Monday, August 25, 2014

Fashion is Architecture


Gorgeous 1950's style tea length dress!
Dior 1950's
1956- Givenchy Vintage Fashion
Pierre Balmain, Paris, 1952 #nymi
1953 #partydress #romantic #feminine #fashion #vintage #designer #classic #dress #highendvintage
#2 Vintage Look | Community Post: My 5 Fashion Biggest Trends For 2014
Rosie Assoulin Spring/Summer 2014
Rosie Assoulin Spring/Summer 2014
Rosie Assoulin
Coco Chanel
http://www.pinterest.com/

Classy leopard print.

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Image Via: Crush Cul de Sac
have to have a pair of leopard print pointies
Leopard Print Heels
8 Hair Bows that Sell The Trend
Leopard & Lace

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Recycled Newspaper Bowl With Lid DIY

Are you a fan of handicrafts, recycling or green living? I was browsing the Wayfair site and came across a handcrafted newspaper bowl priced at eighty dollars. How outrageous when the materials used to make this is virtually free. As a crafter I always try to say, "don't buy, just make!" Here's how:

  • recycled newspaper bowl with lid diy, crafts, go green
Divide newspaper into three strips per page. Place skewer at a right angle on corner and start rolling until just before reaching the opposite corner. Place a dab of glue and roll to the end. A paper rod is formed! You'll need lots of rods to make a bowl and lid depending on the size. I initially made fifty! Relax, turn on so music and ROLL!
  • recycled newspaper bowl with lid diy, crafts, go green
  • recycled newspaper bowl with lid diy, crafts, go green
  • recycled newspaper bowl with lid diy, crafts, go green
  • recycled newspaper bowl with lid diy, crafts, go green
  • recycled newspaper bowl with lid diy, crafts, go green
Coil your rods very tightly making sure there's no hole in the center. Firmly wrap the rod into a coil, pulling it slightly and gently until you reach the end. Additional rods can be added by putting a bit of glue on one end and inserting another rod. Continue coiling and adding rods until you reach the size you want for a bowl.
  • recycled newspaper bowl with lid diy, crafts, go green
Don't worry if you pull a rod apart. Just glue it back together. Don't glue anywhere else on the coil. You want your bowl to move freely when shaping.
  • recycled newspaper bowl with lid diy, crafts, go green
Coat coil with glue all over and while wet start shaping the bowl by gently pushing the center and moving slowly around being careful not to push too bard. It will come apart! Check the layers to make sure they are even and the bowl sits level on a table.
  • recycled newspaper bowl with lid diy, crafts, go green
Add another coat of glue and allow to dry. Make a lid the same way, only smaller, adding a knob (rolled short rod) in the center. Completed bowl and lid should be varnished. You can also paint with your choice of colors.
Knowing how to make these bowls and lids out of newspaper is a wonderful way to recycle. Try making your own version, the possibilities are unlimited!

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Draped Hypertufa Planters, Draping Fabric With a Cement Mixture


how to planters cement draped hypertufa, concrete masonry, container gardening, diy, gardening

My recipe that I had used for this project is heavy on the cement. And by that I mean that I use a lot more cement than I would in a regular hypertufa trough recipe.
I would use
1 part Portland cement (I was using a 2 qt pitcher)
1/4 part of peat ( about 1 pint)
a handful of vermiculite and mortar mix depending on how much you want it to be textured
water, about a 2 qt pitcher as above added slowly as you get it into a slurry or gravy
Cut the fabric into a circle, an oval, or even use it as a rectangle or square. Dampen it and hang it from your "tower." This will be the support that you hang it on to dry. If you want the pointed edges, be sure your support is tall enough to allow them to drape/hang.
Your tower is your support for the project as it dries. I used a bar stool for my first one. You can use a column of paint cans. or even a lamp shade. (NO, the lamp shade didn't work for me.)
It must be something sturdy to allow your fabric to "drape" and not let the ends of the wet fabric touch to floor. It will change the look of your project if the ends of the fabric touch the floor/table.
Cover your tower in plastic! The piece is a little pliable when you attempt to get it off, but it was a struggle with that bar stool. You don't want your piece to cement itself to the tower.
Check out how it hangs or "drapes" and pull it to one side or the other until you have a vision of what you like. The large one pictured at the top of the post was made from an oval cut about 26" by 39". ( I had earlier made it bigger, but decided I just couldn't handle fabric cut that big. It was a good decision, because that sucker is HEAVY after soaking it in cement gravy.
Once it is all mixed, and you have a consistency like meat gravy, not breakfast gravy ( I'm a country girl), put the whole piece of cloth into your mix and roll it around until it is all soaked with cement on both sides.
Wear gloves of course. I had to pick the mix up and smoosh it into the fabric on both sides, being sure to get it into folds. Did I lie when I said it was MESSY?
**Be sure to mix up enough slurry to get it all wet. Depending on the size of your fabric piece, you may need to double the recipe. If you have leftovers, have a few small cloths ready to drape over a butter dish or bowl, or just pour it into those dishes to make feet for a trough.
When you are draping it over your tower, it is easy to pull and adjust until you get the look that pleases you.
(BTW, I made the biggest mess in the garage floor. Oh my! But when it dries, you can scrape it off and the ShopVac takes care of it. Whew!)
I left my creation for 2 nights in a cold garage covered with a plastic garbage bag, then pulled it off the bar stool tower support with difficulty. It is slightly pliable at this point, but did harden after the next step. I put it back into the garbage bag and left it for 24 hours.
**Important Note: Some sources on the internet speak of setting it to dry in the sun. My advice here is NOT to put it in the sun, but in a shady area and be SURE IT IS COVERED BY A PLASTIC BAG. This is what effects the cure!
After yours is fully cured and hard, you may drill a hole in it with your drill that you use to put a hole in the regular trough. Since it is very thin, it drills easily. No problem.
If you want to use it as a container in which to set a plastic pot of annuals or other flowers or plants, that is fine too.

http://www.hometalk.com/4154962/how-to-planters-cement-draped-hypertufa



THE SERENITY PRAYER

GOD GRANT ME THE SERENITY
TO ACCEPT THE THINGS I CANNOT CHANGE;
COURAGE TO CHANGE THE THINGS I CAN;
AND WISDOM TO KNOW THE DIFFERENCE.

LIVING ONE DAY AT A TIME;
ENJOYING ONE MOMENT AT A TIME;
ACCEPTING HARDSHIPS AS THE PATHWAY TO PEACE;
TAKING, AS HE DID, THIS SINFUL WORLD
AS IT IS, NOT AS I WOULD HAVE IT;
TRUSTING THAT HE WILL MAKE ALL THINGS RIGHT
IF I SURRENDER TO HIS WILL;
THAT I MAY BE REASONABLY HAPPY IN THIS LIFE
AND SUPREMELY HAPPY WITH HIM
FOREVER IN THE NEXT.
AMEN.

--REINHOLD NIEBUHR