Showing posts with label Decorating. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Decorating. Show all posts

Monday, May 18, 2020

Sewing and Office Organization in the New Craft Room


The big craft room reveal post got so long that I absolutely have to break down the decorating projects and organization into separate posts.

It's organizing time! Today I thought I could show you my office stuff and sewing area organization.

The office is pretty simple. At my sitting-height counter, Bass made a laptop stand that has space for my DVD player under using leftover mdf from the paper palace.

He also made a tissue/pen/remote holder out of scrap wood. I painted it with some leftover paint from the ombre dresser, which is the same palette of shades for my wall paint.
That parks right between my laptop stand and essential oil diffuser.

The rest of my countertop stays pretty clean, if I can help it. I do use my file cabinet to help with that. The top drawer houses office minutia.

The middle drawer has all of my current Bible study and Bible journaling supplies as well as some reference books for work that I need regularly, but not enough to keep them on the desk.

In the file drawer on the bottom, I have files for work stuff and other random things that I need that aren't related to the household, plus file folders for each year so I can hang on to memorabilia until I'm ready to scrapbook that particular year. Not exciting enough to photograph. 😁

Way on the other end of the room is my sewing area.
I have one base cabinet that helps to make up my cutting/ironing station.

Above I have two open shelves for decor and a basket of fabric scraps and/or mending that needs to be done, depending on current projects.
In the cabinet, I keep larger Sterilite bins of utility fabric, fabric with larger yardage, and a quilt project that's in the works. I also have a stackable container that holds other less-used sewing tools and notions (like elastic, snaps, pinking scissors, sewing feet, etc.)

The drawer holds the all-the-time, most-needed sewing items. Quilting templates, bobbins, pins and needles, thread, good scissors (you know what I'm talkin' about), and sewing machine cord. I don't sew often enough to want the cord just hanging out. If I'm doing a bigger sewing project spanning days, I'll leave it out and the machine plugged in. Otherwise, it's tucked away.
You can see my cutting mat hanging out in this pic. Usually it lives under the ironing board.
Next to the cabinet, hiding behind that cute ruffled curtain, I keep my travel scrapbook bag, a stepstool (because I'm short), and my longer quilting templates (hung on a Command hook).

I also have my yardsticks hanging from a Command hook on the side of the craft "pantry."
 
Moving along that wall, above my sewing desk, I have an open cabinet where I store my scrap yardage in photo boxes. (And yes, I'm OCD enough that I have a thick piece of cardboard that I use a template to fold the fabric into the same height and width.)

The armoire holds random crafting supplies: my acrylic paints, candle-making, sewing patterns, my beading storage, the bowdabra... lol. If it's not papercrafting or sewing, it's in here. 😁

More craft room posts: 
Sewing Projects for Craft Room Decorating

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Flaunt It Friday

Friday, May 15, 2020

Gallery Wall in the New Craft Room

The big craft room reveal post got so long that I absolutely have to break down the decorating projects and organization into separate posts.

Today is all about my fun (and full) gallery wall over my office desk/counter.

I have pieces that I've collected over the years along with art and gifts from my padawans, several Hobby Lobby finds, and a couple of craft projects.
I knew I wanted some wood elements on the wall to add warmth so I added the shelf from Hobby Lobby, had Bass hang a piece of pallet wood to create a floating shelf, and then I painted a piece of pallet wood with Romans 12:12.

The other big wood piece is a pallet wood shelf unit that Bass made to hold my still-growing Funko Pop and Funko Pocket Pop collection.
Totally free. Well, the shelf was free. The Funkos...not so much.
Other than painting a bunch of random frames white to coordinate them, I also wrapped an old hook with twine to make a ukulele hanger.
The fabrics I chose for my new space, to match with my existing area rug, are from the Moda Granny Chic and Farm Girl Vintage collections. I had just scraps left-over after sewing other things so I made this cute hexie hoop for my gallery wall.
I ironed the pieces on to fusible interfacing and then top-stitched over the seams, using a zig-zag stitch.
I'd still like to buy an air plant for my shelf, but that'll wait until our stay-at-home orders are lifted. I like having all my pretties above my desk! What do you look at when you sit down to work?

More craft room posts: 
Sewing Projects for Craft Room Decorating

Linking up at:
Tutorials and Tips

Wednesday, May 13, 2020

Sewing Projects for Craft Room Decorating


The big craft room reveal post got so long that I absolutely have to break down the decorating projects and organization into separate posts.

Up today are my sewing projects!
First the utility sewing...
We have two gaps in the base cabinetry. One to create a longer cutting counter for the sewing area:
We didn't have another base cabinet to use in this space, which is okay because the doors wouldn't have been able to open anyway with the craft "pantry" sitting perpendicular. The curtain hides the gap and allows me to store my scrapbook travel bag. I used old Ikea flat sheets to create the base curtain and all of the ruffles sewn on top.
The other gap is in the corner at the other end of the wall. On the wall is access to some pipes and the radiator heating so rather than block it off with something solid, I added another ruffled curtain. Tension rods keep them in place.

The rest of the room got fun, bright fabric. I had this rug in my "before" space, and it was relatively new. (It may have been a desperate attempt to make the old space not-so-bad. It didn't work enough. 😜)

So that new rug informed my new space's color palette. I tried to pull out the aqua, pink, and deep rose tones. The Moda collections of Granny Chic and Farm Girl Vintage had the slightly retro vibe I like with the right colors. They let me introduce some yellow and green into the space too.

Here's what I made:
A new ruffled curtain
An ironing board cover (we started with a piece of smooth plywood, added poly batting, and then silver ironing board fabric before covering with the Moda print. On the back, I folded the edges over on some cream denim I had on hand to create a smooth back to the whole board.)

A sewing machine cover (batted and quilted)

A lumbar support envelope pillow cover and a loose seat cushion cover with ties and a ruffle (The cushion cover was a gingham at the store, where I got the Moda fabrics, that matched really well.)
A curtain inside the armoire

Covers for my Cricut and Scan N Cut machines
A new backing fabric on my upcycled window ribbon board (new ribbon and buttons too)
This window was one that we replaced in our last house

My hexie hoop on the gallery wall

and my favorite, a rag wreath with all my scraps plus some ribbon from my stash

Do you have a favorite Moda collection?

More craft room posts: 


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Monday, May 11, 2020

Craft Room - The Amazing "After"

So I hinted that a craft room reveal was going to happen when I posted my paper storage and die storage.
It's here! The time has come! The grand reveal may finally be... revealed!
(Lol can you tell I'm excited about this one??) This really ended up being one of our bigger home reno projects in this house and one that turned out really well. I'll give you all the pics and details, and you can see it for yourself. :)

Here's what we started with 10 years ago:
Here was the current "before" with my craft stuff set up as good as it could be:
You can see in this last picture where the closet is. The armoire is sitting against the closet wall between the two doors. You can also see my very "sturdy" Ikea sheet walls in these pics. (Soprano said that the "before" pic looks like a seek n' find. 😝)

That current "before" in late summer/fall 2019 was also the reason for my mini-meltdown that started this whole project. I had started a new job, working part-time from home, and felt like I was living in this depressing, cluttered troll cave. I'm a visual person so all of the "visual" in this space was driving me crazy, and the low lighting was depressing. Just after the meltdown episode, titled The One Where She May Have Gone a Little Crazy, I found this kitchen cabinet set at our local Habitat for Humanity Restore. It was God at work. ;)

Bass got on board pretty quickly, probably based on "the episode", and jumped in with demo. Our basement is unfinished except for the schoolroom, a working brick fireplace, and a brick divider wall about halfway through the basement that had a huge closet on the backside. We decided to give me a bit more space that we'd remove the closet in my craft space area to expand, leaving a smaller closet outside of my craft space. These pictures might help explain:
Linoleum tiles glued onto a board that was nailed to a frame of sorts for the closet floor.
There was paneling galore and a shelf and closet rod that ran the full length of the closet.
 
 

After demo was done, we measured and measured again and measured again to come up with a plan to use as many of the thrifted cabinets as possible.


Once we nailed down the plan, we framed in the u-shaped corner where the closet used to be.
No more brick wall on this side.
Along with framing out the old closet area, we framed in and built a wall to replace the long Ikea curtain "wall." My view went from this in mid-construction to solid wall. (I spent several months poring over Pinterest looking for ideas for my space-to-be. lol)
After the walls were up, we painted. I wanted a light, bright cool gray but I think I went one shade too light. I wanted more of a contrast with the trim but when it's sunny outside you can tell more. #alwaysagamblewiththepaint
Once we painted (dry-loc on the cement block, then interior latex with mildew repressant) we put in my new floor! We went back and forth on what type of floor we wanted to install because of potential water issues. I was kind of leaning towards just painting the concrete, but we found enough of this at the Restore at such a great price that we were willing to install it after we waterproofed very well.
So pretty!
Next up was cabinet install. If you look closely at the graph paper plan, you can see that the plan didn't work once we got in here. A lot of the uppers were 42" tall, which was okay on paper but would have made for an awkward 5" backsplash on my long span of countertop. I should have done an elevation rendering too. #lessonlearned  Enter plan b...and plan c... and plan d. We ended up with this configuration.
The next steps happened in a very random order so the pics might look like bad movie continuity errors. lol
I found a mini file cabinet at the ReStore (only $10!!). We replaced the handles and placed it in my 'office' area of the room.
Sad file cabinet
Dapper file cabinet
Bass with the help of a friend made and installed the countertops.
Bass with the help of another friend made the open cabinets to hold my paper.
We reused the old closet door and added paneling (from Lowe's) and pallet wood (upcycled) to make a barn-style door.
New doorknob and hinges too
Bass with the help of the cabinet friend cut down a piece of paneling (from the ReStore) to create shiplap for the remaining visible cinder block walls. It's my backsplash as well as an accent wall by the window.
I think I'll create separate posts for the decorating projects and specific organization because this is getting super crazy long. Down the road, I'll share quick posts on my ukulele hanger, my sewing projects (sewing machine cover, sewing chair pillow and seat cover, my Cricut and Scan N Cut machine covers, curtain, ironing board, ruffle curtains, rag wreath, and hexie hoop), my pallet wood sign, and my Funko Pop shelf.
For now, let's get to the long-awaited (and much-celebrated) "afters." 😍

The view when you open the door. (That's the corner that has the pipe running along the wall.)
Once in the door, if you face left (towards the pipe wall and window), you get this view. Office "working" space and sitting height counter is on the front wall. Straight ahead is for cutting machines and all things papercrafting.
 

A closer look at papercraft corner.
From the corner, papercrafting continues with all of my paper and pocket scrapbooking page protectors living in the "paper palace" (so named by Soprano).
 Next to the paper palace, we stacked 42" upper cabinets on top of each other to create a supply "pantry" of sorts. It holds all of stamps, finished cards, 6x6 paper, and other stamping and papercraft supplies.
From there it transitions into my sewing area. This was the former closet area that we expanded into. We created a cutting/ironing counter top by extending the countertop piece past the base cabinet. Above we used old barn wood to create two open shelves.

Next to the cutting counter is my ergonomic (but absurdly short) Ikea desk turned sewing table.
The upper cabinet above was from the ReStore set and didn't have doors. I left it open and covered the back with shelf paper.
And that's it. Such an amazing difference! New, upgraded lighting, extra outlets, a door, walls, more countertop, closed storage, a home for my Funkos... best room in the house!
A quick look back from "before" to "after":
I'm so thankful!

More craft room posts: 
Sewing Projects for Craft Room Decorating

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