Category Archives: Crafting

This is what a short-attention span looks like.

Blinds Leading the Blind

Reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated.

Not that November didn’t try very hard to kill me. December had a whack at me, too, come to think of it.

Nevertheless, I have emerged on the other side. Tired, disorganized and cranky, the chatelaine of a disheveled palace, and the mother of wild, scruffy, utterly descheduled children who can recite every line of dialogue from Toy Story 3, word-for-word in its proper sequence.

Oh, and lately my husband has been calling me “Amy.”

I suppose I should have a cure for some terminal disease or, at the very least — and probably more true to my character — an exhaustive plan for world domination to show for my long absence.

Well, I don’t.

Let me ‘splain. No, there is too much. Let me sum up.

So, sometime back, I got inspired. Before very long, I made something I wanted on my own wall, my very own Tulsa destination blind.

With encouragement from a few friends, I experimented with selling a few of these creations. The result was encouraging but by no means overwhelming.

I’m not really a gambler by nature. I don’t know what came over me.

But I bought a ton of supplies. The UPS man delivered six enormous boxes and I started hyperventilating. Thirty-six canvases. I was obviously insane.

I hid them in an upstairs closet and spent a few weeks engaged in a mental kickboxing match, chastising myself for following an impulse — a whim, really — with such a price tag.

You. Stupid. Idiot.

To make matters worse, it occurred to me, in my full-blown dementia, that I couldn’t make a booth with just destination blinds. So I bought other stuff.

And then my computer crapped out. Cha-ching. I started to panic.

I did eventually start painting, realizing that maybe I could cover at least some of the supply costs (never mind the new computer, but whose counting?) by selling a painting or two.

Or a kidney. Either way.

By the time Holiday Market rolled around, I had used and abused my friend Neil, who shares my mania for all things cottage, for painting help, pricing advice, merchandising and even a little last-minute babysitting . Thanks to a cadre of Junior League volunteers, I managed to throw together my booth just before the market opened for Preview night.

As I watched shoppers flood through the doors, sick with anxiety, I remember muttering to Neil:

“I just hope I sell a painting.”

And then this mob of people rounded the corner.

Within six minutes of the market opening, I sold seven paintings. Three of them were bought by one lady. I could have spent the next two-hours-and-fifty-four-minutes shrugging my shoulders in disbelief.

But I didn’t have time.

I was too busy. Selling. Twenty paintings. In three hours.

Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday passed. When the smoke cleared, I had sold 48 paintings. Along with lots of other items, both handmade goodies I’d cranked out and the ready-made things I’d bought.

I took these photos on, I think, Sunday morning after every painting except one had already sold. (This was my first attempt with the iPhone camera, and in poor lighting to boot, so be kind.)

Supplies covered. Computer paid off. I even paid for the iPhone I “had to buy” when the venue’s WiFi went on the fritz.

I don’t know how to spell “relief.” But I know what it feels like.

Bar none, my favorite part of the weekend was hearing people speak well of the things I’d worked hard to make or chosen with care.

You see, Tulsa is “French Country” Country. Home of Charles Faudree. Home of toile. Lots and lots of toile. Some time before Holiday Market, I did a little market research to see what was selling, and “cottage” wasn’t it. Not even close. I started questioning my instincts. Do I stock things that seem to be popular even if they’re things I would never buy for myself, or do I stay true to my own style and possibly not sell anything?

In the end, I decided to stick with what I loved, knowing that if I didn’t sell anything, at least I wouldn’t be unhappy with the inventory. Can I say how glad I am that I did?

If half the battle of making a sale is getting people to stop at your booth — and it is — the other half seems to be offering merchandise shoppers haven’t seen anywhere else.

Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—

I took the one less traveled by,

And that has made all the difference.

One lady had seen one of the blinds on a morning show TV spot and told me the only reason she came to Holiday Market was to buy one.

While I was inhaling an infrequent meal in the cafe, my booth was visited by an interior designer who loved the blinds and said she had clients who would be very interested. Neil confided in her that we were a little afraid cottage taste was anathema in French Country Country, whereupon the designer told her we were just “ahead of the curve.”

I got lots of encouragement to open a store of my own — uh, thank you, but no — and the great compliment of having a couple of people try to knock off my designs and method.

I’m not the sort of person who needs constant reassurance to function, but I have to admit: having people say nice things about your work for four days straight was a heady experience.

As for where I’ve been lately, if this were a (very long) story math problem you might have noticed I didn’t have 48 blinds on hand. Which means I’ve spent the last two months finishing the other 12 paintings I sold at Holiday Market — along with another 14 I sold after the market ended. I finished the last batch on the Tuesday before Christmas and have been in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber trying to recover ever since.

Lessons from this little jaunt?

  1. I’m exhausted.
  2. Trust my gut. Even when all evidence suggests that I’m insane.
  3. Taking the occasional risk doesn’t, in actual fact, kill me.
  4. I need more sleep.
  5. No matter how busy I am, dropping everything to play with my kiddos is always a good idea.
  6. Being on your feet all day after only two hours of sleep really stinks.
  7. I have the best husband in the universe.
  8. I don’t hate working retail. But it’s still a stretch for a misanthrope like me.
  9. Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
  10. Having a friend who shares your enthusiasm for zinc place cards and burlap bags is one of life’s unexpected blessings.

I’ve managed to get all my destination blinds on my website and hope to add the rest of my merchandise soon. But the most pressing issue at the moment is unearthing my house from the debris. It’s ugly. I think I’ve already been reported to Hoarders.

In summary, for those of you who visited my booth to cheer me on — and buy things — thank you from the bottom of my heart! I would be remiss in my gratitude if I did not also acknowledge the help of my amazing friend Neil and the dynamo Junior Leaguers who put on such a fantastic Holiday Market. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

Last but most importantly, my sweet husband did things like staying up four hours past his bedtime to help paint, watching the kids by himself for three days straight, and putting up with a spate of Crabby Abby-ness unparalleled in recent history.

Honey, thank you for your help. And your patience. And your support. And your patience. And your love. And your patience.

I love you. And your patience.

P.S. My name is Abby. Not Amy. Remember?

Hiding Out for Holiday Market

© Abigail Prescott, All Rights Reserved.

While I’m sure no one’s world has stopped turning because I’ve haven’t posted, I don’t want anyone to think I don’t appreciate you. Or that I’m not wracked with guilt.

Because I am. And I do.

But until Holiday Market is over, the time to post anything intelligible — or even profanity-free — is going to be scarce. Nevertheless, exciting things are being made as we speak.

As you can see from the (admittedly crappy) photo above, I’ve been designing and painting up a storm and I can’t wait to share the fun! If you’ll be in or around Tulsa, Oklahoma, over the weekend of November 4th through 7th, I hope you’ll come on by. Find event details and purchase tickets here. I am by no means the only merchant at Holiday Market, so it’s well worth a trip.

In the meantime, you can follow more timely posts with the inside scoop on my Facebook page. I’ll be posting updates about new items, plus a series of TICKET GIVEAWAYS, so stay tuned.

Until we meet again “or the case is solv-ed,”

Pre-Fab Rehab

While the Crimson Tide were cashing in on my personal shortcomings two Saturdays ago, I was busy in our garage trying to prove all those hours spent in the Drama Department Scenery Shop of my alma mater weren’t for naught.

To wit, I was transforming this:

I bought this kitchen island from Walmart.com a few weeks ago, intending to use it as my “cash wrap” for the upcoming Holiday Market and future events. I need an effective and efficient way to transport the rather bulky technology I use and thought this might do the trick.

The island is very portable, sturdy and secure enough for me to not be in constant panic about my equipment getting broken or pilfered. But it’s so… vanilla. Knowing that the island will be stored somewhere in my house for the other 361 days of the year, I had to spruce it up.

Voila.

Island Rehab

I used a couple panels of beadboard MDF brad-nailed to the sides and back, and then covered the top and bottom edges with a 1 3/4″ base cap. (I had two 12′ lengths of base cap as a souvenir from the previous owners of our house, so that isn’t reflected in the budget below.) I also covered the corners with corner trim and put another strip of base cap across the front underneath the drawer.

After using wood filler to repair all the little brad holes, I broke out a “new” toy that’s been sitting in my house unused since April:

It was my first time using it and I’m pretty pleased with the ease of use and the result. Apparently, I didn’t thin the paint adequately, because the texture of the finish is rougher than I would like. After a little post-painting research online, it seems that an 80/20 ratio of paint to water is the way to go; I wasn’t even close. (The paint is “Swiss Coffee” by Valspar, in case you’re a color-junky. I think it’s my new favorite white.)

Island Rehab - detail

I also added some new hardware (Davis by Allen + Roth) and a keyed lock to the drawer.

Last but not least, I stained the butcher block top. If I had known in advance this seemingly simple task was on order of magnitude with the labors of Hercules, I would have passed.

Island Rehab - extended

The innocent-looking blond wood in the before photo belied its sinister strength; there was some kind finish on it that did not want to come off. After two aborted stainings and as many attempts with an orbital sander, my sweet husband attacked it with a RapidStrip disc. The RapidStrip worked fine in removing the finish but left quite a bit of “character” in the way of gouges and visible lines.

Another sanding spree (using 80 grit, then 100 grit, then 150 grit, on the orbital sander and then 220 grit by hand) didn’t completely remove the “character,” but in the end, I managed to get the butcher block to absorb the stain. I used three coats of Minwax Walnut stain followed by two coats of a satin polyurethane.

By The Numbers 1:

  • Kitchen Island – $99
  • Beadboard Panels & Trim – $26
  • Paint – $12
  • New Hardware – $9
  • Drawer Lock – $6
  • TOTAL: $152

Not a perfect job by any means, but it’s done — for better or worse. I’m satisfied with the end result and I think it will be very functional without looking utilitarian. Plus it gave me an excuse to reacquaint myself with power tools. I’ve got wheels turning again…


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  1. In the interests of full disclosure, I should mention this island cost my husband quite a bit more than $152. Due to an oversight brought on by utter exhaustion, “someone” left the garage door open and the garage light on all night after finishing the trim work on said island. The unfortunate result — that an opportunistic and not very savvy thief made off with my husband’s combo set including a cordless drill, circular saw, reciprocating saw and flashlight (while leaving behind the battery charger and several more valuable tools) — should actually add several hundred dollars to the overall cost of the island rehab. But since you are more likely than I to keep your wits about you and close the stinkin’ garage door, the replacement cost of these tools is not endemic to the project and as such is not reflected in its bottom line.

Pillow Trim from Upholstery Webbing

Cowboy Pillows

Around March or February of this year, I happened to be on hand as Joann was clearing out a ton of special order fabric samples: 18″ squares of decor fabric, most costing upwards of $30.00 per yard — and some much more.

The remnants were only $2.00 apiece, so I bought a few with no real intentions. A few days later, they marked the remnants down to $1.00 each. In a singularly unfortunate alignment of circumstance, this markdown coincided with a temporary lapse of sanity on my part. Unfortunate because I bought two dozen or so samples, scouring both Joann locations in my fair city to make sure I got every last one worth buying.

And then my sanity returned because I haven’t touched them since.

However, with Holiday Market on the horizon, it’s high time I got a’sewin’. And what better way to kick off this sew-a-thon than a pair of charming cowboy pillows?

Waverly Wild West

I love this fabric (Waverly Wild West in Red, if you’re wondering) but thought it needed some trim, preferably something rugged to compliment its cowboyishness. Nothing in the trim section at Hobby Lobby leaped out at me, but a lucky turn down the upholstery aisle pointed me to the very thing.

Upholstery Webbing

Happiness is great trim that costs less than $1.00 a yard.

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I Should Feel Guilty

But I don’t.

Okay, maybe a feel a little guilty about buying a perfectly serviceable button-down shirt at Salvation Army and then rending it to pieces for my own amusement.

But I think it turned out well.

I just loved this pattern of stripes too much to condemn the shirt to a lifetime of wash-and-wear drudgery. If love is a crime, I plead guilty.

I made the larger pillow (12″x22″) from the shirt placket, sans pockets. The original buttons were a little too yellowish, so I swapped them out for these 80 centers from Hobby Lobby. At the last minute, I decided to throw on a pre-gathered white ruffle I’d had sitting around for ages. I like its effect but I failed to adjust my intended seam allowance, so the pillow looks way overstuffed. Note the straining buttons. I may rip into the pillow form and pull out some of the “meat” so it doesn’t look so portly.

Aided and abetted by my accomplice, Kona Cotton, I cut the applique and the backs of these two pillows (12″x16″) entirely from the shirt sleeves. The “X” applique was another last-minute decision but one I’m very happy with.  And yes, I’ve come to terms with the fact that any patchwork I do will always have a slight margin of error. Acceptance is key.

If I have a “sewing nemesis,” the invisible zipper is he. I’ve studied the instruction sheet for every zipper I ever bought, as well as every online tutorial I could find and learned one thing: I am a miserable failure. But I just didn’t want to do an envelope enclosure on these pillows, so I made another attempt (or two).

Exhibit A:

This mess was the product of a hour of basting, ripping, sewing, resewing, pinning and swearing. If I was a cartoon, you would have seen an angry black squiggle over my head.

It wasn’t until I found this video tutorial that I finally braved up enough to disregard all the conventional wisdom about basting the seam before adding the zipper.

Eureka! Thank you, British sewing lady. Extra steps are for suckers.

Exhibit B:

I’m not exactly sure where in my home these little darlings will end up.

But I like to think I saved them from a lifetime of ignominious despair hanging in someone’s closet. It helps me sleep at night.

Abigail


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I Do Own A Calendar

But you can’t really tell by my front door.

Being that I’m expecting company on Monday, I thought it time to take down the St. Patrick’s Day wreath and switch it out with something a bit more seasonal.

(Eventually, I hope to have 12-month back-stock of door decor and thus avoid the I’ll-leave-it-up-because-I-have-nothing-to-hang-in-its-place-yet postponement that has become almost ritual around here.)

Naturally, finding something to hang on the front door is the perfect excuse to avoid the things I really need to do in preparation for my guests — like cleaning my house. Which is, of course, why I did it.

I know most people cover grapevine wreaths with flowers, feathers and whatnot. But I’m just perverse enough to like the twiggy goodness of the vines for their own charming selves. I just cobbled a swag out of a pussy-willow-like selection from Hobby Lobby with a little burlap bow.

That’s really all it takes to make me happy.

Although one of these couldn’t hurt, either.

Scenic 30-A: Cottage Charm Giveaway

While I was in college, I was very fortunate to spend two summers working in Destin, Florida.

These were very formative summers for me, not the least because they served as a proving ground for a budding romance with the man who eventually became my husband.

I worked at the Customer Service counter of a grocery store — which is quite the place to be in the middle of tourist season, I can tell you. Among some of my more momentous life lessons and experiences:

  • I met Amy Grant.
  • I learned to distinguish at least three distinct variations of Mississippi Southern accent.
  • I rode out two major tropical storms.
  • I had a pregnant woman go into labor while I was ringing up her groceries — and then refuse my offer of help to load her car.
  • I learned to intuit with astonishing accuracy the type of cigarettes preferred by almost any given customer. It’s amazing how certain types of people gravitate to certain brands.
  • I sold liquor illegally. (I had to relieve the liquor store clerk for her break one day. The store manager apparently didn’t realize I wasn’t 21 at the time.)
  • I learned that the thrill of a four-hour, deep sea fishing cruise is greatly diminished by the sensation — not to mention odor — of baiting your hook with squid. Like neoprene rubber covered in snot. Gross.
  • It was the general consensus of the locals that Roy Scheider is a creep. I’m just telling you what I heard.

Nevertheless, I have a very soft place in my heart for the Redneck Riviera.

If you share my admiration for white, sugar sand beaches and blue waters, I hope you’ll enjoy this contribution to  Kim’s Fourth Annual Cottage Charm Giveaway.

Included in this giveaway is “Beaches of Scenic 30-A,” an original, destination blind-style painting featuring twelve of South Walton’s most beautiful beaches, painted on 12″ x 24″ canvas in a beautiful gray-green acrylic and then distressed for that beachy appeal.

(Sorry about the crummy photos. This is the best I could do on a rainy day…)

Villages listed include: Dune Allen, Santa Rosa Beach, Blue Mountain Beach, Grayton Beach, WaterColor, Seaside, Seagrove Beach, WaterSound, Seacrest, Alys Beach, Rosemary Beach and Inlet Beach.

TO ENTER:

Leave a comment to this post, including your email AND answering the following question:

“If you could have a destination blind from any city/area in the world, what city/area would you choose?”

TO ENTER A SECOND TIME:

Click here and become a Facebook Fan — or “Liker,” or whatever they’re calling it these days.  Every Facebook Fan/Liker will receive an additional entry in the giveaway.

Winner will be announced on May 29th. Don’t forget to include a way to contact you in case you win!

RULES:

  1. I will ship within the contiguous United States only.
  2. Ummmmm … can’t think of any other rules at the moment. But I reserve the right to add or amend them at any time if it suits me.

Thanks and good luck!

Spring Market

Well, I survived the Spring Market. Thanks largely to the good company of good friends who managed to put up with me for an entire day-and-a-half.

Even with no drinking involved.

Now that it’s over, I’ve been just kicking back, mentally decorating the Alys Beach retreat I plan to buy with my profits.

Maybe this one. Although a three bedroom seems so … economy class.

Okay, perhaps not.

I did make some money. But I had a very full car on the way home. Lots of people exclaimed over our merchandise only to buy … none of it.

Even so, I found the event to be very productive as market research, so I know what to focus on down the road.

The Tulsa Destination Blinds were big hits.

My friend Neil made the fridge magnets and these beautiful paper wreaths.

Neil’s sister Amanda came up with these lost sock boards which are a stroke of genius in my book. I also sold quite a few GooRoos but didn’t get a frontal picture of their display (the bassinet in the photo below).

I also got a few hits on people interested in custom vinyl.

All in all, it was nice show. I’m not sure how much I would have to have sold to be “thrilled,” but apparently, I need the affirmation of my creative spawn flying off the shelves to feel fully legitimated.

I guess I’m just needy that way.

My New Toy

Between plans for the bathroom remodel, volunteer commitments and getting ready for Spring Market, March was a busy month. But I have had time to buy a new toy — one I hope will play a starring role in both the remodel and the Market.

Thanks to the incredible amount of wind this week, conditions have not been suitable to break it in yet. I’ve had to content myself by walking around my house and making a mental list of all the things I want to paint.

Which includes basically everything.

I can’t wait to get started.

More “Faux Pillows”

I hope this will count as an exception to the rule that a sequel is never as good as the original.

BEFORE:

I found these yellow silk pillow slips in the bargain bin at Restoration Hardware a good seven or eight years ago. Of course, after I paid for two Restoration Hardware down pillow forms to fill them, the word “bargain” flew right out the window. But I had job back then.

I liked them until we moved into our current home and I learned that yellow is not a color I am friends with. Not to mention that the silk pillow slips now have a number of frayed spots, thanks to the little princes and their tendency to treat throw pillows with all the courtesy one might expect from a herd of Tasmanian devils.

The covers have been exiled to the garage sale bin. But I have these two pricey, naked down pillow forms.

And unbleached muslin, lest we forget.

I tried a freezer paper stencil of a monogram on this version, instead of the grain-sack-inspired stripes. The stencil was a bit difficult to apply to the fabric because the design was pretty intricate but otherwise worked well. I opted to forgo the acrylic this time and buy actual fabric paint, in hopes of finding something that would dry with a softer texture and fade less in the wash.

I made the unfortunate choice to try the Simply Spray fabric spray paint, about which I can only invoke Holly Golightly and say: “Quel disaster.” This stuff is more like spray dye and should not be used for any application in which precision is required. It made a huge, watery mess that bled all over the fabric and completely negated the purpose of a stencil in the first place. Luckily, I had been unusually cautious (for me) and decide to experiment with a sample first, so my painstakingly-applied freezer paper monogram wasn’t ruined in the testing phase.

Perhaps intuiting the Simply Spray debacle, I’d also bought a bottle of Tulip Soft Fabric Paint. Much better. It’s slightly creamier than acrylic going on but dries thinner and with a very nice, soft matte finish.

As though all that weren’t enough, I decided to take my pillow-making to new heights (lows?) by finishing the monogram pillows with welt cord around the edges. I used this tutorial as a basic guide and winged it until I was pleased with the result.

AFTER:

[You'll have to excuse the chairs. Yet another casualty of my style evolution. I wish with all my heart I'd discovered the wisdom of neutral upholstery — and child-friendly fabrics — before I purchased these years ago, but alas, my approach to design was all backwards. One of these days, I'll manage to slipcover, reupholster or replace them with something having an aesthetic less like a punch in the eye.]

This should be the last of the “Faux Pillow” series for a while. Though my invention has not been exhausted, the same cannot be said for my stock of unbleached muslin.

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