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Tag Archives: home improvement

DIY Lampshade Refresh

18 Monday Nov 2013

Posted by jeannerondeau in Projects

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Tags

diy, diy lamp shade, easy lampshade diy, home, home diy, home improvement, how to recover a lampshade, life with kids, linen lampshade, linen lampshade diy

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We have started a list of house projects for the upcoming indoor season.  Chris and I have a habit of getting overwhelmed by the number of things that need to be home-improved around here, and it prevents us from making progress on any of them.  We have decided to break down smaller projects and finish one per month while we save and plan for a huge house renovation.  One of the things on my list was to fix this little lamp’s shade.  We have had the lamp next to the bed for a long time, but the shade was always a little strange.  I got really sick of it when I was pregnant, borrowed some of Ada’s acrylic paints and covered it with what turned out to be an even stranger pearly metallic green.  We then bought and then returned two replacement shades, neither of which looked quite right above the little basket.  Finally I decide to try covering the existing shade with linen.  It was such a simple project and took less than an hour.  Such an improvement!  Why hadn’t I thought of that years ago?  To refresh your own lamp shade you will need:

* Linen Fabric (Be sure the fabric color and weave is heavy enough to cover existing shade color)

*Paper for Pattern

*Ruler

*Pencil

*Scissors

*Craft Glue

*Large Paintbrush

*Ribbon (To cover top edge)

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1. Using your ruler, draw a straight line down from top to bottom of the lamp shade.  (Or use the existing seam if your shade has one).  Position the shade’s pencil line along the edge of paper.

2.  Roll shade and trace outline, stopping when you return to the line on shade.  The shade will create a curved shape as it rolls. Using the ruler, draw a straight line 1/4″ past the point where the shade stopped rolling.  This will allow for overlap of the fabric and create a neat seam on the lampshade.

3. Add 1/4″ each on top and bottom of curve.  This will fold over top and bottom of shade.
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4. Cut out paper pattern, place on linen and cut out.
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5. Squirt glue onto one side of the shade, as show.  (Don’t cover the whole shade at once or it will be messy).
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6. Use your brush to evenly smooth out glue.Lamp8
7. Slowly roll shade onto linen, keeping it the 1/4″ on top and bottom.
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8. Add more glue, brush and roll until shade is covered.  Slightly overlap the ends of the linen, glue and press down neatly.

9. Brush a little glue along the inside top of shade and fold linen over.  Gently press and smooth with your fingers as you go to work out any bumps in the linen.

10. Repeat for bottom of shade as shown.
11. Brush on glue and smooth ribbon on to top of shade.  You can add a bottom ribbon as well.

12. Allow glue to dry and try on your new shade!
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Back Yard Progress: Before and After

10 Friday May 2013

Posted by jeannerondeau in Organizing, Projects

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

back yard bees, back yard before and after, back yard for kids, back yard gardening, back yard in Bed Stuy, Brooklyn back yard, DIY back yard, home, home improvement, life with kids

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We finally have a back yard!

After one year and nine months of waiting, the girls have finally been allowed to run around in the grass.  We had no idea it would be such a project to get the yard ready, but it is so nice to have a quiet, clean, safe place for them to run around.  These are the steps we went through to clean it up:

1. Chris cut down some of the brush.  There was a huge overgrown shrub in the center of the yard when we moved in, as well as the metal awning, a 300 lb stone sink covered in ugly ceramic tiles, a long cement walkway, chain link fence and rat burrows (!).  We soon discovered that the soil was full of broken glass, metal and trash from the last 100 years.  We were naive about what it would take to get rid of the rats and trash (and hadn’t noticed them when we inspected the house).  We spent many nights wondering what the heck we had gotten ourselves into.

2. Get rid of the rats.  After many calls to 311 to deal with open trash next door (I love NYC!) and many visits by the exterminator on our side, the rats vacated.  At one point Chris and I devised an insane concrete/rebar fence to barricade ourselves from the rats.  Luckily, the other methods worked first.  This felt like a HUGE relief and victory!

3. Chris builds a soil-sifter out of screens, wood and a wheelbarrow and begins to sift through the soil to remove glass and trash.  He uncovers tons of marbles, broken mantles, flagstone, rusty metal, broken and intact bottles and a tiny Frozen Charlotte doll head.

4. In the fall we hire fence builders to clear brush, remove most of the cement path, cut down trees, remove the metal awning and replace the chain link with a white cedar fence.  The change is amazing!  After three days and a big trash truck full of debris removed,  the back yard and fence look so much better!  By removing the metal awning, so much more light came into the kitchen.  The beautiful fence finally gave us a sense of privacy.  The fence has two gates, so we can leave our yard through our neighbors’ yards should we need to, and the cedar smells amazing.

5. Chris continues to remove trash with the soil-sifter.  He and ‘Uncle Frank’ rent a truck and bring 3 more tons (!) of trash to the transfer station.  They come home with a plan to start a scrap metal business.

6. We move the few shrubs we saved to the back corner of the yard, plant bulbs and wait for spring.

7. Our spring bulbs start to come up and we plant our first family tree.

8.  We make and bury our family time capsule in the back corner of the yard.

9. After much deliberation, we decide to hire a company to lay sod down in the back instead of doing it ourselves.  We initially had trouble finding a company that would work with such a small yard, but finally ended up using Kings County Nursery in Brooklyn.  They were right down the road from us and showed up a super-quick 30 minutes after I called for an estimate.  They were very reasonable and did the job in under two hours.  We opted out of using the standard pest control and root stimulators (both chemical) for the sod.  Although our soil looked rich, we are trying to amend it after years of mistreatment and did not want to add any other chemicals to the yard.  The pesticide that sod companies use to control grubs is usually Sevin.  Sevin is known to be dangerous to both children and native insects such as honeybees.  Although the nursery assured us that Sevin would only be used under the sod, we did not feel comfortable adding it to our back yard.  We felt confident that the birds that make daily visits to our back yard, the earthworms in the soil and the rich brown dirt back there would make the sod happy without adding chemicals.

10. We have the heavy stone sink removed.  After much deliberation about whether to try to salvage the sink, we decide to let it go.  It was likely original to the house, but had been left out in the weather and had a strong adhesive on it that we could not remove without further damaging the soft soapstone.

11. We water and water and get an old-fashioned push mower to trim and the grass turns green!  The tulips open, the wisteria blooms and suddenly we like our back yard.  After a torturous two weeks of no foot traffic, the girls are allowed to run on the grass.  Finally, instead of me warning them not to touch anything in the dirt with their hands, they can be barefoot!

*We still have a list of plans for the back yard.  The wooden stands in the far back corner are for our bees which will arrive in June, (late this year due to a chilly spring in Upstate NY).  We will continue to fill in our garden with flowers as we watch and learn and inevitably make lots of first-time gardening mistakes.  I just got my vintage clothes line in the mail from Ebay, (post coming soon).  I cannot wait to hang out our sheets and dry them in the sun.  Chris wants to build a play house for the girls.  We want to eventually replace the remaining concrete patio with flagstone.  We want to re-side the laundry room that juts out into the yard, and turn it into a potting/bee supply shed.  And then we will tackle the inside of the house….

Here are some progress photos:

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Good Fences…Back Yard Progress

02 Friday Nov 2012

Posted by jeannerondeau in Projects

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

back yard, cedar fence, gardening, gardening with kids, home improvement, living with kids, Northern White Cedar, spring bulbs, Spring Hill Nurseries, White Flower Farms

We finally have a fence! We have been working on plans for the back yard since we moved into our house in August 2011 and we now have some progress. We still have a lot of work to do out there, but it feels good to get something solid done. Some days living in a house full of projects seems overwhelming – Especially when Chris and I have pretty full lives and a learning curve for each project that comes our way…Here are some before and after photos so far:

*The Back Yard Before We Moved In (I was too chicken to walk back there)

*And Now

*View From Above, (With Metal Awning)

Chris did a lot of research and decided on Northern White Cedar for the fence. A1 Fence is not in our area, but they have a good description of cedar use for fences here. Our contractor ended up getting our wood from Minnesota. We like the non-chemical and low-maintenance aspects of the cedar. It smells lovely and weathers well without painting – and withstood the hurricane winds quite nicely. Chris also devised a crazy contraption to sift the debris out of the soil. (A post on that will come). We hadn’t realized how much trash was out there when we moved in – What the heck were people doing out there?

*Some Debris From the Back

When all of the trash is out of the soil we plan to lay out sod in the spring and eventually Chris will build a play house for the girls using the scraps of fence and bricks from a previous project. The girls and I planted bulbs and bushes right before the storm hit last week. The plants seem to have weathered it quite well and we cannot wait to see green back there come spring! We ordered from Spring Hill Nurseries and White Flower Farms and all of our plants came at the right planting times per our zone requirements. We are gardening virgins here, but we are dreaming of these blooms next year: Hyacinth, Tulip, Iris, Lilac, Peony, Helleborus, Narcissus, Fritillaria, and Lilies. Hooray for future plans!

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