Archives for October 2013

DIY Shield

When I married my husband I inherited some pretty awesome nephews and a fabulous niece.  They are a ton of fun to be around and my husband and I love playing with them. Our garage is the go to place for projects, so last spring we helped the oldest make a Derby Car for Boy Scouts.  So when he needed to make a shield for a school project, he thought it would be fun to make it out of wood.  We were of course happy to oblige.

For projects like these I think it is really important to teach the kids a few basics in DIY and tool safety.  So while I did most of the heavy cutting, the rest of the project was all Jax.   This was a simple project that took less than 30 minutes to do and has a super fun result!

Our supplies were:

  • 1/4″ piece of plywood
  • leather straps from Michael’s
  • staple gun
  • sandpaper
  • jigsaw
  • paint

 

 

First, since this was a school project we had to follow certain dimensions.  Yes I own more than 3 measuring tapes, no we couldn’t find a single one, hence why the husband is using my sewing measuring tape to measure the plywood.  What can I say, we live on the edge (of insanity… daily).

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Once we had the dimensions marked, Jax showed me a picture of what he wanted it to look like and I free handed the shape onto the board and cut the shield out with the jigsaw.

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Once that was done, we cut our leather strips.  We found these on the same aisle as belt making supplies (?!?) at Michael’s.  We just stapled them onto the back of the shield, making sure to use staples that didn’t go all the way through the board.  And since this is Jax’s shield we just placed them over his arm to find placement and spacing.

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Next, Jax and his dad sanded the top and edges of the shield.  We taught Jax the #1 rule of sanding: always go with the grain of the wood.

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It’s starting to look like a real shield now!

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Next up, painting.  Jax’s assignment is to draw things on each of the four quadrants of the shield to represent him and his family (I’m pretty sure we all did a project like this in elementary school).  The plan was for him to do that part at home, but he wanted the background to be white so we decided to spray paint it in our garage (especially since I already had the spray paint box set up from the mirror).

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After two thin coats, the shield was done!

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This would be a fun way to spruce up a superhero costume for Halloween! It can be cut out in any shape, painted with any decor, and Jax was pretty excited about getting to be a superhero!

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And just for a fun little side note… since there were 3 other kiddos we set them up in the living room to watch a movie on TV (unfortunately my house isn’t super kid friendly and their normal place to play is in mass chaos right now as we try to revamp it).  We weren’t out in the garage for very long, but when we came back inside, all three kids had decided it would be more fun to watch the movie from inside Lexie’s crate. I’ll spare you the picture so it doesn’t look like child abuse, but your imaginations can run wild.  Oh to be a kid again…

By the numbers…

This dresser has been through a few reiterations.  This was another basement find from my grandmother’s house.  This is what it looked like when I got it a few years ago (minus the silver handle on the top right… I was testing out my new handles):

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The dresser had been in the basement when it flooded and had a few issues.  The broken drawer (you can see the gap at the bottom right where the broken drawer had pushed the frame outwards) was fixed with a little wood glue and some nails.  The top is warped from the moisture, which I never fixed because it is still functional and isn’t overtly obvious (plus its not an easy fix!).

At that time I sanded this guy down and stained it with a Minwax Jacobean stain with a high gloss polyurethane coating.  It stayed in my master bedroom until we got married and needed a little extra clothing storage.  We upgraded this guy for our master bedroom and moved this dresser out into the garage.  Unfortunately I don’t have a good picture of what it looked like stained in the master bedroom (one day I’ll get the hang of this whole ‘taking before pictures’ thing).

I decided this would be a perfect canvas to do a dresser upgrade that I’d seen around the blogosphere, knocking off this Anthropologie Dresser (you can see some here and here).

I didn’t want to make this a big project, so I left the dresser exactly as it was and just bought stencils and some black paint.

First step, we centered the stencils on the drawer and added some painter’s tape, a little wider than the roller.

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Next we just rolled on the black paint:

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As soon as we rolled the black paint on we removed the stencils and wiped up with a wet paper towel the one spot that wasn’t as crisp as the rest.

 

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I like that the numbers aren’t super obvious, but think it spruces up the dresser quite a bit! And for 15 minutes and less than 20$ (free if you already own the paint and stencils) it was a pretty stellar upgrade!

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We’ve moved it upstairs already and it looks great in the space, but I can’t show you it without ruining the project I’m working on now, so you’ll just have to live in suspense…

 

 

Bonus Room

At the top of my stairs is a room I haven’t really shown on the blog yet. Mostly because I have had 0 inspiration for it.  It sat mostly empty for the first year I was in my house, except for the piano.  My movers LOVED me… “You want that piano where?” “Upstairs in that little alcove that it fits PERFECTLY into” “UPSTAIRS?!!?” Don’t worry… I had definitely cleared this with the moving company first… they just hadn’t communicated that to the actual guys moving the furniture.  I don’t have a picture of it with just the piano… but you can use your imagination with the pictures below… just mentally remove the couches, TV and coffee table.  Oh and don’t mind the fact that I didn’t even pick up the laundry to take a picture of this room… it just wouldn’t be true to the room.

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After my husband’s furniture came to live with me (he moved in with my brother before the wedding, but his furniture all came to the house), I moved my old couches upstairs.  These couches were a hand me down from some neighbors to my brother in college, after college I got them because they were FREE and I was BROKE.  Although I don’t love the blue color, these babies are COMFY.  I’m pretty sure I spent a good portion of my single life curled up in that recliner nursing my television addiction (from which I have still not recovered). Because the laundry room is upstairs and right off of this room, and NO ONE EVER GOES UP HERE unless I have guests, this is pretty much a full time laundry folding station (and by that I mean closet… I loathe folding clothes).

bonusroom1 The previous owners left that window shade, which I’m grateful for… but also find semi-humorous as its the only window they had a shade like that on, and it faces the side of my neighbors house with no windows.  So no one can see in that window.  But it does get a significant amount of light, so maybe they were just blocking out the light? The two things hanging on the wall? Mom and I hung those the week of the wedding so that this room would look a little more settled! This room also houses some of our home workout equipment… which double as toys when the nephews come over and play.

Anyway, I got a little bit of motivation for this space by way of some fabric for curtains I found in my grandmother’s basement and decided to do a little  more ‘finishing off’ of this room.  And my goal is to complete it all before the Halloween party in a few weeks so that people can come up here to play games.

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So here’s my list of things to do in the room– Updated with links for the finished projects!

Its not a super long list… and I’ve already started on a couple of those things… but I’ll be posting about that tomorrow!