Thursday, February 20, 2014

Picture Frame Turned Earring Rack




While redecorating my bedroom, I lost the surface on top of which I stored my jewelry. I was also really tired of fighting with my old earring holder and so I decided to make a new one. The new one had to be wall mounted to fit in my new bedroom layout. My problem is that I have a lot of jewelry, so my new earring needed a lot of space. My other frustration with my old earring rack was that I had to take the backs off the earring and put them on again behind the rack. This took so much time and I so frequently dropped the earring back that I wasn't wearing them because it was too much of a hassle. I had seen a couple things online that I liked, but most didn't have as much storage as I needed. So, I came up with this picture frame turned earring rack! My favorite part of this rack is that you can just lift the earrings off and set the on it!!!

Materials
11"x14" picture frame (or however large you want yours to be)
3 strips of wood 1/4"x1/8"x36" (available at Joann or other hobby stores)
Wood Glue
Spray Paint
Dremel & Cutting Wheel attachment


  1. Remove the glass and other innards from your picture frame.
  2. Cut the strips of wood to the size of your frame. 11" in my case.
  3. Make a mark every 1/4" across the strips of wood starting and ending 1/2" from the edge
  4. With the dremel, make an 1/8" deep cut from the top of the wood at each mark.
  5. Glue the strips of wood to the inside of the frame with the wood glue.
  6. After the glue it completely dry, spray paint the whole rack, if desired.
  7. Done!

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

DIY Upholstered Headboard

Last month I decided to redecorate my bedroom. One of the items I need most was a new bed frame and headboard. I started by making the headboard below. I hesitated for a while before starting this project because I thought it would be really difficult, but it ended up being much easier than I thought. I had a few setbacks, but with a little trial and error, I eventually got it right. If you decide to take on this project yourself, you have the advantage of learning from my mistakes :-)

Materials
Sturdy 6'x4' Plywood Board (for Cal King, wider for King)
6'x4' (for Cal King, wider for King) - 1" thick Foam
Twin Size Batting - High-loft
Upholstery Fabric - 5'x7' minimum
150-250 Upholstery Nails
Staple Gun and Staples
Adhesive Spray

I started by picking the design I wanted for my headboard and drawing it onto the plywood. First, I cut the plywood down to the correct width. Then I used my pin-string-pencil compass method of making arcs, since I couldn't find anything to trace that was the right size. (This method involves tying a string between a pencil and a pin, holding the pin at the center of the circle, and then rotating the pencil around the pin in an arc, keeping the the string tight as you draw)
DIY Upholstered Headboard
After the design was drawn onto the board, I used my jigsaw to cut out the shapes. This was a lot easier than I thought it would be. I started at one side, cut out the arcs, making my way to the center, then starting again from the other side.
DIY Upholstered Headboard

I then laid the 1" foam on the board and cut it 2 inches from the edge of the board with sharp fabric scissors, but a large rotary cutter might have been easier.

DIY Upholstered Headboard

I sprayed the front of the wood and the back of the foam with spray adhesive by lifting half of it off the board, spraying it, and laying it back in place. Then I repeated it from the other side. Next, I laid the batting over it all and soothed it out.

DIY Upholstered Headboard

After I smoothed it around all the edges, I used the same spray adhesive method on the batting too to keep it from shifting over the years.

DIY Upholstered Headboard

Once the adhesive dried, I laid the fabric over it. I prewashed, dried and ironed my fabric to get all the wrinkles out. Be sure to use a gentle or hand wash setting if you wash you fabric. It will fray a bit, but it shouldn't fall apart (if it does, it's not suitable for this project). At first, I tried just hammering in the upholstery nails straight along the edge of the foam, but this proved incredibly difficult and made a really crooked edge. 

So, after a little trial and error, I folded the fabric back over itself and 
stapled 1 3/4" of an inch from the edge of the board. 

DIY Upholstered Headboard

The made a much cleaner line and made it way easier to get the upholstery nails into it. 

DIY Upholstered Headboard

After I had all the straight edges down, I folded the fabric around the back and added a couple staples to hold the fabric back. I didn't staple it down completely because I hadn't yet finished the curved areas.


DIY Upholstered Headboard

Next, I marked every 1/2 inch in a line about 1 1/2" from the edge of the board. 

DIY Upholstered Headboard

I found it to be much easier to add the upholstery nails if a held the nail in place with needle nose pliers while hammering.

DIY Upholstered Headboard

When I got to the curves, I folded the fabric back as shown below, but I didn't stapled the curved areas.

DIY Upholstered Headboard

After all the nails were in, I finished stapling the fabric behind it and mounted it on my bed frame.
DIY Upholstered Headboard

DIY Upholstered Headboard

DIY Upholstered Headboard

DIY Upholstered Headboard