Tuesday, October 27, 2015

LOVE Marquee Sign for Wedding


This was my proverbial Great White Buffalo of my wedding planning. I saw these beautiful marqueee letters that other people had made for their weddings, and well, if they could do it, I could do it.... right?!
I am so stubborn, it is actually quite amazing. Almost as amazing as I had envisioned this sign looking on the dance floor at my wedding. 

Here is a somewhat guide to how I made the sign.
The boards were large "hardboard", pretty much particle board. If i were to do this all over, I would use something thick enough that would handle finishing nails. 

I made my husband (to be) trace out the letters with my supervision and I shipped them off to my dad to cut them. I am sure I would have done just fine on my own, but this was not a project I wanted to risk it on.


Once they came back, my cousin and I spaced and measured the spots for the lights. There is no math or theory involved, just however many of the lights we could evenly space that looked good.



Honestly, i could have even left it like this. It looked great. But i needed to know that this finished product was possible. So on with the painting and the metal sides...




I am not crazy about how the staining turned out. I used a gel based stain, and this wasn't real wood. It pretty much looked like I painted it grey, which is totally fine, but not the rustic barnboard look I would have gotten with real wood and a different stain. You live and you learn. In retrospect, when its dark and the sign is lit up, you can't even tell what colour it is at all.


On to the fun part!

I used 6 inch wide metal flashing. I don't know what 'grade' the metal was, but it was very easily bent. Other important tools needed are a yard-stick (or large level like we used, a solid table or board underneath, a ruler, and something with a straight edge that you can use to bend the metal.

First we measured out all of the bends and cut the metal for each letter and carefully measured and double measured and bent the metal so we could just pop it on.



After the metal was cut was when the real fun began. I lost my project partner/fiancee at this stage due to how frustrating it was to begin with. We thought we could nail in the metal using finishing nails, but it was difficult to ensure we were nailing dead centre on the board, and the board was just too thin. Again, a thicker, wood board would have been better.

Once I was left alone to figure it out, I honestly sat for about half an hour just looking at it. You don't want to play around with it too much because the more you play with it, the more dents you will get in the metal. I devised a plan that included 1000 Nails glue, clamps. boards, yarn, and pretty much anything I had handy in the room.

This is where you have to get creative. Essentially, you have to go one side at a time, and put the glue on, then clamp the metal to the board and keep it there with either weight or pressure for enough time for it to dry. Sometimes I would do about three sides a day - one in the morning, one when I got home and one when I went to bed. I think about 2 hours per side is the shortest amount of time I let it dry. This is not an 'afternoon' project.
  




Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Wedding Card Dresser: Before and After


This dresser... ugh. I love it. It is my favourite piece of furniture that I have ever worked on. I cannot wait to actually use it when we get a larger house that has room for it. Anyways, here is the story on how it came to be;

My brother had this old dresser wasting away in his garage, I believe it was my mom's growing up. So when it came time to start the decor DIY for the wedding, I knew I wanted to refinish this dresser with some beautiful knobs i previously found at Marshalls and Winners. I wasn't initially sure what I was going to use it as, but I knew I needed to use it. Eventually the plan evolved and the dresser found it's place being my card box/ guest book table all in one.



DIY Oreo Pops

As a continuation of my DIY wedding desserts, after I mastered cake pops, I figured Oreo Pops would be a breeze..and I was right. Here is how I did them:


Items Needed
Double Stuff Oreos (it is soooo much easier with Double Stuff)
Misc Sprinkles
Candy Melts
Cooking oil, I am sure any kind will do
Lollipop sticks
Aluminum Foil

Directions
  1. Twist all of the Oreos to hopefully have one side with nothing and one side with all of the stuffing.
  2. Melt a cup full of your candy melts. It is best to do this 30 seconds at a time in the microwave on half-power.
  3. Put a plateful of the stuffing halves of the Oreos in the microwave and quickly until the stuffing is somewhat softened
  4. Take a lollipop stick and dip about 2 cm of the tip into the melted candy melts, then stick into the stuffing side of the Oreo. Place the other half of the Oreo back on and put a bit of pressure to ensure it mushes together. Do them all at once, giving the sticks drying time.
  5. After the sticks are done, melt a larger amount of candy melts, I found a very shallow container works the best. Add about half a teaspoon of oil in it and mix. This thins out the melt and makes it easier to dip.
  6. Dip your pops into the melt with the Oreo laying horizontally, go half way in, and hold the pop over the cup for several seconds, tapping it a few times to get all of the excess melt off.
  7. Add desired sprinkles/decoration.
  8. Lay the pop with the undipped side down to dry.
  9. Once the side that was dipped is dry, repeat to dip the opposite side.

Freezing - I make my pops in 2 separate batches, months apart and froze both. To freeze, I placed 2 pops in a sandwich ziploc bag, then filled up a freezer ziploc bag with as many sandwich bags that would fit. All thawed beautifully, no issues.







DIY Cake Pops

By no means am I a master at anything nearly close to cooking or baking, I merely manage to get by with a decent shred of dignity. My mother is the master that is all food making activities. Which means genetically I have a chance!

One thing I have successfully conquered is the sacred art of Cake Pops.

On June 20th, we had our wedding in my hometown and invited nearly 240 guests. We have too many friends, should have cut some pre-engagement (jk...kinda). my ultimate goal was to DIY the sh!t outta that wedding and make it the most amazing dirt cheap wedding ever. My goal budget was $10,000, which is pretty thin for 240 guests. But i just purchased a new-used SUV for $17,000 and i will get many happy years out of that chunk of change... this is one day. An important day, but no day should be worth more than a car. Many times me and my fiance sat in shock anytime we heard of our friends spending anywhere from $20-30,000 on their own weddings. Just. No.

One of my diy tasks was dessert. The cakes I left to my mother, but the cake pops and oreo pops were all mine. Here is how I tackled them:



Items Needed
A mini cake pop maker (I used 2 to speed up the process)
Misc Sprinkles
A Box of Cake Mix, any flavour (and needed ingredients)
Candy Melts
Cooking oil, I am sure any kind will do
Lollipop sticks
A container to dip into
Floral foam (or styrofoam)
Squeeze bottle


Directions


  1. Plug in your cake pop maker and let it warm up, follow the device's instructions
  2. Mix up cake mix batter exactly as shown on the box as if you were making the cake.
  3. Pour batter into a squeezable container like an empty ketchup bottle or a pancake bottle... this makes the process cleaner and easier than using a spoon to drop the batter
  4. Squeeze batter into each hole on the maker until that half is totally full. Some may need a tad less. Every batter is different so it may take a couple of rounds to figure out your batter.
  5. Let 'bake' for about 5 minutes, remove from maker and place onto flat surface... dont stack them..they may not turn out round if you do.
  6. Once you are done baking all of your balls and have used up your batter, melt a cup full of your candy melts. It is best to do this 30 seconds at a time in the microwave on half-power.
  7. Once melted, take lollipop stick and dip about 2 cm of the tip into the melted candy melts, then stick into the cake pop. Do them all at once, giving the sticks drying time.
  8. After the sticks are done, melt a larger amount of candy melts, I found a narrow, but tall cup works the best - less waste. Add about half a teaspoon of oil in it and mix. This thins out the melt and makes it easier to dip.
  9. Dip your pops into the melt, go all the way in, and hold the pop over the cup for several seconds, tapping it a few times to get all of the excess melt off.
  10. Add desired sprinkles/decoration.
  11. Stick the pop into a foam so it will dry standing up. This way, you get no flat sides.

Freezing - I make my pops in 2 separate batches, months apart and froze both. If you will be freezing them, replace half of the oil in the cake mix recipe with applesauce. To freeze, I placed 2 pops in a sandwich ziploc bag, then filled up a freezer ziploc bag with as many sandwich bags that would fit. All thawed beautifully, no issues.


I don't have a picture of the cake pops at the wedding, but here is the finished product of the dessert table.

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

DIY Wood Floors

I have a very, very extreme and sick DIY disease.

Growing up in a family with a jack of all trades , and a perfectionist one at that, for a father, and cheap Ukrainian farmers for uncles and a mother, has embedded a veryyyy deep inner voice inside of me that says "Why would I pay someone for that? I can just do it myself".

A good DIY project is what my soul survives on. For majority of our relationship I had wished that my fiance was more like that. Although he is very handy and more often that not becomes involved in my projects as a saving grace when I strip the screw, cant find the stud or if anything needs to be lifted or positioned totally level or straight. (My head often rests slanted to the side naturally so my perspective of 'straight' is totally effed up. I can't make things straight. Ever. Not even with leveling tools.)

With that being said, we are entertaining the idea of buying a new house. A new to us, very old house. It is a local foreclosure that is 3,200 square feet. Our current starter home is 900 square feet. So much room for activities!!!

With that, is the need for a 'facelift'. Including 3,200 square feet of flooring that needs to be replaced. At that price, it adds up quickly.

I knew I wanted the wood plank look and wanted it to be kept cheap, but cheap laminate is well, CHEAP. it scratches super easy. So i found this lil gem of a project at Centsational Girl


I am in looooove with the look, and the price. I think my favourite part would be that you can see all of the nail holes.

Here are some other examples of this type of flooring.