Tag: art

  • One Room Challenge: Frame Your Own Canvas DIY

    One Room Challenge: Frame Your Own Canvas DIY

    In this easy tutorial you’ll learn how to stretch your own canvas print over a frame so you can hang a bit of yourself on the wall. 

     
     
    When I started imagining what to hang over our couch, I knew it needed to be something besides a family picture. I wanted something new and fresh, that we hadn’t hung up before. I figured we’d probably check out the thrift stores and see what we could find. 
     
    But then I did something else – I started browsing my old college art folder. I’ve got a number of really cool pieces I had forgotten about, like the hanging skeleton, and Alexander Graham Bell – but it was my abstract black and white that caught my eye. Rolled up in the bottom I knew it was the piece I was looking for. 
     
    I even got a pretty good grade on it! I mean 19/20 for someone who had never gone beyond middle school art class must mean the art gene didn’t completely skip me over right?
     
     
    The big question I had to ask myself at this point though, was why didn’t we frame it in class? I had no idea what I was doing here, so reached out to a couple art friends – all who also had never actually stretched canvas before. Feeling a bit better about that I headed to Pinterest where I learned of these nifty things called Stretcher Bars.  
     
     
    I made a couple phone calls and found Hobby Lobby sold them in all different sizes, but you can also get them on Amazon. If it hadn’t been for pinterest, I would have attempted to build my own wooden frame, and also would have gone about it completely wrong!
     
    See for canvas, apparently you don’t want the canvas to lay directly on the frame. These premade stretcher bars are slightly raised right on the ends to keep the rest of your painting off the boards. Plus, no need to figure out those corner angles because it’s all done for you. 
     
    First things first here now! You need a painted canvas! If you don’t have one laying around from an old college class….please tell me if you do!….then go buy some canvas and paint it! It will be a lot of fun! 
     
    Next, measure your painting. Buy your stretcher bars in the right sizes. My painting is 4 feet by 23 inches. So I picked up 2 48″ stretcher bars and 2 23″ bars. Insert the stretcher bars together at the corners, and VOILA! You’ve just build your frame!
     
     
    To stretch your canvas now, you’ll lay your painting upside down. Place your frame on top of the painting, lining it up as best you can to the edges of the actual picture. Hopefully you’ve got a good 3-4 inches to overlap over your frame. 
     
    After the painting, this next part is my favorite! It’s time to pull out the Staple Gun! Following the numbers below staple each side in succession. So 1 staple in side 1. Then side 2, 3, and 4. Then go back to side 1. It will take awhile, but that’s how you get a nice smooth and straight stretched canvas. Depending on how large your canvas is, 2 sets of hands can be very helpful here. 
     
     
    Wasn’t that exciting? Slowly but surely this Everything Room is getting put together! With a nice piece of personal art – that finally grew on Mark – we have a bit of a color pallete to help guide the rest of the room. 
     
     
    Join me again next week to see which piano we decide to keep, and how it will affect the room arrangement!
     
    Linking up with Calling it Home for the One Room Challenge! 
  • SaveMore Deal – Frame the Alphabet

    Picture of Frame The Alphabet
    oooo, isn’t this gorgeous!  You can get your own Frame the Alphabet, custom artwork for 56% off over at SaveMore. 
    A $134.99 value, you pay $60 for a 39.5″ x 15.5″ custom framed piece of art. If you have not yet signed up for SaveMore deals, you’ll get a $10 sign up credit, making this deal even better! You can buy one for yourself, and 3 more for gifts!
  • Appliance Art

    Appliance Art

    Have you seen these? Oh my heck I want one so bad!! 
    Wouldn’t it be fun to change those dull appliance looks for something funner looking? Or more classy? Hide away the appliances under some art!
    My personal favorite is this chalkboard cover
    The kids would have such a blast!
    Or maybe do some seasonal art….
    To top it all off, they’re having a 40% off sale right now too! Just enter code FLASH0817 at checkout.
    Must *hint* to the hubby that Chrsitmas is just around the corner….
  • Budget Wall Art: Love Is Spoken Here

    Budget Wall Art: Love Is Spoken Here

    When budgets are tight, but you need some inspiration or beauty added to your life, a little bit of DIY Wall Art is all you need. 

    Budget wall art you can love looking at.

    Related Content:

    1. Frame Your Own Canvas
    2. How to Hang Art Like the Pros
    3. Star Map Art

    I pretty much spent my day yesterday looking at the wall in our front room. We had this large bare spot that needed something, but a framed picture would’ve looked too cluttered.  We got to thinking about vinyl lettering and decided we’d go that route.  Then Mark came up with the brilliant idea to just paint it.  It would be a lot cheaper, and could actually fit into our budget.

    The first step was designing what we wanted.  I knew it would say “Love is Spoken Here”, but I still needed a good font.  After playing around for a bit with the fonts, Mark sat down, and in 5 minutes had the whole design done on photoshop.

    Make some budget wall art for the home.
     
    To humor Mark, and because not many people will make the connection, the font and star are taken from his favorite band – Smashing Pumpkins. The next step was finding someone to print our 2-foot by 3-foot design.  We went with AlphaGraphics for just under $4! Now that’s a deal.
     
    After picking up the poster, I taped it up on the wall and marked the corners where I wanted the final image to be. 
    Wall art on a budget
    Once I had it where I wanted it, I removed it from the wall to cut out the letters, creating a stencil. Anywhere the white wasn’t attached (middle of R), I laid some tape on to keep it in place.  Then it was back on the wall.
    make budget wall art with your own stencil
    At this point, I then used a pencil to trace the whole design right on to the wall. Finally the fun part! Painting. We used some black acrylic paint that we already had on hand. Mark helped for a little bit until Rosalina woke up from her nap. At that point I got Venice and Chloe to help take some pictures. 
    Making wall art on a budget is simple.
    After we took the stencil off, I went back around a few of the edges with a fine brush. This helped fix where some of the paint dripped or seeped through the paper.
     
    It only took about 5-hours from start to finish but was worth every minute and the neck ache. Did you notice my yard sale find? I picked that candle holder up knowing that this was exactly where it would be going!