DIY: Quick & Easy Table Runner

Last Wednesday night after work, I headed to my parents' house to have dinner with them.  My mom had been to Target earlier in the day and scored these three sets of sheets from the clearance rack.

Pink and white stripe, green and white polka dot, and pink and white polka dot.  She got the queen-size sheet sets for under 20 bucks.  Love a good deal!

So why the sheets?  Well, we've got some more card table tent ideas up our sleeves and buying sheets is a lot cheaper than buying lots of yardage of fabric.  Plus, it's a bigger piece of fabric.  If you're ever making something big, sheets are the way to go if you don't want to have to piece your fabric together and have a seam down the middle.  Just a little tip from me to you.  We'll be able to get several tents made out of these three sets of sheets.

Before we started cutting out walls and roofs, I asked my mom if I could cut off a strip from the side of the striped set.  It didn't take me long after seeing the sheets to decide that they'd make a great table runner for a Pinkalicious party that's being held at my house later today.  Mom did not object, so I grabbed my scissors and cut off a piece.

It was a wrinkly piece because I used the fitted sheet so we'd have as much of the good flat sheet to use for tents as possible.  All I had to do was cut off the elastic and give it a good ironing and you can't even tell it used to be a sheet.

Since this was a spur-of-the-moment idea, I had not measured my table at home nor did I know the measurements of a standard table runner.  I didn't care, though.  I figured I could just wing it.

To give it just a little more detail (and because, truthfully, I was nervous it would be too short since I cut from the edge of the fitted sheet and not the middle where it's longer), I added a 3-ish inch strip of the same fabric turned in the opposite direction on each end of my long strip.

Mom still had some white sheets left over from lining Parker's tent so I was able to use a piece of them to line my table runner.  Like a good little sewer, I placed my right sides together and pinned all the way around.

It didn't take long to make my way all the way around, sewing them together.  I tell ya, sewing striped fabric is the way to go.  It's so nice to have a little line to follow!  I may make that a new sewing requirement for me - I'll only make things out of striped fabric.  It should would make everything easier.

After turning it inside out and ironing it, I did do some quick top-stitching all the way around so it'd keep its shape if I ever washed it.

When I got home, I threw it on our dining table to see how it'd look.  Guess I didn't really need to worry about the length being too short.  It's longer than any other table runner I have.  Oops?

When the chair is pushed up under the table, the edge of the table runner almost kisses the seat of the chair.  I'm ok with that, though.  I figure for something that I knocked out very quickly after work one day, it could be a lot worse.

For some reason, the end of the runner sometimes reminds me of the cuff on a man's shirt.  You know, something like this:

Did anyone else think that?  No?  Just me?  Well, alrighty then.

We're just a few hours away from the Pinkalicious party.  I'll be back with more details soon!

Pirate Tent

I told you that you wouldn't have to wait long to see our second attempt at the card table tent, and so here I am keeping my word.  When we made Bren's for her 3rd birthday, we knew that her cousin Parker would also be turning 3 just eight days later, and we couldn't make a tent for her without making one for him.  So that trip to JoAnn's that turned into a 3 hour affair was spent picking out fabrics for two tents, not just one. Now, with Bren's, we pretty much followed the pattern that I bought and made very few alterations.  We couldn't do that with Parker's though.  What little boy wants a tent that looks like a playhouse, complete with flowers and curtains?  Not Parker, that's for sure.  After doing a little googling, I found this etsy store that had several different themed card table tents.  It was there that we found a Pirate tent and instantly knew that's what Parker's should be.

We were able to use the pattern we had for all the basic measurements.  But for all the details, I had to draw everything by hand.  Luckily his doesn't have as many teeny tiny details like Bren's, but it still turned out just as cute.

And of course, just like with Bren's, I waited until during the birthday party to take pictures of the finished product.  Shame on me.  These aren't great pics by any means, but you know I'm going to share them anyway.

Might as well start with the front.  The door to this one is a flap, just like on Bren's.

Zoomed in on the door, you can see we "hung" an old wooden sign warning trespassers to enter if they dare.

No front door is complete without a lantern.  My mom said the nice thing with working with the black fabric was that it hid any of her sewing mistakes.  The down side is that it showed every single piece of lent, and this fabric picks up everything!

And it wouldn't be a Pirate tent (fort? ship?) without a skull and crossbones.

The two sides of Parker's tent were much less detailed that the playhouse tent.  One side had three portholes.

And the other had a regular window with broken shutters.

For the back, we drew a flagpole and flag so that the skull and crossbones could fly high.

And that's it.  Much simpler than the playhouse version, but perfect for a little boy.  My mom got Parker the perfect gift to go with his Pirate tent.  Check back for his birthday party pictures to see what it was!

Card Table Tent

I'm excited to finally reveal the card table tent, also known as the super secret project that my mom and I have been working on! But first, let's back up.  Waaaay up.  All the way to March.  That's when my sister-in-law, Bren's mom, emailed me a link to this super cute idea.  It was one of those afternoons where it was clear neither of us felt like being at work, as we kept sending fun links back and forth to each other.  With this particular link she wrote, "This is so cute!  I'd never get around to making one but Aunt Lucy might!"

Y'all, it's like she was daring me to do it.  Game on.

That was March.  At the time I thought, "Brennie's birthday isn't until August.  This will be a fun project for me to tackle over the summer."  And then the summer got busy with things like trips to the beach, weddings, and that really big surprise party we threw.  Before I knew it, it was the last week of July and I was just a couple weeks out from Bren's birthday.

I did some googling to refresh my myself on the project and ended up finding this handy tutorial.  At just thirteen bucks, I ordered the pattern without hesitation.  Sure couldn't hurt to have the dimensions listed out for me, right?

Here's the picture from the pattern that I would be recreating for my favorite 3-year-old little girl.

Cute, isn't it?  The idea is to make a fabric playhouse that fits right over the top of a standard card table.  Then it can be folded up and put away easily.  Genius!

Originally, I thought I'd try to tackle this sewing project by myself.  I knew my mom would be super impressed with me if I could pull it off.  But then the pattern came in and I started reading through it and there were a lot of words in there I didn't know.  Plus, time was running out.

I sprung the idea on my mom the weekend I stayed at her house.  I had a feeling she'd think it was cute but I didn't realize how excited she'd be about it.  We headed to JoAnn's first thing that Saturday morning and ended up spending over three hours there!  We decided to go with a pink and green color scheme so that it'd match Bren's room, and in addition to being the right shades of those colors, we also wanted them to be cheap.  We spent a lot of time pulling bolts of fabric and then putting them back before we were finally ready to stand in the ridiculously long line to get them cut.

Later that night, my parents had a wedding to attend so, since I was left to entertain myself, I went ahead and got started cutting out all the pieces.  The nice thing about having the pattern is that it had all the detail pieces drawn to scale so I could just trace them onto a piece of Wonder Under and then iron it to my fabric.  No guesswork - my kind of project.

Now, some of you that have been reading along for a while may be a little confused about the hint I gave.  How do a tree, door, and mailbox fit into this project?  Well, I never said they were a real tree, door, and mailbox.  I'm sneaky like that.

See?  Here's the tree laid out on the kitchen table after I'd cut out all the individual pieces.

I have to say, I had the easy job for this project.  I did all the tracing and cutting out while my mom did all the sewing.  She even took it one step further than the pattern and lined it so you wouldn't see all the seams on the inside.

I didn't do a very good job of photographing all the steps, but here's a shot of one side laid out on the table.

The whole tent is made out of fabric except for those flowers.  We did those out of felt so that we could just sew them down in the middle for a 3-D effect without having to worry about the edges fraying.

We barely got the tent finished in time for the birthday party.  In fact, we were tacking on the curtains just a couple hours before the party started.  Here's where I goofed again.  I should've taken some good pictures of it at my mom's house.  Since I didn't do that, all my pictures were taken while dodging the birthday girl and her friends as they crawled in and out of it.  I apologize in advance for the poor quality of the pictures - it's super cute in real life!

The tree wraps around a corner, in between two windows complete with shutters and curtains.

Close up of window.

The opposite side has the two bushes with felt flowers.

The address for Bren's playhouse is her birthday: August 18.

To the left of her front door is a light.

And to the right is this really cute mailbox.

It even has a pocket so she can receive mail!  I had every intention of putting her birthday cards in the mailbox, but then I forgot.  Bad, Aunt Lucy.

You can see in this picture of the front that my mom lined the hole for the door in white to make it look like a door frame.  (You can also see the doorbell in this picture.)

I waited til the tent cleared out before sticking my head in to get a picture of the inside.  The inside is lined in white even though it looks pink from the sun shining through in this picture.  The curtains are one of my favorite parts of the playhouse.  They're a super cute polka dot on the outside and then lined with this cute green fabric on the inside.  They're tied together with a piece of pink ribbon and then tacked down to the window frame so they don't move.

I'm not 100% sure, but I think the birthday girl liked it.  Here she is sticking her head out to tell us to come in and play.

Later on in the afternoon, I caught her 6-year-old cheetoh-eating brother hanging out in the tent.  Busted!

So there you have it - our first attempt at the card table tent.  There's a good chance you'll get to see our second attempt at it very soon.  It was a fun project to work on and I hope Bren has fun playing in it!

More pictures from Bren's birthday party coming soon!

 

Pinterest Challenge Redo

I had totally accepted my Pinterest Challenge FAIL yesterday when I wrote my post about it.  Really, I had.  I knew there were some things that I could change before setting my crayons out in the sun to bake again and I had every intention of trying out some of those changes.  I felt like my first attempt hadn't been all that bad.  Heck, some of you even thought it looked good enough to frame.  Even still, I knew I could do better. But then...sigh.

Then I started clicking links and looking around and reading comments and I started seeing all these other melted crayon masterpieces and they looked good.  Like, really good.  And way better than mine.  But from what I could tell, no one else went with the sit-it-out-in-the-sun-to-bake method like I did.  Or actually I guess I should say no one stuck it out all day like I did.  Well, I'm sure someone did, just not anyone whose blog I read.

If using something other than the sun to melt the crayons could be called cheating, then I read about quite a bit of cheating going on!  There was a lot of hair dryer usage to get a nice drippy effect.  I knew that wouldn't work for me, though, because I recently sweet-talked Doc into cleaning out the little lent tray thingy on my hair dryer and now it doesn't get as hot as it used to.  Then, later in the afternoon, I read one blog post that showed the crayons dripping in the oven.  Hmmmm...

Doc is still out of town so after work I drove over to my parents house for dinner.  I know I just spent the whole weekend over there, but I'm not one to pass up on a free meal.  Especially lasagna.  (That meal almost got really expensive for me since I got pulled over on my way to their house.  Luckily I got off with just a warning.  Phew!)  There's a Fred's located just around the corner from their house and I have to pass it to get there and this time I just had to swing my car into the parking lot to pick up another pack of crayons.  This time I sprung for the 64 pack!

So while my mom finished preparing dinner, I dug around in her cabinets to find some baking tools and ignored her comments of "You are NOT cooking crayons in my oven."  I promised her I'd be real careful.

I was originally going to use the big center piece from my tri-fold foam board since I had so many more crayons, but it wouldn't fit into my mom's oven.  And then, since I had to cut it down anyway, I went ahead and made it an even 11x14 so it'd easily fit into a standard sized frame.

The rest of the prep work was all the same as the first time: line drawn at the top for straightness, colors arranged according to Roy G Biv, crayons glued down with Crayola logo on top.  When my board was all ready to go, I placed it on a cookie sheet and leaned it up against a cooking dish.

I made a little tray out of aluminum foil to catch any crazy crayon drippage.

I had no idea what temperature to set the oven to.  250 seemed like a good number to me, so that's what I went with.  Into the oven it went.

Did I mention I left my camera at home?  Yea, these awesome photos are comin' atcha from my iPhone.

I may or may not have squealed when I saw these two drips.

It's working!  And it's working fast!  The crayons started dripping just seconds after being in the oven.

It's hard not to be a cheater when it feels looks this good!

I don't know why, but this was so fascinating to me.  Especially after my first failed attempt.  The crayons that baked in the sun melted inside the wrapper first and most of the tips never really melted, they stayed hard.  But now, in the oven, it's the tips of the crayons that were melting away.  And they were all melting at what seemed to be an equal pace, regardless of their colors.  So freaking awesome.

After about a minute of good dripping, I turned the oven off so it could start to cool down and the wax could harden back up.  I felt like I had reached a good level of drippage.

Here's my masterpiece fresh out tha oven!  It smelled delicious like wax.

I've got these pretty sweet blended smears at the top of my crayon row.  This might be from me getting uber creative and putting my own twist on it, or it might be from the foam board being top heavy and flipping over backwards.  Only my mom and I will know for sure.

It's a good thing I put the aluminum foil tray down at the bottom because my drips definitely made it that far and pooled up at the bottom.  Truth be told, I kinda like the way it looks on the bottom, even though that will probably get covered up by the frame.

Like last time, I took a picture from the top.  This time, the wrappers still had a lot of wax left in them.

I think this photo is my favorite.  I love how the melted wax and blended colors look!

So there you have it.  When making melted crayon art, if at first you don't succeed, try, try again just cheat and stick it in the oven.  You won't regret it.

Pinterest Challenge: FAIL

Last Tuesday, the lovely ladies of both Young House Love and Bower Power announced that they were holding a little Pinterest Challenge.  In short, the challenge was to take inspiration from something you found on Pinterest, put your own spin on it, and then post about it today (Tuesday).  After writing the post, you could then add a link to one of their sites so that others could come visit and get inspired.  Simple, no?  They explained the challenge on their blogs using a lot more words than that, and even created a fun little video that included an HGTV celebrity whom I do not know, so feel free to click on those links to get more details. Pinterest, for those of you not in the know, is a fun site where you can pin things that interest you.  Get it?  Pin + Interest = Pinterest.  And by "pin" I mean it's a place where you can create your own folders to place things you find online that you like and don't want to forget.  Similar to saving things in your Favorites Folder, only you can see pictures instead of just names of websites.  Oh, and just like every other social media platform, people can follow your pins and you can follow others.  Or you can just search for things on the main page and look at things that people you don't know have pinned.  What I'm saying is that there's lots of cool stuff on there to look at, and it's really, really easy to get sucked in and then realize you've blown a few hours on the site.  I've noticed that when I log on my productivity levels majorly plummet, so I save it for a little treat for myself when I know I've got some time to kill.

So, back to the challenge.  I follow both Sherry and Katie on a regular basis and I have my own account on Pinterest, so when I read about the challenge I immediately thought it sounded fun.  Only problem?  I didn't have a project on Pinterest lined up to do.  They both announced the kind of projects they would be working on - Sherry's would be a light fixture for her laundry room, Katie's something for above the bed in her guest bedroom.  Those types of projects called for a lot of supplies I didn't already have on hand, like light kits.  Since I didn't already have a project in mind, nor did I have time to shop for a whole bunch of supplies, I figured this would be a challenge that I'd just have to watch from afar.  No participating for me.

Fast forward to late Wednesday afternoon when I found this fun piece of artwork on Pinterest.

(via)

Pretty awesome, right?  And no, I wasn't on there looking for a project to do so I could participate in the challenge.  I quickly logged on to pull up something I had pinned a few days earlier, and this immediately caught my attention on the home page.  Super cute, super creative, and super easy.

Did I mention that the supply list would be a cinch to get my hands on?  I mean, I can grab a foam board and a pack of crayons practically anywhere.  And that's just what I did.

What is it about a brand new pack of crayons that makes me so giddy?  It's gotta be their perfectly sharp tips and the newness of them.  They're just screaming to be colored with!

My foam board was actually one of those tri-fold boards that are used for science fair projects, so my first step was to cut off the two sides.  I was originally going to use the bigger center piece for this project, but since I only got the 24 pack of crayons (as opposed to the 64 pack), one of the smaller side pieces was plenty big enough.

While my hot glue gun heated up, I arranged my crayons in the perfect rainbow order.  Roy G Biv, y'all!

Now, I tend to err on the side of being a perfectionist, so before slapping on some hot glue and sticking the crayons down, I drew myself a line across the top so that everything would be perfectly straight.  Then I could get to gluin'.

I left a little bit of space at the top and the sides so that I could easily frame it after the crayons were melted.  What can I say, I'm a thinker.

I debated between having the Crayola logo be on top or the names of the colors, but in the end, the logo won.  My OCD came out and I decided I liked it better with them all looking the same.  Besides, what's the fun in colors that have practically the same names, like Yellow Green vs Green Yellow and Red Violet vs Violet Red.  How are kids ever supposed to learn their colors with names like those?

Approximately, oh I don't know, 48 seconds of hot-gluing later, I had my rainbow completely stuck down.

And all of my perfectly pointed tips were still in tact.  I resisted the urge to give them a good scribbling.

Here's the full view of my canvas.  Sure, my edges aren't perfectly smooth, but I was banking on a frame covering those up, so I didn't care.  See that little dent about midway down on the right?  Yea, that's where I rested on my elbow while gluing on the crayons.  Lesson learned: my body weight will leave an impression on foam board.

The next day was kinda overcast and rainy so I didn't get to set my board-o-crayons out in the sun.  I actually had to wait until Sunday to set them out to bake.

I moved a chair out into the yard where I thought they would get some full-on sun.  After a little bit of positioning and re-positioning, I left the board propped up with a slight incline.  I figured if it was straight up and down my crayon wax could drip straight down and miss the board all together.

About 30 minutes later I came back out to check on the crayons.  They were starting to look a little sweaty and the darker colors were getting melty on top.  Aww yeah.

Up close of the melty-ness.

You know what they say - a watched pot never boils - so I went inside and left the crayons to melt on their own.  I did sneak a few peeks from out the window and could tell progress was being made.  On my next trip out with the camera, the crayons looked like this.

It's like the blue and green were racing down the board and then got stopped by a major crayon wax pile-up.

I was able to make a few observations at this point.  First, the darker colors were obviously melting way faster than the lighter colors since they absorb more heat.  Second, the purple crayon on the far left was my favorite; it looked like it slid completely out of the paper wrapper all at one time but was still kinda intact.  Third, the wax was separating.  See the little white spots in between the crayons in the shot two photos up?  That's wax that was sweating through the paper.  And the lightly smeared purple-y area above the wax pile-up is where all the white wax melted off the purple crayon that's still intact, if that makes any sense.  This was shaping up to be quite the science experiment.

Once again, I headed inside so the sun could work its magic without me watching.  This time I waited a couple hours before heading back out with my camera.  Here's how it looked that time.

Um yea, pretty much the same.  The light colors still weren't budging.  What the heck?  I could tell from barely touching the paper that they were melted inside, they just weren't doing any dripping.  I was about to start running out of daylight, so I tried to help speed them along.  I grabbed a couple toothpicks and did a little poking and prodding.  Then I tapped the board up and down hoping to loosen the wax up a little.

Oh, I loosened it alright.  The pink crayons from the far right fell right off.  Crap!

(Yes, that's the instructions on how to put together a piece of furniture.  Once the melting got into full swing, I slid into under the edge of the board to protect the chair.)

I was majorly bummed about those two falling off.  I guess if the point of the project is for things to start melting, then I probably shouldn't use hot glue as my adhesive of choice.  Another lesson learned.

The view from the top was pretty cool.  You can see how the crayon wrappers are starting to look hollow.  I could see all the way through some of the darker ones that had already dripped out, and I could tell that the reds, oranges, and yellows were melted, they just weren't sliding out.

Then, while I was standing there feeling defeated and disappointed over my failed project, the pile-up of wax started sliding again.  More drips came from the dark colors too.  Can you tell in the picture below how the purple crayon from the left has started melting and there is more blue and green smeared at the top?  The glob at the bottom is moving too.

I can't even tell you how fascinating this was to me.  It was so fun to watch the drips and try to predict which way they would go!

It was blazing hot outside so I went back in, leaving the crayons out to melt a little longer just in case the lighter colors decided to get in on the action.

An hour-ish later I came back out and booyah! The oranges and yellows finally let loose!

Here's a zoomed out shot where you can see that the blues/greens/purples made it all the way to the bottom.  Good thing I put that paper down.

You can see from the shot above that the shade was creeping in, so that's as far as the melting went.  Obviously this is not worth framing, which is why I'm calling this project a FAIL.

But!  I think I'm going to attempt it again.  Maybe I could get better results if I switch up the variables a bit (like how I'm using my science fair lingo?).  For instance, what if I used a piece of plywood or something that wasn't so smooth?  Then maybe the initial globs wouldn't slide so fast and would leave more of a color streak on their way down.  Or, what if I cut off all the tips before I glued the crayons down?  That was one of the fascinating parts to me - even though the wax inside the wrappers was completely melted, the tips on the lighter colors were still hard as a rock.  Wonder if the colors would melt at an equal pace if I set it up in a hot car?  There are so many things to experiment with!

Of course, my dad insisted all day long that there's no way possible to get it right without using some kind of applied heat.  He even suggested putting it in an oven somehow.  I shot down his ideas, telling him that would just make my foam board melt.  My mom suggested I pull up the tutorial to re-read it, but I reminded her that I didn't read a tutorial, I just saw the one picture.

Turns out the joke's on me.  When I went back to pull up the original inspiration picture from Etsy (where it's for sale for $70!), I was able to read in the description that the artist uses a heat gun and applies a controlled heat application to get this outcome.  Ugh, maybe I should've done my reading before-hand.  I don't know, though.  Now that I've seen that it's possible to get them to melt from the sun, using a heat gun just seems like cheating.  What do you think?

Updated to add: The results are in!  Click here to see Sherry's awesome Clothespin Light Shade, here for Katie's really cool basket weave mirror, here for Emily's swanky nailhead trim on closet doors, and here for Lana's bold chalkboard fridge.  Looks like I'm the only one that majorly failed.  Crap.  Oh well, I'm linking up on their blogs anyway!

Updated again to add: I gave it another try!  Check out my much more successful attempt here.