June 30, 2009

Feeling Very Accomplished

the mural in situ

My daughter's room looks wonderful. The mural looks wonderful. The dresser looks wonderful. It isn't all completely done, but she loves it.

almost, almost done

There's about 2 more days of work to do -- seal the dresser and put its little ladybug knobs on, tack on the missing toe moulding, touch up the paint on the trim, blah blah blah. I don't know when these things will happen, we are in social summer mode, but we can live really happily without having these things done. I mean, my daughter loves her new room so much that she cleans up after herself, putting all her little toys away, every day since the big reveal. She's four and she cleans her room! No, wait, we need more exclamation points!!! There!!!! I don't even have to tell her to do it. (MY room is not clean, just so you know.)

I thought I should explain how all this came about. It wasn't spontaneous and it wasn't something I had always planned to do someday, not really. I never designed a nursery or anything. A few months ago, some friends were sharing photos of their homes, and especially their kids' rooms. My friends are really creative. They poured their creativity into their homes and created all these special spaces for their families. The kids' rooms were simply dreamy and dreamily simple. Nothing was too extravagant, nobody spent a ton of money, and everything they had done, I knew that I could do, pretty much, if I would just make the time to do it. And I knew my kid would love something more put-together, if I would just put it together, and that I would really, really love doing it. One day soon that room is going to be much more hers than mine and eventually she'll want to paint it black and hang up crazy posters of crazy celebrities or something (and you know -- I probably won't stand very much in her way, I think), but right now, my kid is my number one fan, my muse, and my best customer. She really puffs me up. So I did this for her, and for me, and the pinky-purple paint may be buried under lots of other layers of color in years to come but we will never forget this.

Her comments

Now onto the details I figure some people will be looking for:

The mural. The mural was drawn in Illustrator and finished up in Photoshop by yours truly. It measures 43"x54". I used uprinting.com to print it; they call this a "wall graphic" which in actuality is like a giant piece of medical tape -- a thin fabric with an adhesive back, and the adhesive is repositionable, but I wouldn't monkey with it too much if I were you. Uprinting says they can print these wall graphics up to 60"x60", I believe. They packaged it very carefully -- it came all the way across the country without any damage whatsoever. Sam and I learned the hard way, when mounting it to the wall, to smooth out its bubbles and wrinkles with our hands and NOT with a squeegee (it's thin, you'll scrape some ink away), and if your wall has little pockmarks and nail pops and defects in it, they will definitely not be masked. But I still think it is a really fabulous solution, and excluding shipping it was under $100 with a 1-day turnaround. I think that's astoundingly good. I also think there is some hope of transferring this mural to another little girl when my girl outgrows it, if we're all really careful. If transferring years from now was higher on my priority list, I would have had this printed on paper or canvas or foam core instead and I would have Velcro-ed it to the wall. I had considered printing on vinyl, too, but that tends to off-gas a lot.

The paint color. That's a little tricky. I'm very fussy about paint. I wanted zero-VOC (I have used MAB's EnviroPure a few times previously and I'll be glad to use it again). My town (3 hardware stores and a just-paint shop) was essentially out of zero-VOC in a configuration that could produce the vivid bluish-pink color I wanted. My paint salesman sold me on Sherwin Williams Duration, which isn't entirely zero-VOC but close, and meets their GreenSure standard. Sherwin Williams/MAB have, I think, awfully limited color swatches, so they matched Behr's "Posies" for me. It's a pink with a lot of blue in it. The major difference between Duration and EnvroPure is that Duration is done in ONE coat, EnviroPure wants 2 or 3 coats. I'd still rather have truly zero VOC... but getting it done in one coat, that is pretty convenient.

Princesstastic">

When the big day came, my friend Julie was wonderfully supportive. She works hard and yet she spent her day off on somebody else's housework, you know? That is love. She painted the doors (which needed it! bad!) and assembled the bed and was generally in charge of the soundtrack while we worked. It was pretty funny when she put Loreena McKennitt on. Loreena McKennitt is fine in small doses, I find, but in a room that is ever so PEENK, oh mah gah, I laughed right over the edge. I think she switched to Sweeney Todd right after that. Or maybe it was Dr. Horrible's Sing Along Blog. Either is a worthy antidote. I know we listened to both.

Sam put in plenty of sweat equity too AND the photos that are actually good, well, he took those. If you have photos of a pretty room for me to look at, please share them. I am a new fan of design*sponge too!

June 25, 2009

The Things We Do for Love

little ladybuggy drawer knobs

Well, now that my kid can read (!!!) posting this is pretty risky, but she doesn't know how to spell or type or even turn on the computer yet so my secret surprise, all for her, is still safe. Hidden in my attic are a ginormous mural (drawn in Illustrator/Photoshop and printed on adhesive fabric by uprinting.com - it looks terrific, I'll let you know how the adhesive works out) and the assorted pieces of a "ladybug garden" dresser which I am INSANELY HAND PAINTING, AS IN, BY HAND, AND IT IS NOT SOME TINY LITTLE WOODEN DOLL, OH NO, BECAUSE I'M NUTS. I am at the stage of the project where I'm sure I've lost my mind and taken on too much. If this project is like any of the other insane projects, that means all will be just fine. She will love it.

So the photo above are little ladybuggy drawer knobs and below are the drawers in progress. I made the photo nice and blurry as a special treat for you :D !

getting closer to DONE

My white paint marker was too thick-nibbed to do the eyes and mouths of the ladybugs -- they are so tiny -- but lots of patience and a toothpick with just a little bit of unthinned acrylic paint, wiped clean between strokes, did the trick.

My amazing and awesome friend Julie arrives tomorrow to help me turn Maya's bedroom walls into a kind of lilac apocalypse while she's at school -- I'm taking a day off of work. I am really psyched. And insane! But psyched.

May 26, 2009

Welcome Summer

Welcome Summer

...well, just about summer, anyway. I love it. I have noticed, though, that I am feeling the heat more this year than in years previous, and this may have a little something to do with *ahem* my chocolate cake and ice cream diet. I weigh more this summer than I did during my pregnant summer, actually. My friend A and I are planning on running walking shambling our way through a 5K soon, though, that'll fix me.

It has been an intensely busy month and then some. All is pretty well but we are working on the house and garden quite a lot. Home is the project that never ends, right? Among other projects, my friend J gave me an intensive lesson on landscaping (already put to very good use) and my brother and I just put an upholstered headboard on my bed (pre-fab, not homemade, but just Google "how to make upholstered headboard" and you will find great ideas that you too can implement if you are not also holding down a full time job, a side job, and raising a tiny child). The headboard makes the bed look massive -- too big for the small room -- but there is no denying it's a cozier place to read, which I do in bed more than anywhere else. I am a big fan of Terry Pratchett lately. What are you reading this summer?

April 22, 2009

A bit of nostalgia

bon voyage, in blue

When I was very little I had a little suitcase not too much unlike the one drawn above. I don't know where it is now, and it wouldn't be practical, and I suspect it isn't really my daughter's cup of tea -- but I would like to see that little suitcase again for a little while.

April 14, 2009

My imagination has been stolen away by fairies

The Fairy Queen

I have been working on a new series of pictures -- for my daughter's soon-to-be-redecorated* room! Most of these drawings are not too personal at all, and so I hope to make them available as prints. Of course I have had a) a full time day job and b) a preschooler who gets sick a lot and c) technical difficulties with the monitor-to-printer calibration to contend with, hence no print shop update just yet.

* True to typical 4-year-old girl form, she wants a palette of pink and purple and the more fairy-princessy-fluffy it is, the better. So far I think we are talking pink walls and purple bedding, flowers, and pictures of all the things she loves. Why not? It's her room... and since I have easy local access to affordable zero-VOC paint (MAB Paint's EnviroShield is my current favorite) this should be a pleasure. She'll be able to sleep in her room the night I paint it, too.

March 25, 2009

Mmph

Mmph

Hi! I still exist! (So does the above cat, who will turn 17 next month.) Since my last post, each human member of the family has gotten ridiculously sick, recovered, and now one of us appears to be coming down with something else, as of this morning; my day job went through a major transition which turned out well for me but makes me much, much busier; I mourned the departure of Battlestar Galactica; and welcomed Spring. I crafted just a little bit, and drew just a little bit, and will be drawing more very soon because I've got commissions due. Overall -- good things. The sicknesses can shove it, that's all. How are you?

February 18, 2009

Re-Stash a Crafter

I haven't been free during the too-few hours we get good light in the house lately, so I have not been able to photograph anything pretty for you -- not the totebag in progress, not the pretty fabric from Spool, not the exciting yard of thomaspaul aviary fabric soon to become cushions. But: in my small way of helping my brother-in-law and sister-in-law furnish their new home, and get some extra breathing room in my home, I have been de-stashing a bit, emptying my 2 desks of fabric and scrapbooking scissors and beads and sequins and yadda yadda. This comes right at a time when somebody in the world can probably use and love the craft supplies I want to give away.

I've just sent an inquiry to the coordinator for "Re-Stash a Crafter" (make sure you read all the teeny text on that page, and in the sidebars -- it's a little hard but let's understand they had to put the page together in a big hurry. Or maybe my browser is just weird). I'm hoping Re-Stash can take my excess and give it to a crafter who lost his or her stash in the bushfires in Victoria, Australia. I reallyreallyreallyreallyreally love my stash. Sometimes, I have to admit, I just like visiting it and having it near and I'm sure I'm not alone in that. Imagine if you were a book-lover (which, hmm, you may well be) and ALL of your books were up in smoke. You may not need to read any of those books at the moment but you'd miss their nearness and their presence in your life. So. Re-Stash. I hope I can be part of the goodness.

ETA: This link is actually super duper helpful!! I'm sorry I didn't manage to find it before but I think the fault is my own. Anyway, there are instructions, there is a shipping address, and they will take my stuff!

February 09, 2009

My sweet valentine took me to Spool

Keetatspool

Seeing as how the family was presented with a TRULY RARE weekend without any one of us being ill, we decided we'd better celebrate Valentine's Day early. I mean, chances are we will each be laid up in bed with mad cow disease, rabies, and jock itch next Saturday. Maya and I went on a date to Dunkin Donuts. Then we bought Sam some beautiful new shirts and ties. He has a pink one now, thanks to our little girl's insistence. Then Sam and I went into the city, just the two of us. He took me to Spool. In the picture above, I look so judicious and conservative with my one bolt of fabric, but that's only the beginning of the story. That one bolt was soon joined by 13 others... all by fancypants designers to which I rarely, rarely treat myself. Do you want to see what I got? I'll take photos.

February 05, 2009

I know where the daffodils are sleeping

I know where the daffodils are sleeping

Well, I just checked, and the economy: still crap. (Although at this very moment the Dow, Nasdaq, and S&P are each up a tiny bit.) Yesterday I got an oil bill for $790. That is a 7 and a 9 and a 0, each before the decimal point. Yeah. So today I am in a rather cool house, covered in snow and impressive icicles, though full of happy daylight, and I'm trying to do happy and hopeful things. I drew this image (above) which has been in my head for weeks, and I watched The Art of Quilting documentary by PBS. I got it from Netflix. It's not a how-to, not at all, but an exploration of art quilts. I was so mesmerized by seeing and hearing the voices of these artists I have been reading about for years that I forgot about being hungry, forgot about my pause button, and burned lunch but good.

It was worth it.

I am sending a print of the daffodil bulbs to my sister who is on an amazing journey in South Dakota. I would say that in the I'm-colder-than-you pity party, she wins!

I think I had also better tell my mom, who reads this blog, that we are not freezing to death and that we can certainly pay the oil bill. I think it is just time to conserve, is all. Would you like some hot tea and a rice pillow?

February 02, 2009

I think that was the most artsy-craftsy weekend we've had yet

Friday evening, our buddy Jason came over with his guitar and a new original song, which Sam learned (he plays violin). Meanwhile, Maya and I were upstairs painting watercolors and listening to the music they made. It's how I picture ourselves on the very best kind of day, really. And then Battlestar Galactica had me on the edge of my seat, so good! I'm glad to see it take an exciting turn again. I called my friend Julie immediately after it was over to get her take on it and she actually hadn't seen it yet; she was DVR-ing it and working on a new quilt, which she wanted to tell me all about, and poor Julie, I -- her best friend -- said to her, "I CAN'T POSSIBLY TALK ABOUT QUILTING RIGHT NOW! [which is major for me; I love quilting] GO WATCH AND CALL ME BACK WHEN YOU'RE DONE!" And she did; I don't think she minded how totally rude I was. Seriously, it was a good BSG episode.

Saturday morning, I made pancakes. One of us makes pancakes every weekend, it is a highlight of our week for sure. This time it was apple-blueberry for Maya, apple-banana for Sam and me. I forget where Sam got the idea to shred a little bit of peeled apple into pancake batter, but DO IT. The effect is really good.

That is one hot chick

And I found this really hot chick on our griddle during the process.

Maya insisted she needed to do more acrylic painting, not with watercolors again but painting paint, so we went off to Michael's with one of their 40% off printable coupons (thank you, internets!) and outfitted her with more canvas.

Acrylic painting again

Julie came over; she and Sam messed around with cameras while Maya and I did painting painting with painting paint. You can see the pretty things Sam and Julie did here and here.

Then after the kiddo went to bed, I taught Julie free motion quilting! She did very well. She has requested a quilted totebag tutorial from me, which I am slowly working on. I have decided I want Sam to film me while I am working on the tote, so I had to stop at step one, basically. But this is the patchwork front of my tote in progress:

Start of a quilted patchwork tote

I liked these fabrics so much and had so much left over -- plus that yearning to finish something good, and fast -- that I made a quilted pillowcase for one of our formerly very shabby couch cushions on Sunday. It's much happier now.

Wonky Log Cabin quilted pillow for my couch

(That is a remnant of blue sari fabric in the background which Julie and I are "auditioning" for another pillowcase. Maybe. We shall see!)

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Hilarity ensues as Keet Leibowitz attempts to balance art, life, a full-time day job, and parenthood.
Read her full biography here.

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