Showing posts with label diy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label diy. Show all posts
Tuesday, 2 October 2018

7 Home Décor Mistakes You Shouldn’t Make

Home decoration is a complete process that you should carry out with great care and focus. A single mistake can destroy the whole decorative effect, effort and money invested. Always buy stuff from reliable sources like if you’re buying carpets online, be sure that the store is authentic. However, people continue to make mistakes that need to be addressed. In this post, we will highlight to home owners the top home decor mistakes they should avoid at all costs.
Source: https://unsplash.com/photos/gREquCUXQLI
1. Not Considering Fire Hazards
A lot of effort goes into home decoration with a lot of money as well. People who decorate their home with self-effort should understand how catastrophic fire can prove if it is not considered while making adjustments in the room and house. Never use heaters or other fire items near places where the risk of catching fire is the most.
2. Not Checking Fabric in Person
Everyone has a different choice in furniture and fabric for pillows, bed sheets, sofas and other living room items. When you assign someone to purchase fabric on your behalf, they may not return with what you were expect. This is a serious negligence that should be handled carefully. You should check the fabric before making the final purchase call.
Source: https://unsplash.com/photos/GpBkUtY-0dE
3. Using Wallpapers on One Wall
Either you should wallpaper all the walls or don’t do that at all. Using wallpapers on a single wall makes no sense leading to poor home decoration and ugly look of the room. Be careful while you select wallpapers, consider their colour that matches your taste and may give a great aesthetic view to the room and other places where used.
Source: https://unsplash.com/photos/95V3AkP3wH8
4. Not Testing Paint Colors
This is for the home owners who decorate their houses on their own and make all arrangements needed. There are a lot of scammers out there. People are selling poor quality paints and decoration items. If you just buy and use the paint without testing some other places, it may be something that you regret later.
5. Stuffing
Stuffing a room is never a wise option. There should be separate areas or rooms where you want to keep your items and fill that with decorative pieces or other items. A room that has a frequent use should contain just decorative items that provide a nice look to the room. Overcrowding makes a place look restricted and diverts attention of the visitors.
Source: https://unsplash.com/photos/CGZbE-Pa1S8
6. Out of Place Themes
This mistake needs to be avoided at all costs. You shouldn't use a modern theme in one room while the nearby ones are decorated with an old or classic theme. A single theme that matches with the paint colours, environment and makes you feel better should be employed for the whole building.
7. Getting Caught up in Trends
Falling a victim to trendy styles, themes, decoration ideas, designs and concepts may not prove good for your house. You have a choice that may not match with anyone elses. So you have to be unique in what you choose and what you decide on. Be careful and listen to your heart and everything will go fine and smooth.
(This is a sponsored post.) 
 
Friday, 2 March 2018

A Guide to Distressing Your Own Denim


Wearing the same clothes day-in, day-out can get boring, so why not get creative and transform some of your old jeans into the hottest distressed denim loved by the likes of Rihanna and Kylie Jenner? It may sound complicated but maxi dresses retailer QUIZ is here to break it down into a step-by-step process.

Before you start
Before you start, you need to carry out some inital preparation. If you don't, you risk acting too hastily and potentially making a mistake that could ruin the overall look of your jeans.

Try on your clean, dry jeans and work out where you want to distress. Pockets, knees and the bum are the most popular parts to modify, as they are the areas of the jeans that naturally wear and tear. Use chalk to mark out where you want to distress.

Creating tears
Inside the jeans underneath where you plan on cutting, you'll need to place a magazine or thick piece of cardboard. This will prevent your knife from slicing both sides of the fabric.

Take a safety knife and carefully cut rips of varying sizes into the denim to create a natural-looking tear. Loosely aim to create a diamond shape using varying sized cuts.

Next, fray the tears you've just made. Along the edge of each cut, gently tease the horizontal white threads using a safety pin, being careful not to break them. Then, using tweezers, pluck out the vertical threads to leave just the white horizontal threads. Repeat this for each cut you have made.

Distressing the denim
At this point, you'll need a piece of sandpaper. Take the sandpaper and rub it across sections of your jeans. Doing so will create a natural-looking colour fade, perfect for adding the finishing touches to your distressed denim creation.

Consider patches
This next step is optional but adding patches to your denim is a great way to show off your individual fashion flair. Bright florals motifs are in vogue and practically leap off distressed denim to give you an eye-catching contrast of grunge and chic. If you want a subtle embellishment, why not go with lace? This is a classic feminine fabric that will dress up your modern distressed denim with retro charm for the ideal smart-casual look.

If patching your denim or distressing it altogether sounds like too much effort, you could head to QUIZ instead to shop their collection of ready-made ripped and patched jeans. However you do it, you definitely need some distressed denim in your wardrobe for the season ahead!

(This is a sponsored post.) 
 
Friday, 2 June 2017

What should you grow in your garden?



Growing your own vegetables can seem a little daunting at first – and then after hours in the garden the novelty can wear off, leading to people giving up at the first hurdle. However, help is now at hand! With the help of Suttons, a premium seeds retailer, we can provide you with the best fruit and veg to grow in your own garden, and how you can incorporate them into some fresh, healthy meals.

Peas

If you are looking for a hassle-free vegetable to grow in your garden, then peas might be for you. They sprout well in cooler weather, so springtime beginning in March is always a good time to start growing them. Remember, once you’ve planted the seeds, the peas need support from the stems; use either chicken wire or other netting between supports at the end of each row. Peas taste even better straight from the ground, and you can use them as part of a green vegetable medley – or alongside a lean meat to finish off a dish. The best thing about them is that the more you pick – the more they produce!

Potatoes

Usually grown during spring, potatoes are a part of the carbohydrate group which is one of your main macronutrients that should be part of your diet. They are the staple of most dishes, and go great with a lean steak or as a jacket with tuna. The growing process is also fun: plant your seed potatoes in a potato bag and as the green shoots start to sprout, cover them again with compost. Keep doing this until your potato bag is full, and then you can start watering them. Wait around 10 to 20 weeks until the foliage begins to go yellow, and then tip your bag upside down to see all of the potatoes that you’ve managed to grow!

Spring Onions and Radishes

You have a choice of two methods when it comes to growing these vegetables. Either way, they require a lot of sunlight to grow, so summer is the perfect season to plant. They can be grown either in a pot in the garden, or you can sow them straight into the ground as we lead into the warmer summer weather. Both are ideal within a fresh, flavorsome salad; the spring onion provides a sharp, sweet crunch – whereas the radish can add a natural pepperiness to the dish.

Goji Berries

Despite the exotic nature of the fruit, goji berries can be grown in a British climate perfectly fine. They are surprisingly tough as a shrub and can grow in windy coastal areas, but they also require plenty of sunlight so again, summer is the perfect season for growing goji berries. The fruit is extremely juicy and are rich in nutrients. Mix in a blender on a morning with other fruits and natural yoghurt to make a superfood smoothie to help you face the day every day. Or alternatively, use the fruit as a topping for your morning cereal to give it an exotic twist.

Blackberries

As a classic British fruit, the blackberry can easily be grown in your own garden. To grow them, take the plant and train the stem into wires so that they are easier to harvest when they fruit. They can grow anywhere in the garden as they don’t need a lot of light or attention. If you don’t want to deal with thorns, then use a variety such as the Apache. They are popular when pair up with overnight breakfast porridge. To make this sweet but nutritional breakfast, take rolled oats and pour either coconut soy milk or usual soy milk over the top of them (only enough to soak them). Mix your blackberries in and then leave it overnight to chill in the fridge. When you take it out in the morning, it’ll be a creamy texture perfect for a fresh spring day. 
This is a sponsored post.
Wednesday, 10 December 2014

A Christmas Essential: Sugru

Picture the scene - It's Christmas Day and you have hyped up children who are overly excited about their new toys. They get so excited that, oops! A toy gets broken. Cue tears. If your house is anything like mine, you never have superglue when you need it. That's where Sugru comes in.



Sugru is a wonder material that feels like play dough but is as tough as superglue and it sticks to pretty much anything (ceramics, glass, metal, wood, and most plastics and fabrics). It's only £9.99 so it makes a fab stocking filler or Secret Santa gift.




My iPhone cables always giving up on me so I've been testing out my Sugru on that. It really is like a soft play dough. It does have a bit of a chemically smell that I don't care for too much but that is to be expected. It moulds so easily and stays in place. Once you give it time to set it turns into a durable, flexible rubber that stays stuck. Unless you remove it of course. I was actually surprised at how well it held!


It is available in a range of colours: silver grey, awesome orange, woody brown, mossy green, and panther pink.

Sugru is such a great, innovative product and you should really check out their timeline story.



You can find out more about Sugru at the website, Facebook and Twitter.

(Disclaimer: I received a tin of Sugru free of charge in exchange for this post. All thoughts and opinions are my own.)