Friday, May 22, 2015

Custom Lettering

Recently I helped a close friend plan a birthday party for her parents.  She had decided on a rustic but classy theme with burlap and lace.  We scoured Pinterest and away we went.



One craft Do It Yourself idea I had come across on Pinterest were card board letters decorated with Elmers Glue. I know crazy, right?  I honestly didnt believe it and most of the pins showed afters, provided some explaination but since they were mostly links to Etsy accounts didn't provide much in the way of Before/After Pictures.  Since I was sort of flying blind I decided to give it a try on a cardboard box to see if it could even work.  What!  So glad I practiced cause I definetely learned what not to do and made the final product so much easier. Flowers were not a good idea as the flue ran together. 


The  actual letters I went a little slower and went over the sections to remove excess glue, pop air bubbles and clean up the lines.  As you can see with the E the glue dries clear.  One other thing in my practice was I did one with a double coat and that was too much.  I honestly didnt think that the texture would come through but it does.  


It took a few days to finish the letters with glue since I wanted to do the sides and tops as well.  With the glue running I did it in sections letting the glue set/dry in between.  

I painted the letters with a spray can of flat white primer. Since I was going for a rough look I didn't want glossy.  After the paint was dry I went over with a grey / sunbeached was the name.  Since these are cardboard don't go heavy hand with the paint or the stain.  I have seen some posts where the letters were covered in foil.  Practiced that as well and I didn't care for how the foil looked when painted. This would solve the cardboard issue but just wasnt the look I was going for. 


 I did a matte verithane spray to protect them after everything was dried.  

I really like the outcome and will be making these again.  Have fun with your own project!

Saturday, March 14, 2015

Brownie Cook-off

So I am not sure if this is a real thing or not. But I have decided to try a Brownie Cook-off with myself. I know, crazy right?

My husband loves the bag brownies that he used to get in the store, not the box, they were different. Or so he says.  The kicker is he the Betty Crocker brand in a bag seems to have changed the recipe, and not a fav anymore. Go figure.

I have decided that we have to find a solution to his delima, hence, Brownie Cook-off. Or more specifically Brownie recipe Cook-off.  I went out to Pinterest and found a few "worlds best" brownies, better than a box recipes. Surprisingly there is more than a couple worlds best, how is that possible.

I pulled out 2 of the ones that were similar size pans and cooking time and went to work.

One with butter, one with Vegetable oil, and one with extra chocolate chips which may be my favorite just on the extra chocolate alone.

 


Both in the oven and now we wait...

The fist one comes out and the verdict is - my husband says too sweet, I am undecided, very chocolates and sweet and would be good with ice cream.  Recipe and link below.


The 2nd one, Oh My Gosh, it too twice as long and the top was a cracker and the the inside was too chewy and almost undercooked.  FAIL!!!

So depressing. Not even going to share the recipes since that would just be mean, but really! I bake and although I will take some responsibility the flavor on the 2nd brownie wasn't good despite the texture.

Neither was successful to my husband, so back to the bag, if he can ever find it. By the way he is on line now trying to see where.  Doh!

Recipe for the sweet brownies found here.


Good luck with your own cook-offs.



  

Friday, January 16, 2015

Fireplace Focal Point

I have recently decided to start up with this blog idea again.  Since my last post was sometime ago I have plenty to share.

We have moved into a new house and have slowly been making improvements.  One that I am very excited about is the recent transformation of our fireplace, TV area in the family room.



I am not sure why builders today create these holes for the TVs which now are the size of a large picture. Makes me crazy.

Our fireplace was very outdated with ceramic tile and gold metal accents. There was no mantel and the walls had no character.

My husband and I have always been drawn to a country cottage style.  We have used ship lap in our office, which I will share in a future post, and decided to use it in here as well.   This also ties in different rooms in the house.  The room was previously painted a light yellow which was not bad but not really our style.

The ship lap received a dry brush of paint so the knots and character of the wood shows threw.  The fireplace was painted to cover the gold with a flat black so your attention stays on the stone and wood.

One thing that I think is a must is having a mantel.  We did a 4x6 post that was stained to match the flooring with decorative hardware.  The addition of the stone, which is the Airstone product, a great alternative to real stone.  We got it on clearance and only spent $100 for all of it.

Total project cost less than $300 and makes such a great difference in our home.  More pics at https://www.facebook.com/SmallJobsPlus/posts/655468841239782