this bad boy.  The details were so nice.  Double tiered, wooden legs, and on castors.

I’m guessing there was another glass shelf at the bottom, but we can replace that.  Either with another piece of glass or painted MDF.

Everything was great, except the finish.  While I liked the brass color, it was certainly worn, and not in a good way.

Hoping to keep the brass, I tried using Rub N Buff on it.  No such luck, it just wiped right off the slick surface.  Well, it was worth a shot.  Sure, I could have used spray paint, but I’m not sure how it would hold up over time.  When in doubt, I turn to my trusty friend Blue Magic.

Pair Blue Magic and fine steel wool and you’ll get a shiny, chrome finish on brass plated items.  Because this stuff is stinky, I rolled my cart outside.  I strongly recommend wearing rubber gloves, too.  The thicker, the better.  Then, dip the steel wool in the cream, and polish away.  Ten or twenty seconds later, depending on the thickness of the brass and how hard you’re scrubbing, you’ll see chrome.

Keep on going.  Now, I’m not sure exactly how/why this works, but here’s my best guess.  The steel wool acts as a fine sandpaper, removing the brass plate.  If used alone, it would scratch the metal, so the Blue Magic polishes it.  Thanks to all the crazy joints and details, it took me about five hours to get this done.

I decided to keep the brass on the wheels, both because I like the look and I didn’t know if the metals were the same.  I quickly sanded down the legs to re-stain them a rich walnut color.  Boy was that quicker!  A coat of silver spray paint on the black rubber pieces and here she is.

Obviously I’m using it as a side table in our living room.  The size is great, but I’ve got some styling I want to do.  Oh, and the bottom shelf.

I’m loving the shiny finish.

Those dark wooden legs, me-ow.

I’m excited for the bottom shelf and pretty details.

Castors are awesome, too.  If we don’t need it as a side table down the line, we can always roll this to another room, inside or out.

Basically, it’s exactly what I didn’t know I wanted.

How about a budget breakdown?

Cart:  $12.99 at Goodwill

Blue Magic and steel wool:  Already had on hand (costs about 12 bucks at car stores)

Sand paper and stain:  Left over from the bookshelf and bench

Silver spray paint:  From my stash

Time: roughly 6 1/2 hours

Total: $12.99 plus 6 1/2 hours of my time.  Not bad at all.

Do you like the changes?  Or did you prefer the brassy finish?  What’s your favorite recent thrifty find?  Ever tried Blue Magic on brass?  I’m contemplating using it on another project, but I’ve got some testing (and probably convincing of Ben) to do first.

It’s a Cougar! No, Wait!

It’s a bobcat.  Having a cougar in the back yard (either a real cat or a Mrs. Robinson-esque lady) would be strange.  I much prefer the four-wheeled bobcat version we have.  A week ago, Ben brought home the bobcat from his work and started digging up the back yard.  To get the bobcat up the hill, he had to gently slope the hillside.

After an hour or so, he finally got the hillside finished and came into the yard.

Digging around, pulling the sandy paver base out was easy digging and went quickly.

Over the weekend, Ben really got to work.  All the stone retaining walls are too short/unstable/easy to break and don’t have the look we’re going for.  See what I mean?

Oh, the cross hatching you see in the picture above?  Just the window screen.  The boys and I hunkered down in the house.  Because broken bits of concrete were flying, we put pieces of foam insulation over the new windows.  How much would it suck to shatter a newly installed window?!?  So, my peeping Tom vantage points were limited, hence the screen shot.

Digging sand and dirt was the easy part.  Lifting giant slabs of concrete, not so much.

Trying to break it with a sledgehammer wasn’t working, so Ben used something with a little more muscle.  Lift…

Higher, higher, still higher.

And flip.  Broken pieces were easier to hammer to more manageable pieces.

Quitting time for Friday night.

With the fountain out-of-the-way, Ben set out to destroy the patio off the pool house.  Which included moving a giant rock.  You think I’m kidding when I say giant?  Take a look.

That is only the top part of it.  Here’s the bottom.  Yes, I was cringing and hoping it would work.  Ben is tenacious with that bobcat.  Oh boys and their toys.

Now we’ve got a giant pile of dirt.

This morning, the concrete cutter came out, cut the pool house opening, and left.  More details on that next week!

Progress, but it’s so dirty now.  Sand constantly in the house.  What does your backyard look like?  Or any other large equipment?

Art with Heart

For too long, er, the past five months, our bedroom has looked like this:

Ugly paint, minimal furniture, and no art on the walls.  Come to think of it, the whole house looks like that.  Well, I decided I had enough.  Time to take matters into my own hands.  When Jenny mounted a cheapo Kinko’s print to foam core, I thought it looked cool.  Then Katie did it, too.  And then a light bulb went off above my head.  Hellooooo, we pulled foam insulation out of the wet bar in the pool house.

So I measured, hoping the foam was at least two feet wide.  Hooty hoo!  The foam was exactly 24 inches wide by about 4 feet.  I had already gone through our wedding photos and chose two of my favorite ‘we’re not posed smiling at the camera’ shots.  Sure the first one is blurry, but I like it that way.  A little more artistic and unexpected.  I love that it’s sort of a ‘moment in time’ capturing the emotions we felt that June day.

After sizing and editing the photos in Photoshop, I saved the files, headed to FedEx Office (I still call it Kinko’s) and had ’em printed.  For $4.50 each, I got two 24 by 36 inch prints.  I headed home and started cutting the foam.  Well, tried to cut it.  The utility knife didn’t work on my 2 inch thick foam.

If something doesn’t work, I call Ben to ask for his ideas.  He suggested using the table saw.  After a little begging, he agreed to cut the pieces for me when he got home.  He did and it worked like a charm.  Just to be safe, I had Ben cut the pieces at 23 1/2 by 35 1/2 inches.  With the sides straight, I mixed up a little, okay a lot, of kelly green paint.  Because I hate being careful when I don’t have to, I painted the sides first, then mounted my photos.

Speaking of mounting photos, I started by using ModPodge, which was a mistake.  It bubbled up and I had to work with it a lot.  After one short edge, I searched the house, knowing I had spray adhesive somewhere.  Ah ha!  Found it.  Outside, I lined my print up, peeled back a small bit, sprayed, then pressed it into place.  With that first edge stuck down, I sprayed the rest, working in smallish lines, pressing the paper down, and smoothing it from the center out.  Because I did this along (and thought getting it to lay straight would be more difficult) I didn’t trim my paper before mounting.  I had a little paper overhanging the edges, so I flipped the pieces over and carefully cut along the edge using a utility knife.

To hang these big guys, I decided to just poke a hole in the back for a nail.  First, I measured a few inches down, then centered.

Ben suggested adding small pieces of pipe, just to prevent the nail tearing the foam.  What a thinker.  He cut two small pieces of copper pipe (which we were about to take to the recycling center).

With the copper tube centered in my cross-hairs, I pushed down.  I couldn’t get the pipe flush unless I pulled out some of the foam.  A needle nose pliers pulled it out and the pipe stayed wedged in the foam.

I hung the pictures on either side of the big window.

Finally, something on the walls!  Two big somethings.

Better yet, these prints have meaning to us.

Walking into our room doesn’t make me cringe anymore.  Rather than focus on the terrible wall color, I see pretty prints that remind me what a wonderful man I have.

And it only cost nine bucks because I had the rest of the materials.

A pop of green is another fun touch.

Only three more walls to get something on, including this giant one.  Oy, that blue.  Hopefully we can scrape the popcorn ceilings and repaint this fall/winter.

I don’t know which is worse, the awful blue or the burnt red in the bathroom.  No wait, the red is much worse.  At least there’s something pretty in the room now.

What do you think of the most recent additions?  What art have you added to your home?  Oversized prints?  A custom painting?  Blurry photos that you love?