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What I'm Reading This Week #18

Happy Friday everyone and welcome to May.  We had a long week of getting the garage together so the Mr could finally park in it six weeks later.  We still have some work to do in there as far as purging and such but we needed to get the space useable again since it's been a holding tank for our old countertop/sink, old grill waiting to be picked up by a friend, insulation, built planters and patio table and extra fencing from critter cages.  We haven't had the mental drive to figure out how we get the shelves in order.  I think I'm going to have to look up some garage organizing articles or something because it's really overwhelming to look at it all.  If we can get a plan together to tackle it then maybe we'll have our weekend plans for next weekend as long as it's not hot yet because we don't want to be in a sweatbox. Now let's peek into: Dietitians Agree, Eating More Might Be the Secret to Your Strongest Year Ever   (Volume eating FTW.  It's been ...

DIY gone awry

For over a year, I've had some perfectly patina'd picket fence slats in the garage.  I was going to make shabby chic type signs with them, got unmotivated and there they sat.  I was getting the feeling the Mr was going to chuck them if I didn't do something with them and with a self imposed Christmas decorating deadline looming, I decided to hop into an idea I had last year.  Funnily enough, this idea failed last year too as a pencil tracing technique on a stained piece of wood didn't work and I said screw it.  I was determined to make it work this time!

I took the pickets and arranged every other board facing the same way so it didn't look like I ripped a fence out of someone's yard and ran.


I had scrap board that I cut to screw into the back of each slat.


But before that, I had to see if our shortest screws would work with the scrap wood and slats...


As you can see, that would've poked through so I had the Mr pick up 3/4" screws instead of the 1" ones we had on hand.

I installed another scrap piece in the back and screwed in a D ring that holds 60 lbs on the back.


I sealed the back with clear primer in case there were any buggers that tried to take up residence in there.

Since I don't have one of those fancy pants Cricut (affiliate link) thingys, I had to go old school and print out my saying and then use an exacto knife to cut it out.



I used a pencil to trace it onto the boards and got to painting.


After I was done with my first coat, I saw it...



Did you catch it?

Tannenbaum is misspelled.

BALLS!

This project is doomed.

I refused to let it get to me.  I painted a few coats of Pure White Annie Sloan paint over it after I sanded it down and put a light coat over the other slats to try to save the natural distressing.


I won't lie...I died a little inside losing all of that beautiful natural patina.

I reprinted and after checking the spelling 60x, repeated the process.

I put a coat of wax on it to seal everything in and keep the paint from chipping off.


Now it's hanging up on the wall to greet everyone as they come in!



The lesson, be persistent even when the crafting Gods are pissing in your Cheerios!

Have you ever bombed a DIY project?  Were you able to save it or did you scrap it?

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Comments

  1. It looks great on our wall. I know it stinks that it took you extra time and all that but it definitely was worth it!

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  2. I'm not much of a DIYer so I don't really have projects to keep or scrap. Your sign looks really cool, and I always like to see what talented people like you come up with.

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  3. Nice save girlfriend! Wish I could say the same for my faucet repair lol. Having alot of trouble with my dry bar. Our fave Citristrip has let me down...after removal I am stuck with a very gummy residue, can't use much chemical, it's in the basement, grrrr. Have you ever had that result?

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    Replies
    1. Hmm, did you use stripping pads? Really rough and kind of removes the gummy stuff as you go. Then I will usually go over it with those industrial blue paper towels before putting on the next coat. I hope that helps!

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  4. Oh noooooo!!! But you did a great job salvaging it and it looks fabulous!!!!! ā¤ļø

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  5. This turned out to be beautiful!! I love the font you used for the words. I used to do a lot more DIY stuff than I do now, although I was never good in the patience area. My mom was the creative one and could do just about anything with nary an effort. It always came naturally to her, whereas I had to work at it and still fell short. I admire people like you who have such creativity flowing through your veins. I'm so glad you didn't just scrap the whole thing and kept working on it. It turned out GREAT!!!!

    ReplyDelete

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