Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 November 2011

The Hanging Garden.


Hanging Garden How-To
Thought this was rather cool as I browsed this morning. A bit untimely for those of you in the northern hemisphere perhaps, but hey, swings and roundabouts my friends.

This came via Poppytalk and is from Persephone Magazine

The Lazy Lady’s Guide to DIY: Hanging Herb Garden

What you’ll need: 
Tin containers with snap-on plastic lids (tea, cocoa, and coffee cans are a good bet), 
coat hangers, 
pliers, 
scissors,
herbs (I bought basil, rosemary, dill, and cilantro for about $2.50 each),
masking tape,
coffee filters, 
a nail,
a hammer, 
X-acto knife, 
scrap fabric or paper, 
and glue or spray adhesive.
Herb Garden Before

After you’ve emptied and cleaned your cans, remove the bottom of the can with a can opener. Using the hammer and nail, punch 10-15 holes near the center.

Herb Garden Can Top

Slide the bottom inside the can, holding it up from inside. Tape the bottom in place about an inch from the outer edge of the can. (You could also use a hot glue gun.)  After you’ve got it good and stuck, punch two holes on opposite sides of the can about a quarter inch from the edge. These are the holes for the handle.

Taped Top

Flip the can over. Gently press the plant into the can. This part can get a little messy, so you might want to do it over the sink or outside.


Herb planted in can

Once you’ve got the herb in the can, take your coffee filter and cut a small diamond in the center, with a slit extending to the edge on one side.

Coffee filter

Fold the coffee filter around the herb and tape the edges together. Tape it to the can so that the top of the filter is tight. This will help prevent leaking and soil from falling out when you turn the can over.

Coffee filter taped to the can

Using your x-acto knife, cut a hole about 1-2 inches in diameter in the center of the plastic lid. The size of the hole really depends on the size of the plant. Too big and it will leak, too small and you might not be able to get the plant through it. When in doubt, go smaller.

A circular hole is cut in the lid.

This part is tricky: Carefully feed the plant through the hole in the plastic lid. The best way I’ve found to do this is to grasp the center of the plant, gathering all the leaves together, and gently twist it until it’s in a rope-like shape and isn’t poking out everywhere.


This part is tricky.

No herbs were harmed in the making of this project. (Until I ate them.)

Once you’ve got the lid snapped on, you can glue or tape it in place if the plant is especially big or heavy. Mine wasn’t, so I just left it snapped. Next, cut your fabric or paper into strips long enough to wrap around the can completely with a little overlap. Cut it wide enough so that there’s about a half inch extra around the top of the can (what used to be the bottom). You should probably have a cat hold the fabric in place for you.

Olive is helping


"You need this? Too bad, it's my bed now."

Hold the fabric so one edge is even with the bottom of the can, where the plant is poking out. Tape or glue the vertical edge of the fabric to the can, then wrap the fabric tightly around the can. You can use spray adhesive, glue, or clear tape to secure the fabric. Next, fold the extra half inch of fabric or paper inside the top of the can and glue or tape it in place. Be careful not to cover the holes for watering!


Wrap the fabric around the can.

 To make the handles, use your pliers to cut about 6 inches of wire from the hangers. Bend it into a curve, then use the pliers to bend about 1/4-1/2 inch off the end into a right angle. Poke the ends through the holes you hammered out earlier, then use the pliers to squeeze the ends upward to secure it. I also made hooks for mine to make it easier to get them down for watering.

Herb garden after

You can hang your plants from curtain rods, hooks in the ceiling, or just about anywhere that gets plenty of light. I hung my herbs over the sink in my kitchen so they would be within easy reach while I was cooking. So far I haven’t had any problems with leaking, but you may want to avoid hanging your plants over hardwood floors or other surfaces that don’t take kindly to being dripped on.

Herb garden after 2



This project could be tweaked in hundreds of ways. I originally planned to cover my cans in wood veneer and stain them for a more natural look, but had a hard time finding it locally. Sheet metal, wallpaper, wrapping paper, collage, or paint would also be great materials to use on these. And of course, you don’t have to grow herbs: you could also use these to grow hanging vines, flowers, tomatoes, peppers… the options are endless.
by Bobella

So there it is - a little involved? Maybe. Worth it in the long run? Definitely!

Monday, 17 October 2011

The Fashionable Cleaner.


Lately I’ve noticed - after moving out of home within the last 12 months - that I clean A LOT!
(I can hear my dear mothers voice in my head everytime I say the words "Pick up after yourself!" or "Today's a good clothes drying day!")
And I don’t think I’m alone with that.
Why not make it fun? Dress up for the occasion! Splurge on the cute stuff!
Here’s some stuff the get you up and ready…


[Source]
These Rubber Gloves give everyday chores a saucy face-lift!
 
 
Foot in the Door™ - Black Doorstop
[Source]

Just place the ever-so-dainty toe of this playful pump under the crack of your very own door and it will be held open in style.





The Audrey Fabric Apron - Black and White Floral by Gloveables®
[Source]

This vintage-inspired hostess kitchen and cooking apron to flatter every woman's figure.






[Source]

 The Ostrich Brush is a beautiful and functional cleaning tool. Made of a pear wood handle and natural, harvestable ostrich feathers, you will fall in love with the quality of this duster.






Broom & Dust Pan Set - Black & White Floral by Gloveables®
[Source]

This matching dust pan and broom will help your clean in style.

So, what are you waiting for?




Wednesday, 28 September 2011

The Interior Design Trends - Spring/Summer 2011.

Spring and summer 2011 interior design style will voyage through time and remoteness according to designers and department heads. They know precisely where the horizons will be.
Trend Number 1. Folkloric Movement
[Source]
This Folkloric trend is not fixed to any definite tradition or legacy, but uses conventional craft and hand drawn imagery throughout all countries.

There’s a mix of African, Russian, Scandinavian and Indian influences across fabrics, metal work and ceramics.

This takes in well crafted pieces of furniture, while accumulating embroidered or patterned fabrics for low key warmth. Tables should be fully clad in hot summer colours – oranges, reds and pinks.





Trend Number 2. So Fresh Drift
[Source]



Spring comes in the abode with flowers, fabrics and home wares. They are established in this style in an expansive variety of yellows and soft greens of khaki, moss and olive shades. Next to white polish pieces and white ceramics, these looks convey vividness and clarity to the home. Also they are nicely complemented with wicker garden furnishings and natural timber furniture.


These next three are all rivers to the same ocean.




Trend Number 3. 50′s Interior Trend
[Source]
The main colours for this trend are washed out red, emerald green and gold. Retro prints and mid – 20th Century furnishing figures and manners are a high-flying theme.




Trend Number 4. Granny Chic Trend

[Source]

Granny Chic takes an unmarked path this spring with modern-day graphics, update on florals, crochet, fine china and all things characteristically British and homespun.
The main idea is of flowers on tableware, cushions in teal, maroon and subdued gold and a real mix of wistful flowery wallpapers.



Trend Number 5. Chalky Pastels Trend

[Source]
 This key look persists this year. Pastels of dusty pink, mint green and pale blue grow to be a key palette for spring/summer 2011. Delicate suggestions of colour are added to tableware and trimmings. This colour palette is collective with matt finishes.