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almost instant art

27 January 2013 by Andrea Leave a Comment

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If you’re short on art around your place there are ways to create almost instant (and cheap) art.

I work in advertising, so we frequently get giant catalogs of different types of royalty-free images that places like ad agencies purchase. Like this one…

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These catalogs frequently land in the trash or recycling so I snagged this one and found this awesomeness…

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…which I decided definitely needs to be hanging on my wall, so I cut it out of the book and framed it in a $4 floating poster frame and got this…

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Sorry about the glare…I have lots of windows.

Isn’t she awesome? For this kind of project an inexpensive floating poster frame is usually your best bet because a) it’s cheap, and b) the art likely won’t be standard size. This was 7 1/2″ x 9″ so a floating frame was ideal. Plus the paper very likely isn’t acid-free, so it probably won’t last forever, but then you can feel good about changing things up when you get bored, because you only spent $4!

Doesn’t she look fabulous here on the small wall between my linen closet door and my bedroom door?

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Accompanied by some other whimsical pieces…this folk art snake I created on a scrap of wood, using paint, buttons, and decoupaged ransom note letters cut out from a magazine…

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And this multi-media, silk-screened and quilted art piece by Janice Taylor…

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But don’t worry if you don’t have access to books of royalty-free art. If you have a graphic designer friend, ask them if they ever get them and would be willing to pass them on to you. Or buy a cheap second-hand coffee table book to cut up and frame. (And don’t feel guilty about cutting up a book! I know how these things go, and we need to get over that. Think of giving it new life that you can enjoy every day!)

Another inexpensive option is to clip magazine ads. There are some beautiful ones and again, they may not last forever, but for now they’d make great little art pieces. Here are a couple that I’ve saved over the years with the intent to frame…

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Or you could even frame an interesting piece of wrapping paper like this…

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…or a sheet of artsy scrapbook paper…

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So there’s no excuse for you to not have any gorgeous art on your walls! Now go frame something!

Showing off at Funky Junk Interiors.

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tea time

15 January 2013 by Andrea Leave a Comment

Would you please pour me a cup of tea?

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Oh wait. Something’s off. Looks like someone put Sharpies in the teapot.

Oh yeah. That was me. Because I love to use things for purposes other than their original intent. Like Sharpies in a funky Midsummer Night’s Dream teapot.

Clever, too, since I wasn’t serving up tea very often.

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It’s cute, don’t you think?

 

rules & regulations

3 April 2012 by Andrea 7 Comments

“Rules? We don’t need no stinkin’ rules!”

Today I got into a bit of a Facebook fight.

Well, it was more that I shared an unpopular opinion. But it was on a big blogger’s Facebook page. And there were other big bloggers chiming in and sharing their dismay with my opinion.

So while it wasn’t really a fight, I don’t think that my opinion was terribly popular.

What was it all about?

Said big blogger offered a helpful “tip” suggesting that if you have a link party that you shouldn’t invite others to your link party in another blogger’s comments section or by sending them an email invite.

Things like this were said on that Facebook thread…

“If you have to beg others to join…you shouldn’t be having a link party.”

“Really the blog world doesn’t need another party. Why don’t we just put time and effort into the already established ones?”

“If people consider it rude, why would you want to continue to do it just because you don’t think it is? What should matter to you is how your comment is PERCEIVED, not how you meant it.”

“If you are offending 10 or 15 or even 20 people that are participating in this conversation, imagine the sheer magnitude of how many others you are ticking off that AREN’T here reading this.”

There were a handful of us who talked about being open to this type of invite when offered up sincerely, but it seems that a number of people really want to develop this blog etiquette, which to me looks an awful lot like a rigid set of rules of engagement to play in their blog world.

Like a movie star complaining about evils of the fame and fortune that they’ve gained, these big bloggers complaining about comments, email, and people promoting to them seemed disingenuous.

Frankly, I found it condescending and offensive. A grown-up version of the limits set by the queen bees in high school. And contrary to what the Internet is all about. You know, the Internet…the place where you can create an online world, made up entirely of computer code.  That same place made into what it is today by a bunch of computer geeks wearing Def Leppard t-shirts and living in their moms’ basements. The very essence of which is diametrically opposed to rules and regulations.

But a number of these blogger ladies think that it’s their job to “teach” newer bloggers their desired rules of engagement. Teaching them that they should concern themselves with how they are perceived by others. This really rubbed me the wrong way. Maybe it looks like sour grapes, since they have giant followings and I don’t. If that’s how it looks, so be it.

Some of the comments were mean spirited. Some of them were of the “I got mine, now you need to work hard to get yours too” variety. And some were downright dysfunctional, if you ask me.

To say that we need to try to figure out how every reader “perceives” us is dysfunctional. Forget about bloggers and the Internet for a minute. If we are constantly trying to figure out how others view us and what they think of us, we will never be happy as individuals, nor are we likely to do what it is that satisfies us, because we will constantly be dancing to somebody else’s tune. Frankly, I don’t think this is a good way to live a meaningful life.

But back to blogging and the Internet…

The beauty of the Internet is that you can create the very world that you want to live in. If you don’t want to get a certain type of comments, perfect, moderate your comments. If you don’t like the comments or email that you receive, you are always free to use the ever-popular delete key. In fact, some of you may not like what I’m saying here, and I will take the luxury of using the aforementioned tools to eliminate comments or email that I find offensive.

I’ve been thinking a lot about creativity and blogging lately. Been thinking about how to express myself uniquely in my home as well, which is my creative palette that I share here.

My philosophy about the Internet extends to my home. The possibilities are endless. I don’t just want to copy what I see in magazine or on Pinterest or on other blogs. What I really want to do is stretch my own creativity to the nth degree and create something new and unique in my home. Something that I love. That’s what I want to share on my blog. And hopefully as a reader of this blog you might find a shred or two of inspiration and will take that to your home and create something new and unique in your world.

So instead of worrying about rules and regulations, whether they’re about blogging or design, let’s throw caution to the wind and expand our horizons, think outside the box, and challenge ourselves to stretch our creativity. In our hearts, in our minds, in our blogs, and especially in our homes.

In many ways, the Internet carries the essence of creativity. Make of it what you will.  Be kind and be a good person. That will mean something different to every person, but do your best.

And for the love of all things holy, let’s spend our time thinking about new ways to stretch and be creative, rather than thinking of ways to reign in creativity.

think outside the box

20 October 2011 by Andrea Leave a Comment

With decorating, it’s important to think outside the box.

For example, the white armoire in the upstairs hallway looked boring, and well, white. And I saw it every single time I walked to my room.

So I decided to think outside the box and hang a picture on the side of the armoire.

Now every day when I walk by I see my favorite print ever, Kitten with Scissors, by Mati McDonough…

And every time I walk past that formerly boring and white armoire, I’m filled with joy from this amazing print.  It pays to think outside the box!

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