DIY Canvas Drop Cloth Textile Headboard

Geez that title is a mouthful!  But it’s a big title for a big project that I’m pretty pumped about sharing fuh reals.

I’ve actually been thinking about doing this ever since I hung some DIY’d frames that I wasn’t sure about from minute one.  I even mentioned how I felt in the end of my post about them.  Just.  Meh.

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

I don’t know why I waited so long to do this, because once I bought the supplies, I knocked ‘er out in a couple of sessions over a weekend.  By myself.  While I was getting over a combo sinus + upper respiratory infection.  And it only cost me $29.11.  No, seriously, look:

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

Ipso facto – an able bodied novice with a few bucks and smidge of determination can totally tackle this, and they too will be left with a really cool, unique and bold headboard!  You ready?

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

Supplies:

  • Curtain or textile
  • 48″ long x 1″ diameter wooden dowel
  • 2 traverse rod brackets (I used these)
  • sample size latex paint
  • craft paint brushes
  • newspaper (I’ll explain)
  • cardstock (if you’re making a template for your pattern)
  • scissors
  • drill and screwdriver
  • level (my laser level was really helpful)
  • wee bits of patience

Click here to see how I made my curtain out of a $10 drop cloth!

Now for the pattern.

I already have a couple of patterns happening in the room so this took some careful thought.  My duvet is this beaut from west elm and my rug is this little guy from IKEA.

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

I read this post once about mixing patterns – I wish I could find it or remember where I saw it – but it gave great advice.  It said to make sure your mixed patterns are three different sizes – small, medium and large.  My duvet is my medium.  The ikat design resembles Spanish tiles and each little chunk of the pattern is about 6″ wide.

My striped rug would be my small.  I guess because some of the irregular stripes are skinny?  I don’t know, I never said I was an expert.

Anyway, my textile headboard was to be my large pattern.  Which is good because I kind of already had a design in mind, and it ended up fitting right in with the duvet.  If you follow me on pinterest, you may have seen my recent Endless Circle pattern pins (here, here, here).  I was inspired by the pattern on the wood headboard in west elm’s picture of my duvet (check it out here).

If you don’t care about how I made my pattern because you want to make your own, skip on ahead a few pictures / sentences.

To recreate the endless circle look, but with dots instead of a solid line, I needed a template.  I used a math compass on card stock to create a 10″ diameter circle (referred to as a “pie” henceforth) and cut it out.

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

Then I drew a line through the middle of it, and a line perpendicular to that.  Then I sliced each of my four pie slices in half with two more lines.  And then each of them in half again with four more.  And then in half again with eight more lines.  So I ended up with 32 slices of pie.  Make sense?

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

The plan was to put a dot next to the end of each line around my pie.

I started with the center of my pie at the very top of my canvas in the middle of the width.  I used a craft sponge pouncer dipped in latex paint to make my dots.

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

Here’s where the newspaper comes in.  Friends, when I decided to paint on a drop cloth, I didn’t think I’d need to protect my work surface.  Isn’t that what a drop cloth is designed to do?!  Well after my first row of circles I noticed that my paint was bleeding through onto the dining table!  EEEP!  It was at that point that I taped some newspaper down underneath the drop cloth, which did a dandy job of protecting my table from bleed through.  I then continued to paint my dotted circles using my template and following a right to left horizontal path.

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

The paint is the same blue I used for my striped wall art (Valspar Perfect Storm).  It kind of has greenish undertones but the canvas seems to neutralize that.

When I completed my circle pattern, I staggered the template to create a lattice look.  I can’t think of a better way to describe this process so here are some fun visuals.

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

Once my painted pattern was dry, It was time to hang this bad boy up!  I used these traverse rod brackets from allen + roth.

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

My handy laser level made it easy for me to be sure that my brackets were perfectly vertical.

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

I marked where the screws would go, drilled pilot holes and put in the anchors for the screws.  And because I like to keep it real, this is what our bed looked like after that part of the process (sorry, babe).

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

Don’t worry I washed the sheets immediately after.  Anyway all that was left to do was hang the canvas up and revel at my new headboard!

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

Much better than the “before” if you ask me.  And I even had enough canvas fabric leftovers to make that toss pillow – I’ll be back with the quick how-to for that soon!

I will say this massive textile kind of makes that wall to the left look bleak and empty, but because we’re moving soon, I don’t know if I want to spend a ton of time hanging things on the walls.  I need that thought to marinate for a minute.

diy canvas drop cloth textile headboard

 

Other DIY’d items seen in this post: bench / mid century nightstands

What do you guys think about my “headboard” – love it, hate it?  Do you have a formula for mixing patterns?  Do tell…

A Curtain Of Sorts

I recently completed a pretty big project that I’m totally obsessed with.  I’m gonna give it to ya in two posts though, so you’re not stuck reading a one thousand word diy essay, k?  Lets talk about how to sew curtains.

how to sew hidden tab top curtains

Supplies:

  • Blue Hawk 9′ x 6′ canvas drop cloth
  • Iron / ironing board
  • Sewing machine
  • Thread
  • Fabric scissors
  • Yardstick
  • Binder clips
  • Seam ruler (not necessary but certainly helpful)

I wanted this curtain to be floor-to-ceiling, and my ceilings are 8′ high, so the first step was to trim this guy down.  I also wanted it to be just under 4′ wide.  So I measured 4′ feet from the long side at both the top and bottom edges, folded it over and clipped it in place using binder clips.

how to sew hidden tab top curtains

I then ironed a line down the length of the curtain and used that as my guide to cut the fabric as straight as possible.

I repeated the process across the width by making a fold, clipping with binder clips, ironing and cutting across my ironed line.  I went with 8′ 1″ so that once it was hemmed it would be down to 8′.

For the side hem, I used a seam ruler to iron a 1″ fold along the length of the canvas.  I then folded it within itself, resulting in a 1/2″ fold.

how to sew hidden tab top curtains

Then the side got a double stitch hem all the way down.  I used a needle and thread in my sewing machine specifically designed for heavy weight fabric.

how to sew hidden tab top curtains

The hem along the width would serve as the top of my curtain.  I prefer hidden tab-top curtains.  I just like the way they look.  The process to make them is a bit more tedious but the juice is worth the squeeze if you ask me.

For my tabs, I cut nine 2″ x 4″ rectangles out of my canvas scraps.

how to sew hidden tab top curtains

I folded the long edges into the center and ironed.

how to sew hidden tab top curtains

And then used a zig zag stitch down the middle for added sturdiness.  This left me with nine 1″ wide, 4″ long strips.

how to sew hidden tab top curtains

how to sew hidden tab top curtains

Using the same folding and ironing technique as I used on the long side of the curtain, I prepared the top to be hemmed, but before I double stitched it, I tucked each of my 1″ wide tabs under the fold, about 4 1/2″ inches apart.

how to sew hidden tab top curtains

Then the tabs got double stitched into the top hem.

how to sew hidden tab top curtains

I folded the bottoms over and stitched them in about an inch and a half below the top hem so that I could slide a dowel rod through like so.

how to sew hidden tab top curtains

 

how to sew hidden tab top curtains

how to sew hidden tab top curtains

And voila!  I turned a $10 canvas drop cloth into a curtain of sorts.  I’ve used this method on several different fabrics for curtains for friends of mine and it works like a charm every time.

Stay tuned to find out how I used this curtain!  Hint: it’s not over a window.

Do you like to sew your own curtains or do you prefer to buy them?  Do tell…

Project Arrested Development

Anyone who has known me personally for more than a half-hour probably thinks that this post centers around what I deem to be the best television show in the history of ever (based upon the post title).  Put down your forget-me-now’s hermanos, because that is most definitely not the case.

Here’s the story of some old film rolls, that were lost for 14 years, and the one girl who had the guts to develop them.  Its… Project… Arrested Development!

developing old film

The back story here isn’t complicated – I had several rolls of film and disposable cameras sitting in a box for about 14 years.  I consulted a coworker (who is also an accomplished photographer) on whether or not they could be developed.  She told me as long as they weren’t exposed to harsh elements that I should go for it.

I went for it.  With a few of the rolls, that is.  Two of the disposable cams had exposures left on them, so I’m using them up now to see if I can get some cool fades / light leaks on the pics I take.  I’m sure I’ll post about that at some point.

Anyway, the real humor in this story, friends, is that even 14 years ago I seemed to have a propensity to curate my environment and preserve its memory in photographs (hey, just like I do on this blog!).  I feel like I’ve maybe improved, even if just a little.

I now present to you my room – at age 15.

Here’s the entry.

developing old film

You can’t see it?  Let me bring you in closer.  This is where my friends wrote all kinds of notes to me.  An analog “facebook wall” of sorts…

developing old film

And no wall is complete without photos… and pockets from jeans that are hopefully no longer being worn.

developing old film

Stickers are so en vogue…

developing old film

As is Freddie Prinze Jr…

developing old film

But lets actually move into the room, shall we?  Hey Jame, I think your finger is on the lens…  Wait is that Freddie Prinze Jr again?

developing old film

Here’s a weak wide angle of my bunk beds… Please make sure you notice the HUNDREDS of Beanie Babies on the shelf… (it was the late 90s, early 2000s… what?!)

developing old film

Hello wall gallery… I think I see someones faaaavorite band in there!  Also – fun fact – I still own that trunk table!  And it still looks the same as in this picture.  BAD DIYer, BAD!

developing old film

Oh in case you guys didn’t know, I like Blink-182 a little bit.  I almost typed “used to” in that last sentence haha…  I don’t like lying to you guys.

developing old film

And seriously, did I put a bumper sticker on a perfectly good wood dresser?!  For shame.

No teen room is complete without a desk at which you never always did homework, right?  Please direct your attention to the top right hand corner of the below photo, wherein you’ll find a cartoon I drew of me and my future husband, Mark Hoppus of Blink-182.

developing old film

Oh and because I’m not finished having a sense of humor about my 15 year old self, here’s me that next Christmas, where I received tube lights to hang over the whiteboard I got (both of which I relentlessly begged for).

developing old film

And the whiteboard?  Well I wanted to make sure EVERYONE got a sweet, sincere Christmas message as the first thing I wrote on it apparently…

developing old film

Pure class.  Stick that in your #TBT and smoke it.  I’ve got more pics of my bedroom after we painted over the green and the wall writing (but not over my Blink posters!)… but those are for another day.

Have you ever developed an old roll of film?  Did your parents let you scribble on your walls?  Are you a fan of ARReSTeD DeVeLOPMeNT?  We should be friends… Do tell…

 

 

Some News

Well friends, I suppose I should spill the beans on a semi-recent development at jhbhq…

Our landlord is selling our his condo.  Womp and double womp.

Jamie's Home Condo

So it is highly likely (unless the condo is sold to someone looking for investment property) that there is a move in the near future for Mr. Fella and me.

This isn’t great news, but I suppose it’s not terrible either.  Worse things have most decidedly occurred.

What isn’t so cool, is that we really weren’t planning on moving again until we are ready to purchase.  That just isn’t an option right now.

Another big bummer is that our landlord is really cool.  I mean really really cool.  He and his wife have been so welcoming to us.  They let us hang whatever we want on the walls, decorate how we want to, and encouraged us to do our own thing in the courtyard gardens.  I’m really nervous about trying (and possibly failing) to find another landlord who will allow us to put our own touches on our home.

And mostly, I am really sad about leaving our neighbors.  It’s hard to find good neighbors, and mine are awesome.  Not looking forward to saying goodbyes.

The fella is out of the country with the great United States Air Force, and when he returns in a few short weeks, we will probably begin the process of rent-house hunting.  Joy.

One thing is for sure.  This little blog is gonna keep on rolling, no matter where I live.

And I still have ongoings and upcomings that I’m eager to share in the interim.

And… to be honest, there are some things about this little condo of ours that I’m not too sad about possibly leaving behind.

Numero Uno on that list is the lack of natural light.  I need sunlight to survive, yo.  I need brightness.  The five windows in our home (all but one of which face either north or south) just aren’t doing it for me.

And both of us have pretty crummy commutes, so improvement could be made there.

So there you have it.  Some news.  Moving.  Meh.

Anyone else about to move?  It is that time of year, isn’t it… Wanna help me?  I’ll pay you in friendship and beers.

xo

jamie

DIY Glass Magnets

Recently, the fella and I spent an afternoon at Main Street Days in Grapevine, TX with a couple of our finest friends.  I do love a festival.

While we were there, we visited Vetro’s shop.  They’re a glass blowing studio based right there in Grapevine’s historic district.  They had some really cool stuff (we were particularly fascinated and creeped out by their seriously realistic glass eyeballs), but the fella and I only walked away with a couple of cool looking glass “shards”.  They were actually scraps / runoff from various blown glass projects the artists made.

They’re the perfect size for magnets!

diy glass magnet

To make your own magnets out of glass “shards” (not the sharp kind, please) or glass beads or glass somethings, all you need are magnets, your glass and E6000 glue.

diy glass magnet

Make sure you follow the E6000 instructions carefully.  They say to start with a rough surface, and the backs of my glass shards had tiny pockmarks in them, so that worked out well.

diy glass magnet

The glue comes out really fast when you first open the package (maybe because the contents have been under pressure? not sure).  Make sure your work surface is protected.  This stuff smells too, and the fuminess lingers, so if you’re sensitive to that, open a window and maybe wear a dust mask if that’s your thing.

The E6000 should sit for about a minute or so before you put your magnet on.  Once my magnets were in place, because I had so much excess from the glue coming out of the tube too quickly, they slid off center a few times.  I sat with them for about ten minutes to move them back into position when they slid too far, and after those first ten minutes the glue had hardened enough to where the magnets stayed put.

diy glass magnet

I let them cure for 24 hours and then they were ready to stick to the fridge!  If you know where my grocery list came from we can be friends, k?

diy glass magnet

Also, yes I positioned them in the above picture to look like two colorful dolphins giving kisses.  Don’t judge.

Did anyone else hit up Main Street Days?  We had a particularly pleasant time in the Craft Beer Experience tent.  What crafts have you guys been doing lately?  Do tell…