Archive for the ‘How To’ Category

Make Your Own Magazine Files from Diaper Boxes

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

There are lots and lots of things going on right now that I could write about…but honestly, it all requires a lot of deep thought and confession and me vomiting my emotions all over my computer screen…and I don’t want to deal with that right now.

So, I’m going to post a tutorial. On a Wednesday. With pictures! And DIAGRAMS! And exclamation points!!!

Because this is what I do when I’m really stressed. I make shit. Specifically, shit that I think will help me improve my life.

And since making money is kind of illegal, I’m making organizational stuff and pretty stuff for my house.

dyi magazine file holder

I fantasize about having an organized, pretty office space. Currently, my office is a corner of the dining room, and it usually looks like a scene from a movie right after the kids have been left home alone for a weekend and (predictably) had a party that got out of hand.

And when I see my desk every morning when I walk out of my room, I’m usually wearing the same expression as one of those angry parents returning from vacation to a (somehow completely unexpected) disaster of a house.

But that is going to change…and it’s going to change for very very little money.

So, step one is to organize our magazines. They live in piles all over our house and when I want to reference one for some inspiration, I can never find the one I’m looking for. And I know that what I need is a whole bunch of these:

Magazine file holder

But they’re super expensive…like $7 to $25 for ONE. I would totally pay that for some of the cute ones (like the ones in the pic above, from The Container Store, West Elm and See Jane Work)…if I had the money. But I don’t.

What I do have, though, is lots and lots of diaper boxes. Because I made the mistake of going with disposables, and after paying thousands of dollars in diapers over the past three years (not an exaggeration), I wouldn’t throw the boxes out, so that I would feel like something that I paid for did not go out with the garbage covered in poo poo.

I saw great tutorials all over the internet about how to make your own magazines holders from cereal boxes, but they were just really flimsy. If I put more than three magazines in them, they kind of fell apart. Plus, they were barely big enough for the magazines, and I thought they looked a little puny. Diaper boxes, however, are really sturdy, and have lots of folds already in them, and come in lots of different sizes.

Is that enough explanation? Want some instructions? And maybe some pictures? And more question marks?

Here is the diagram of a standard diaper box. I had four boxes on hand and no two were the same size, so this diagram is just done to some general proportions. You can modify it fairly easily according to the size box that you have. And, of course, you don’t have to have diaper boxes…that’s just what I’ve got.

Right, diagram:

DYI Magazine file holder diagram

That’s your box, after you’ve broken it down (completely unfolded it). Or something like your box.

Notice the solid line is anywhere that there is a cut. The dotted line represents folds.

Do you think that I think you can’t read? (more questions marks, yay!)

So, lay your box out flat on the floor or table, and look at the largest panel (there should be two in the same size). Lay a magazine down on top of it and make sure that the panel is at least a quarter to a half inch larger on all sides that the magazine. It’s fine if it’s bigger…just needs to be at least that much larger so that magazine will fit inside.

Then, check out this diagram below.

DYI Magazine file holder diagram

The blue lines are where you’re going to cut. Draw it out with a pencil first, and make sure to work with the folds and cuts that are already there. This will make your life a lot easier. After you’ve drawn it out (with a ruler, yo), you can (should) use a utility knife to make the cuts.

DYI Magazine file holder diagram

These (above) are the shapes you should have after you’ve made your cuts.

Notice that they are not oriented the same way. Technically, they can be oriented the same way, but I wanted to keep the printed side of the box out and the plain side in (so that I wouldn’t have to paint the inside white to cover the diaper logo later). That might be kind of confusing, and if so, sorry. This should maybe clear it up:

DYI Magazine file holder diagram

That’s what the pieces will look like, and how they will eventually make this damn thing.

Here is what my box looked like after I made all of my cuts:

DYI Magazine file holder diagram

And my pieces:

DYI Magazine file holder diagram

I did cut one extra piece that was not on the diagram (sorry…forgot). I just cut off one of the flaps that was not used in the two main pieces. It was a flap that was the same size as the bottom flaps.

So, with everything cut out, I got my trusty glue gun ready and started assembling.

First, I hot glued the pieces for the back together (these are the tall pieces, labeled D in the diagram above).

DYI Magazine file holder diagram

Seriously, just lay ‘em out, add glue to one side, then lay the other side on top of it. Press down, glue dries.

And now, you have this:

DYI Magazine file holder diagram

Then, fold the piece on the left up, so you’re looking at the back side of the front piece (the one labeled C”). Add hot glue, then fold the other side up, and lay the corresponding C piece on top.

You have basically just folded the whole thing up to exactly how it will look finished, except with the bottom open.

It should now look like this:

DYI Magazine file holder diagram

Then, I turned it upside down, and glued the bottom pieces together. Now, with the back and front, my flaps were the exact same size, because I was just using the flaps that were already there on the box. With the bottom, these are two smaller pieces that were cut from the smaller panels of the box (follow that?), so they did not cover each other completely as the other flaps (front and back) did.

This is why I cut the extra piece. After I glued the two bottom flaps together, I glued the extra piece on top of them. This piece covered the entire bottom, and also gives the bottom some extra support).

And here’s my box, all finished:

DYI Magazine file holder diagram

But it wasn’t really so pretty.

So I wrapped it up in some brown craft paper (that I absolutely * l o v e * and use for everything). I just wrapped it like I would wrap a present, but tucked the paper into the hole so it would be long enough that you wouldn’t see the paper ends.

Here, just look:

DYI Magazine file holder diagram

You can see the two diaper box magazine holders I made here (below) on the same shelf with the one I made from the cereal box (it’s the one in the middle). It is cuter in this photo, mainly because of the adorable wrapping paper, but it is a lot smaller (it can only hold National Geographic magazines), and it really needs the diaper boxes on either side to even hold it up.

DYI Magazine file holder diagram

For the next ones I make, I’m going to try to use some fabric so that they’ll be a little more durable, and I’m going to try to add some label/tag holders like in the mass-produced examples earlier in this post. I think that will work much better than the little round hangy tags I’m using now, and will probably make them look a lot more finished. Maybe even cut out some little windows in the fronts?

…And this makes me wonder if I couldn’t make a lot of those little organizer boxes from crap I have laying around (with exclamation points and diagrams, of course)…and for free!!!

DUN DUN DUN…to be continued…

I’m linking up to a linky party…yes, I finally got the balls to do it. Go check out the other amazing projects posted at Today’s Creative Blog Get Your Craft On! Y’all know I love this site, so this is kind of a big deal that I finally feel like I have a project that is worthy of posting over there.

Get Your Craft On Tuesday

How To Lighten the Mood

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

*Disclaimer: To my male readers, especially those who know me for realsies…stop reading here, or your eyes will feel like they’ve been dipped in acid. I promise.

Now that that’s out of the way…

The yearly check-up of my girlie bits has never really bothered me. Sure, it’s mildly uncomfortable, but once you’ve popped out a baby or two, laying on a table with your legs spread and knowing that there are less than three people down there armed with only a small, non-sharp instrument seems like a walk in the park.

I will concede, however, that it is a situation that one does not find themselves in very often (well, hopefully), and can tend to be a bit awkward.

So, I try to lighten the mood by making generic small talk, but I think I’m just weird enough naturally that I can break the ice just by merely existing.

Back up a bit, and I’m in the elevator on the way up to the doc’s office, and I get an email. There are problems with the shirt order for the charity walk I’m co-hosting that is happening in a few short weeks. The problem is that there might not be enough to fill all of the orders, and I just found out that our turnout has a good chance of being better than we anticipated.

So, I’m kind of frantic about this, but I go on in, get my blood drawn, pee in the cup and wait my turn in the stirrups.

I get called back almost immediately, so I go on in and don the classic paper gown. I figure I have a few minutes, so I get out my phone and try to email the people back to see if there is any way that we can get more shirts, or at least our original order amount. I’m kind of freaking out, because everyone is all about the shirts. We’re getting shirts, right? You have shirts? All walks have shirts.

Now, when I send emails, I read them aloud to myself as I’m typing. Because I’m crazy. And because I have to hear the words to make sure they work. If I don’t read it, I find that I just randomly drop half the words of a sentence, because my fingers apparently think they are unnecessary. Psshhhh…lazy verbs…who needs ‘em.

So, I’m sitting there in my paper gown, mumbling about how important shirts are, and my doctor and her nurse walk in. They’re sneaky and quiet, and I know they heard at least a little bit of my dissertation on the value of shirts. I kind of tried to mention that I wasn’t talking about my shirt, but shirts for kids with special needs, but that sounded even more crazy. So I just go “Hi, how are you? Good, good,” laid back and popped my legs open.

See I don’t like to dilly-dally on these matters.

So then they’re asking me all about my last period. And I haven’t got a bloody idea.

Ha ha, bloody, get it?

Menstrual jokes aside, I really don’t know when my period was. I never do. My husband knows better than I do, but that’s mainly because he has a much better sense of time. If something happened two months ago, I may still start a story about it with “The other day…”

So I think for a minute, then I’m all “I think CVS had a great deal on tampons and pads the third week of March, so i think that’s when it was.”

Turns out I was wrong about what week the sale happened, and likely my period as well, but I informed them that my word was not very reliable in this scenario.

But really, nursing women aren’t supposed to have periods at all, so I think it sucks that I started mine at exactly six weeks postpartum with both kids. And then it never comes on any regular schedule, so how I am supposed to keep track of it?

The nurse walked out of the room giggling (I’d say it was a borderline “good hearty laugh”), and it made me feel good that my complete inability to track my cycle has brightened someone’s day.

How To Organize the Top of Your Dresser

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

So Tuesdays here are getting a little bit of a makeover…because honestly, I can’t write a tutorial every month, much less every week. As a result, Tuesday posts will now be either of the tutorial variety, or of the slightly different “How-to” variety.

What’s the difference, you may ask?

Tutorials really should actually include instructions. However, a “how-to” may be instructions, a list, or just a clever title reflecting whatever it is that I may want to write about that day. Also, I need alliteration, or I will die, and the “t” in “How to” is just enough to keep me from slipping into a blog-induced coma.

So, ready for this?

Ta-da!

How-To Tuesday

Ok, so a while back, I shared a photo of what happens to the top of the dresser by my bedroom door.

And it was ugly.

Cluttered bedroom dresser

See? Told you.

Anyway, long before I posted that photo, I knew something had to be done about that mess. And then after I posted it, I was all “I’m showing a slice of real life…that’s got to count for something.”

Then this whole blog home tour thing happened, and I looked at all of the gorgeous houses these women have, and I was singing a different tune.

Now, mind you, I have very realistic expectations for the condition of my house, considering that we have two children, two adults who hate to clean, and two very time consuming jobs. But the house envy still gave me the gumption to get going on that dresser.

So, folks…here is where we are now.

organized antique handmade bedroom dresser

And because I’m so awesome and so fond of inane detail, I’m going to tell you what was there and how I organized it to get it looking this darn cute. Oh, and hopefully, it will provide some inspiration for someone, somewhere, with a similar situation.

What was there:
* A whole bunch of nursing pads
* Random items that our dear daughter brings into our room…this included an unopened pack of shoe strings, shell necklace, and cell phone manual
* Several different snuggle blankets
* About 5 bras…because that’s where they go when they are removed, and that is where they stay until they are called into boob holding service once more
* Several maternity tops that never made it into the “maternity clothes” box for the attic
* That pack of gigantic underwear I bought by accident (OMG, I can’t believe I haven’t written about this yet…remind me later, ok?)
* Two meat company hats
* A bunch of coupons that came in packages of diapers
* A stack of clean, folded, white men’s undershirts that never made it to the drawer where they live
* Mostly empty container of Tums
* A whole bunch of receipts
* A whole bunch of Kyla’s pay stubs
* The unopened package of Dora undies waiting for potty training to happen
* A few bits of string, buttons, change, three non-matching toddler socks…

And a partridge in a pear tree :)

No, really, somewhere towards the bottom left, there was a bird key chain.

There was a clear pattern here…a bunch of stuff that never made it where it was supposed to go, but obviously didn’t belong on the dresser. And most of these items had a home not far from their current resting place.

So, the real pattern is laziness.

But I’m hoping to kick that, and keep it like this.

organized antique handmade bedroom dresser

Here is where everything went:

As I was going through everything, I found a lot more than what is listed above. Like three stuffed animals and a flash light.

* I am giggling as I write this, because it has not escaped me how hilarious and sad it is that we had all of that stuff just sitting in piles on the dresser *

I took an inventory of the items that I knew would end up right back on the dresser. You know, because something is always going to end up there again.

The receipts need to just go in the trash or of to be filed away as soon as they come out of the pockets. End of story. We’re adults, and we should be able to handle that.

Then there is the matter of the other “pocket finds.” The buttons, the loose change, the bottle caps, bottle caps, keys…whatever.

The change is easy. A mason jar (leftover from our wedding decorations) is a great place to put change, and it kind of goes with our whole “old country farm cottage” thing we’ve got going on.

We had this cute little flower plate that used to sit in our foyer to catch keys and other items that were generally discarded in that part of the house. However, Kyla Brown has taken to dropping his keys and wallet on the dresser so that tiny fingers do not find them and misplace them. So, the little plate got a new life as a dresser accessory, sitting there anxiously awaiting those keys and wallets, or belts, or gum, or other items that need to be easily accessible for daily use.

Then there is the other stuff. Cue the pretty ivory-slash-porcelain sugar jar. Don’t remember when or where I bought it, but it was cheap, and Kyla did not like it for holding sugar. He said it was too small to hold a five pound bag, so he didn’t want to use it. Kitchen snob. Anyway, so now it gets to sit on our dresser, acting as a haven for those miscellaneous pocket finds on their journey to pure organization.

Two wood cigar boxes hold other randomness, like the various paper items that we want to save for sentimental value. The contents of those boxes could be a post all by itself. Napkins with inside jokes scribbled on them, plastic wristbands from bars and shows, phone numbers on McDonald’s receipts, pebbles that we thought were pretty…yeah, I know, I will be on hoarders when I’m old, but at least he’ll be on there with me, because half of it is his.

And, lastly, we have my jewelry boxes…the tarnished silver one that some sweet relative gave me when I was in high school, and the awesome box I found at Home Goods when I lived in Savannah. These are two of my favorite things in the entire house.

Side note: if you’re considering coming to my house and going straight for those boxes, don’t waste your time, unless you want my engagement ring that we bought at Belk, on clearance, for twelve bucks. And if you touch it, I will kill you.

organized antique handmade bedroom dresser

I’m planning to get another size mason jar or old bottle for holding fresh flowers, but I have yet to have the heart to cut any of the ones in my yard. Maybe when my gladiolus bloom. I think I need some more height there in front of the light switch, and it would be super awesome to wake up to flowers every morning.

One day, you’ll get to see what we do with that dresser. I’m torn on what to do with it, since one of the handles needs to be fixed and the top layer of paint was probably already peeling when I was born. I want it to look nice, and not be a safety hazard for my kids (peeling lead paint…check!), but I am having a hard time knowing what to do. Knowing that it was built by my great great grandfather makes me want to be extra careful of what I do with it.

Any ideas, now that y’all can see it?

How To Make Open Shelving Look Good

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

So, The Mama-In-Law is re-doing her kitchen, and is graciously allowing me to help her come up with ideas. And I’m super excited about it…I love decorating, and think I have some good ideas, even though you would never know it looking at my house.

One idea that she is entertaining is the concept of keeping her cabinet doors off and going with open shelving. Since she has a smaller kitchen, I think it would be awesome, and really make the room look bigger. But the problem, as with any open storage, is how to set it up so that it is usable and pretty.

So I decided to hit the intraweb and see what I could see. I thought other people might be interested in some of this, so I’m sharing it here. Plus, since The Mama-In-Law reads the blog, I can just be like “go look at the blog,” and she’ll be able to see what I mean without having to read out a super long link to her over the phone. See? Win-win.

Open Shelves in Kitchen

(Left to right, top to bottom: Coastal Living via The Inspired Room, Country Living via The Inspired Room, Kitchen & Bath Ideas via The Inspired Room, HGTV)

Open Kitchen Shelving

(All: Country Living)

As you can see, there are many gorgeous inspiration photos out there, but there is one major problem with all of these.

That shit ain’t gonna be functional. If you can keep your shelves looking like that all the time, either you A) are really rich B) never use your kitchen C) have some large pantry somewhere holding all of the stuff that you actually use.

Since none of these situations apply to The In-Laws, I had to look harder to find lived-in open shelving. Thankfully, I found these:

Real Life Open Kitchen Shelving

(Country Living, The Inspired Room)

Livable Open Kitchen Shelving

(Both: Kitchen & Bath Ideas via The Inspired Room)

Basically, it seems like, in order to have open shelves that are cute and utilitarian, you just need to organize. Here are some ideas that I came up with, and a few that I read.

1. Include a few items on your shelves that are pretty, and tie in with your decor. Just look at these as accent pieces.

2. Have the entire rest of the shelving dedicated to things that you actually use, and preferably things that you use regularly. Not only is it practical, but it helps to ensure that you won’t have a bunch of crap sitting up there collecting dust, which will just look bad and make you stressed out about how everyone can tell that you dust like twice a year.

3. If you’re going to put your standard, every day pantry items up there, like canned goods and boxed dinners, take a tip from the grocery stores…move everything to the front of the shelf, so that they are all aligned. It will look much neater and less cluttered if it looks like there is a method to your madness.

4. Use cute containers (old tin boxes, wicker baskets, canisters, etc.) to hide some of the clutter of the not-so-pretty items you have to have. Maybe put all of your coffee stuff in one basket, put your sugar and rice in their own canisters, and all of your condiments in an old hat box.

5. Anything that you have that is cute and large, put it up front. You can hide the less pretty stuff behind it, and can get to it easily by moving one large item, rather than having to move a bunch of little stuff.

6. Most importantly, just make sure it works. The good thing with taking the doors off your cabinets, though, is that in the case that you decide it is not going to work for you, you can always just put the doors back on. I guess you’re just SOL if you go buy cute shelving and it doesn’t work out. In that case, it would be an uncomfortable break up for your wallet and your walls, so maybe wade in before diving head first into the whole “open shelves” thing.

And, here are all of the articles I used for reference (fyi – they contain some great tips on kitchen organization and decorating):

The Inspired Room – How to have open shelving in your kitchen (without daily staging)
HGTV – Kitchen Cabinet Styles
Country Living – Kitchen Storage and Organization Ideas
Country Living – Efficient Kitchen Pantry Ideas
Kitchen & Bath Ideas – Kitchen Pantry Ideas
Country Living – The Ultimate Guide to Kitchen Decorating

**I yoinked the images from the above listed sites without permission, so if the owners (or their lawyers, as the case may be) see this and want anything removed, just let me know**

Girls’ Room Chandelier Makeover

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Chandelier Makeover for little girls room

So, let me tell you a little about The Mama-In-Law.

I cannot even begin to describe to you how wonderful this woman is, or find words that accurately explain how thankful I am to have married into such an amazing family with whom I have such a fantastic relationship…or how I really do feel like they are my “family” rather than my “in-laws”…

So, we’re just going to discuss how she always finds the coolest stuff at thrift stores.

This woman can spot an awesome piece of furniture, or a crazy cool accessory, buried under piles of junk and get a good deal to boot. She loves to shop, and she has great taste, especially when it comes to house stuff and things for the girls.

And one day, shortly after we moved into our current home, she mentioned that she had several (yes, several) chandeliers she had picked up here and there at thrift stores and the like, and asked if we would be interested in seeing them, suggesting that we maybe could clean one up, paint it, and use it for something.

Um, yes please!

So they come to visit, and they bring three or four chandeliers out of their trunk (yeah, for real…nice trunk) and lay them out on our porch. After some discussion amongst ourselves about which one had the most potential and some funny looks from passers-by, we picked one, brushed it off, and brought it into the house. The others returned to the trunk, headed back to the magical other dimension where The In-Laws store all of the thrift store awesomeness that they have yet to find a use for.

I didn’t think to take a picture before we painted it (I know…stupid, stupid!), but the best description that I can give you is a plain, black chandelier of unknown date and origin with little going for it other than being not too tall and not too fat. The shape was good, and the curly parts were nice, but pretty boring as far as chandeliers go.

And what I had in mind would require some sparkle and class. This was going in my girls’ room, and it had to be pink and girlie and beautiful.

So, after a lot of work and countless hours spent stringing fake pearls, here is what we got (and I gotta tell you, I LOVE it):

Chandelier Makeover for little girls room

And for anyone who wants to know, here’s how I did it:

1. Took off all removable parts and taped up the parts that I didn’t want painted (sockets, etc) with blue painter’s tape.

2. Cleaned it off really really good.

3. Hung it from a tree in the backyard (with a small rope through the top chain link). Make sure to cover anything that you don’t want painted, or you may end up with a white tree like I did.

4. I used some matte finish white spray paint to cover the black. Google tips on spray painting, because I didn’t do a very good job and don’t think you should listen to my advice on that part.

5. Then I used some pearl finish spray paint. That stuff was awesome! It took me like three cans of it to cover the whole thing, but again, I suck at spray painting. Yeah, I know right, an art school graduate who can’t spray paint…sad.

But really, that pearl finish is what does it. It’s not just a white chandelier. It’s got a pearl coat. It makes it pink and green and opal and gorgeous, and sparkly. Mission accomplished.

Chandelier Makeover for little girls room

6. Once the whole thing was dry, I started getting the decorations ready. I had found pictures online of chandeliers that I liked, and made a plan for how I wanted it to turn out. I decided I wanted a long hangy thing on each big curly arm, some small hangy things on each of the little top curly arms, and pearls draped around the circumference. So, I would need six of each of the long and short hangy things and a good many pearls.

7. For the pearls, I bought a box of fake pearls at Micheal’s. I got two boxes of 500, but that was way more than I needed. I still have one unopened box and half of the other left. I got some fishing line (that we just had laying around, for some reason), and strung up an es aitch eye tee ton of pearls. For real…I threaded fishing line through every single one of those pearls. And kept my two-year-old from swallowing a single one. I’m very proud of that.

8. For the hangy things, I got some beads in the Micheal’s jewelry making department in pink and clear. I got them at a half-off sale, and got plenty, just in case. Again, I still have a ton of them, so if anyone needs some cute pink and clear fake jewel things, just let me know.

9. I laid out all of the ones that I had six of, and then played around with different configurations. Here is a close up of one of the long hangy things:

Chandelier Makeover for little girls room

10. I did six of the long ones and six of the short ones, and, here’s the part where you really need to be a talented artisan…I tied the fishing line around the arm of the chandelier and put a dollop of hot glue on top, to hold it in place. Yes, hot glue. I worried it might reheat and drip down, but that hasn’t happened yet, maybe since I put it so far away from the bulbs. Be careful of that possibility, though. I don’t want any children injured by hot glue raining down from their chandelier because of me.

11. With the pearls, I actually counted them out to try to get an even number between each arm, but as I was trying to put them on, the paper clip marking my place came off and everything went to hell, so I just eye-balled it. And more hot glue to hold it in place.

Chandelier Makeover for little girls room

Yeah, you can pick on me for the hot glue, but I get compliments on this thing all the time.

And did I mention that I LOVE it?

How I Became a Work-At-Home Mom

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Well, since the preschool transition conference was cancelled, I really don’t have any updates on that front. You guys will just have to wait until next week to hear more about that drama.

So, I decided that it was about time for me to share how I became a work-at-home mom. I’m pretty sure most of you can guess how I became a mom, so I’ll spare you those details and focus on the “work-at-home” part.

Anyone who knows me IRL knows most (or all) of the events that led to my current employment situation. But I’m hoping that, for those to which this condition applies, this post will also provide you with a little additional insight into the motivation and emotions that influenced the decisions I have made to get here.

I’ll give you a hint…laziness and fear factor in much more than I’m sure most people realize.

A month after I graduated from art school, I was hired as the Online Designer for a national special-interest magazine. The pay was pretty good, just about all of the other employees were awesome people, I had benefits and a 401K and I learned how to use the coffee maker. It was a pretty alright gig.

I worked hard, and tried to impress my bosses. I volunteered to do things that were above what they had asked for, and if they asked for something I didn’t know how to do, I went home and stayed up half the night figuring out how to do it.

During this time, I also started doing freelance graphic and web design work for friends of friends. I did a medical website and business cards for a motivational speaker (note to self – tell the story about the jar of beans sometime). It brought in a little extra cash every now and then, and it was never really stressful, so I enjoyed it alright.

A few months after I started this job, Kyla moved to the city where I had been living and working, and we got an apartment together. Several months later, we were engaged, and planned to get married the following May. We were excited about where our life was going, and doing pretty well for ourselves.

Then, one day, I went in to work, and saw a bunch of people talking in the kitchen. One of our coworkers, an assistant editor, was being let go.

Just like that.

She went in to work one day and found out that she no longer had a job. This was in 2006, before the bottom fell out of the economy, but the publishing world was already taking a huge hit. This absolutely terrified me.

I didn’t want to lose my job. I thought my position was too important for me to be laid off, but I had also assumed that about her position. I would much rather quit than be fired/laid off/whatever…I wanted it to be my decision. I did not want to keep working my butt off and then have someone else tell me that it wasn’t good enough.

It’s not that I thought that she had “failed,” or not done her job. I know it was because a bunch of higher-up-someones spent too much money on shit they didn’t need and it trickled down through company politics until the decision was made to “downsize” someone, and she was chosen.

But if I was “downsized,” in my mind, it would mean that I had failed. It would mean that I was not good enough. And that was a possibility that I was unwilling to face.

So, Kyla and I had already talked about moving back to our home state at some point (not our hometown, because I needed a Target and varying retail options since I had lived in bigger cities for the past few years), and I pushed for “some point” to be “now.”

Then, I had this great idea. I was going to not get a job and stay at home, and be a freelance web designer. I really wanted to work at home, and had decided that the 9 to 5 desk job life really wasn’t my thing. I had a few good freelance clients, and had the potential to get more, so I decided that I would not look for a job.

Yes, I know…I say that I’m terrified of failure, yet I decide that I’m going to be self-employed, which moves personal and financial failure out of the “possible” category and into the “highly likely” category. Doesn’t seem to make much sense, but here’s the thing…it totally does.

I did the math, and had decided that his income would be enough to get us by alright until I could make some money. This seemed way easier, in my mind, than trying to find a job doing what I wanted that didn’t require me to be at work during regular business hours every single weekday in business casual clothes in a town that had little to no market for my skills anyway.

On top of that, I just didn’t want to have a job anymore. I would much rather sleep late and hang out in my pajamas in front of my computer all day. So that’s what I decided to do.

Kyla and I discussed it, and he agreed to go along with my plan. Because he’s the best husband ever.

I gave my notice, Kyla asked for a transfer, and we prepared for our wedding. Less than three months later, we were newly married, living in a new city, with a new mortgage, and only one real job between us.

For real. I just decided not to get a job. That’s how I started working-from-home.

Now, here is the part where I got lucky, because several of the great people I worked with changed jobs more often than some people change their air filters. Since I had made such a big impression on them, they called me from their new jobs, and asked if I’d give them an estimate on this project they were working on. And then I would get the job.

Then they told people that I was cheap and awesome (web design, people, web design), and those people contacted me for estimates, and then I got those jobs. Then, every year or two, these people needed their sites redesigned, or went to work somewhere else, and so on.

Sometimes, no one calls. No one emails. And those times suck a lot if they last for more than a few weeks. But those times also give me a little bit of a vacation, and if I save money when I am making it, and put it back for the times when I’m not, it usually works out. Generally, I’ve been able to get enough work to keep me busy solely through word-of-mouth referrals.

Now, I’m the only person I have to answer to if I’m not good enough. The money that I bring in is almost always directly proportional to how hard I work. And I’m able to be at home, with my girls, every single day.

It’s never EASY. There are nights that I know my children are falling asleep to the sound of me chicken-pecking out some code, and days when I’m already checking my email before they’ve even had breakfast. I constantly wonder if my girls will remember the silhouette of my head back-lit against the computer screen more than they remember me smiling and playing with them.

But it is WONDERFUL. I know that I am doing the best that I can for them. I’m able to be with them, to teach them, to play with them, to cuddle in bed at 9:30 on a Tuesday morning with them. I’m here for therapies and meetings and evaluations and doctor appointments. I am here to change their diapers and feed them and love them and watch them grow. And I’m still able to contribute to our family’s financial stability.

I think I have worked hard enough to deserve to have this arrangement, but I also realize that I am extremely lucky and blessed to be able to continue to have it. I’ve had so much support from my friends, my family, my awesome in-laws and my amazing parents, and most of all, my fantastic husband. And anytime I feel scared of failing or like my motivation is slipping, I have my two wonderful little girls, who give me a reason every day to pick myself up and “just do it.”

Now, once I can teach these little girls some coding, we’ll be all set.

Favorite Friday – Knock-off Wood

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Favorite Friday

Oh my oh my oh dinosaurs, do I have a treat for ya’ll today.

Let’s say that you love expensive furniture. You ransack every “upscale American-based home furnishings” catalog and swoon, pining over EVERY SINGLE piece of furniture printed on those pages. You fantasize about owning a whole house full of three thousand dollar bed frames and nine hundred dollar coffee tables.

But if you are then brought back to reality by the pathetic little balance in your checking account, and you dismiss this time you’ve spent with the catalog as “inspiration for the future,” then you are going to love this girl.

No, scratch that. You will want to marry her. Or kidnap her. But she’s in Alaska, so you might have a hard time with that.

Anyway, meet Ana of Knock-Off Wood

Knock-Off Wood

Beautiful. Alaskan. Mother of a toddler. Self-taught carpenter.

I’m not joking. TAUGHT HERSELF TO BUILD FURNITURE. We’re not talking about the “cutting out paper in the shape of a star for your scrapbook” type of DIYer here. This woman is a talented, creative, finish carpenter.

She finds furniture she likes in stores and catalogs, figures out how she would build it, and draws up easy-to-understand plans for you to make it yourself. “Easy-to-understand” on her site is not like the “easy-to-understand” instructions that you get with a desk from Wal-Mart or a shelf from IKEA that might as well be written in Chinese. All of her plans are intended to be used by someone with little-to-no experience in carpentry. Translation: these plans are easy to follow even if the only thing you’ve ever built was a bad reputation.

She makes these great illustrated plans, some of which are even animated. She also has video tutorials on certain concepts she uses and provides handy tips and tricks that she’s picked up through trial and error.

And people are actually building furniture from her plans. Readers build pieces and write to her, and she displays them on her site in her “Bragging Board” posts. There are even some links to the blogs of women who have built from the plans in which they document their own experiences.

She has a ton of plans for Pottery Barn, since that’s her personal taste, but she’s also got some other, more modern stuff in there too. And, if you don’t see plans for something you would really like to build, you can actually request plans from her.

Did I mention this is all for free? Yep. Free. That’s my kind of price tag.

See, I have a disease that I like to call “thrift store syndrome.” This is characterized by an unrealistic expectation of price, due in part to years of shopping in second hand stores. I think a solid wood dresser should be around $150, tops, and a pair of jeans should be no more than $5. Kyla Brown says that things just don’t work like that…you can’t get nice things for cheap.

I think I’m going to be changing his mind.

Oh, and she swears that carpentry is what keeps her in shape. If that’s what carpentry can do to a post-pregnancy body, then get me a nail gun…stat.

So, ya’ll take a look at some of the images below. You can click the image or title to go directly to that post, or you can just go to her blog and spend the rest of the day there, fantasizing about not only owning these gorgeous pieces of furniture, but building them yourself.

Oh, and let me know if any of my real life friends want to go in on a table-saw. I’ve GOT to have that farmhouse table.

PLAN: Bailey Console Table, Knock-Off of Pottery Barn
Simple, solid, beautiful. I’ve often wondered how difficult it would be to build great furniture like this…and know, thanks to Ana, I’ve got a pretty good idea.
PLAN: Bailey Console Table, Knock-Off of Pottery Barn

PLANS: The Farmhouse Table from Salvaged Lumber { Restoration Hardware }
These are so adorable! OMG, my girls need these chairs. There is a plan for a coordinating table as well!
PLANS: The Farmhouse Table from Salvaged Lumber { Restoration Hardware }

PLANS: Kid’s Storage Chair, Finally! { Land of Nod }
These are so adorable! OMG, my girls need these chairs. There is a plan for a coordinating table as well!
PLANS: Kid's Storage Chair, Finally! { Land of Nod }

PLANS: Puzzle Bookcase { Crate and Barrel }
See? She also does modern. The Godmother, are you paying attention? Get ya Daddy these plans today!
PLANS: Puzzle Bookcase { Crate and Barrel }

PLAN: Cameron 3 Shelf Bookcase, Perfectly Simple { Pottery Barn Kids }
I think I really am going to try these. Look over the plans…it looks so easy. And I just can’t bring myself to pay hundreds of dollars for a bookcase.
PLAN: Cameron 3 Shelf Bookcase, Perfectly Simple { Pottery Barn Kids }

Plan: Kitchen Island like Williams Sonoma Home, Save Thousands
Best for last? Maybe. If I could build this, I would give up web design and become a full-time carpenter.
Plan: Kitchen Island like Williams Sonoma Home, Save Thousands

And here are a few more links…the “honorable mentions” of my favorite projects. I just couldn’t narrow it down.

Plan: Pottery Barn Kids Classic Stove

PLAN: Magnetic Chalkboard Tree Wall Art, Just Like Pottery Barn Kids

PLANS: Barnwood Frames – $1 and 10 minutes

Pottery Barn Kids Classic Kitchen, Retail Over $500

Plans: Craft Organizer Just Like Pottery Barn

Plans: The Simplest Nightstand, Retail $299, Build it for $30!

**I yoinked the images from Knock-Off Wood without permission (including images from Pottery Barn, Restoration Hardware, Crate and Barrel, Williams Sonoma, and Land of Nod that were on the site), so if the owner(s) see(s) this and want anything removed, just let me know. **

How to Get Crayon off the Wall – A Story of Frustration and Salvation

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

Let me tell you about the first time that I had to wash crayon off the wall.

It was today.

Can anyone tell me why it’s important to make sure that the crayons are put away when you’re done with them? Here, let me show you.

washable wall paint is misleading

This is a section of the wall in my daughters’ room, after being attacked by a preschooler with a red crayon and then scrubbed for 30 minutes by a very unhappy Mommy.

This is as much as I can get off. I didn’t think to take a picture before I started scrubbing.

Why did I decide to paint the walls a shade of white? And why did I bother to spend the money on the fancy, more expensive, “washable” paint?

[UPDATE]
Not only is My Momma an amazing, charming woman, but she is also a genius. “Get a Mr. Clean Magic Eraser…they’re good for that kind of thing.”

It totally worked. Not a spec of crayon left. I wish I had called her BEFORE I scrubbed with a wet rag for 30 minutes. Note to self: call My Momma earlier next time. And get more Magic Erasers.

Tutorial Tuesday – Continuing the Silhouette Love

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

Tutorial Tuesday

My plan was to actually create a silhouette of each of my girls today and write a nice tutorial and post it…and it would have been awesome.

But you know what? There are a ton of great tutorials out there already, and I just didn’t have time.

I spent most of the afternoon researching what school I want to try to get my not-quite-three-year-old-special-needs-daughter to go to, since I only have a week to prepare for meeting the preschool transition coordinator who wants to send our little girl to a school that is completely unacceptable to us. I really feel like, to get the full effect of my emotions, you must see a lot of exclamation marks…like this: !!!!!!!!!!

I’m not a snob or anything, but why would I bother sending her to a school that can’t even manage to teach a quarter of its fifth graders to read? That’s a rhetorical question, ya’ll…I don’t actually expect answers. I know there are many arguments to support us having her go there, community empowerment and yadda yadda yadda, but it’s not even the school she’s zoned for. For all I know, the school district just pulled her name and threw a dart at a map. It’s not even near our house…you pass four other schools between here and there. URRGGHHHHH!

So, back to the tutorial situation. Thankfully, there are so many great ones online, that my not writing my own will likely not matter so much.

Here are the tutorials I found that looked the best, and the ones I had planned to try:

The classic silhouette, but way easier.

The Anderson Crew – make your own silhouette picture

silhouette framed wall art, silhouette wall decor, silhouette decor, silhouette tutorial

A hip, modern take on the silhouette.

Thompson Family Life – Silhouette Plaque

silhouette framed wall art, silhouette wall decor, silhouette decor, silhouette tutorial

Another fairly easy tutorial for the classic silhouette

Style at Home – How to create silhouette art

silhouette framed wall art, silhouette wall decor, silhouette decor, silhouette tutorial

And more hip…

From Ready-Made via Apartment Therapy

silhouette framed wall art, silhouette wall decor, silhouette decor, silhouette tutorial

I promise I will post my own silhouettes soon, pending I don’t destroy my computer as I navigate the befuddlement that is the “School Choice/No Child Left Behind” legislation.

**I yoinked the images from the above listed sites without permission, so if any of the owners see this and want anything removed, just let me know**

Silhouette

Sunday, January 24th, 2010

A very sweet, very artistic friend recently did a silhouette for another friend of ours. It was adorable. The image was of this friend’s three dogs, and the artistic friend’s daughter, all looking up and begging for a treat. The silhouette turned out so cute, and it got me thinking about how that would be really neat to do for my daughters.

A quick search online revealed that I am not the only person who has thought about this recently. I found what seemed like hundreds of blog posts and articles on decorating with silhouettes spanning the past few years. I’ll post about it when I do finally sit down and do some silhouettes of my girls, but in the mean time, here are some of my favorite sources of inspiration that I found during this little shadow art treasure hunt.

I just love groupings of framed art, but groupings of framed art with a THEME? Beautiful and organized. But wait, there’s more…

Photography by David Prince, found via Desire to Inspire

silhouette framed wall art, silhouette wall decor, silhouette decor

I love this wall color with the high contrast black and white of the silhouettes. The silhouettes are arranged in a family tree configuration. Even more organized…*swoon*

Cookie Magazine, found via Grayson: A Different Shade of Gray

silhouette framed wall art, silhouette wall decor, silhouette decor, family tree silhouette

I love how this one looks like all of the art was just placed there haphazardly. I bet it took them FOREVER to place them to look like they were placed randomly. Come on, you know it did.

Photography by Roland Bello, found via Grayson: A Different Shade of Gray

silhouette framed wall art, silhouette wall decor, silhouette decor

EEEEEK! No way ya’ll, look! It’s a series of framed silhouettes illustrating the varied uses of a balaclava! This is beyond rad.

New York Times, found via Desire to Inspire

silhouette framed wall art, silhouette wall decor, silhouette decor, balaclava silhouette

If I had a farm house, I would have an entire hallway decorated exactly like this.

Country Living (There are more in the gallery, so you should follow this link. I just picked my favorite to post here)

silhouette framed wall art, silhouette wall decor, silhouette decor, balaclava silhouette

And here are a few more links of note, if you’re interested.

The Finer Things – Striking Silhouettes
Manolo for the Home – Inspiration: The Outline of Things
Second Story View – silhouettes

There will be more on the silhouettes tomorrow…so stay tuned!

**I yoinked the images from the above listed sites without permission, so if any of the owners see this and want anything removed, just let me know**