Life in Rehab is BACK! Get ready for a slew of new projects for the new year! We just can't promise we know what we're doing!

Visit Life in Rehab's new Etsy shop
And because we're good friends by now,
our readers get 25% off
by entering the promo code
REHAB when you make a purchase!
So deck out, do some early holiday gift shopping,
strut your stuff and make a statement!


I'm on a mission. If I have never EVER not once replied to your comments, you may want to check this out: No Reply?



Showing posts with label Featured Guest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Featured Guest. Show all posts

Thursday, May 5, 2011

So I Picked Up Some Steel Wool and Knitted a Stove...

Reader and follower Lee Niata Johnson does not have a blog, but evidently she's read enough of them to feel bullet proof and invincible, just like the rest of us.
She tackled her first DIY.
And I must say, this is a really cool project, so I just had to share. 
She doesn't have a full step by step, and I'm not going to presume to do one since this is, again, not something I've done, but her photos tell the tale pretty well, don't you think?
Take it away, Lee!

I needed wanted a new stainless steel drop-in range/oven.  However the current prices are from $900 – 1100!  OUCH!  So, after almost 2 years of living with a range top that was off white I now have “stainless steel” thanks to this product:  http://www.liquidstainlesssteel.com/learnhow.html  Product cost $24.95!!  I also added new black porcelain drip pans from Lowes $20.














 I ordered the product online after searching months for a new drop in stove/range or some kind of way to paint it!  As soon as I saw the video and a picture of a range top, I was SOLD!

Product arrived in about 3 – 4 days.

Pictures I sent show all of my steps.  I simply followed the instructions that came with the paint.  Also viewed the online video.

TIPS:
·         Clean appliance thoroughly!
·         Paint THIN coats – I painted 3 layers – one hour drying time apart
·         THIN Top coat – 2 hour after last base coat.  I only painted one top coat

I AM VERY HAPPY with the results!!!!!  In fact I love it so much, I’m painting my cabinets white this weekend, I hope!!
I have been inspired!!!
Now THAT'S a first project! I'm hiding this post from the hubs- he's dying for stainless steel appliances!
What do you think, guys? How'd she do? And would you give this treatment a whirl before tossing what you've got?

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

No Reply?

Have you ever asked a fellow blogger a question in their comments and wondered why you hadn't heard back?

Yeah, me too. I had asked Yanet at 3 Sunkissed Boys where the awesome antique mall she'd been to was located. She and I live in neighboring towns. We finally connected through email, but she was SURE she had answered me right away.

Then she discovered the problem. My email was coming up in the comments as 
noreply-comment@blogger.com.

I've tried to answer a few comments today, and I've run across the same thing. And if you enter a giveaway, and your email looks like that...

Not to panic! Lindsey at Sweet Simplicity had the answer, and with her permission, here's her tutorial on how to fix that pesky little problem using no power tools or Mod Podge whatsoever.

Because I need help with the technical stuff.

 I LOVE receiving comments! It makes my day to open my gmail account and see an e-mail notification of a new comment. I also love to reply to your comments from my e-mail account. But sometimes when I hit reply instead of seeing your e-mail address I see noreply-comment{at}blogger{dot}com and I can't reply. When I reply to other people I can see their e-mail address and the response automatically goes to their e-mail. This is extremely helpful when people ask me questions in a comment. It is so much easier to reply this way than to have to go to their blog and leave a comment or search for their e-mail address.


If you would like people to be able to email you back after you leave a comment, here's how you change those settings.

1. Click on the Customize link in the upper right hand corner of your screen.
2. Click on the Dashboard link in the upper right hand corner of your screen.
3. Click on Edit Profile, which is on the left hand side of the screen next to your picture.


4. This will take you to the Edit User Profile screen.
5. Look in the Privacy section.
6. Check the box that says, "Show my email address".



7. In the Identity section, enter in an email address.
8. Scroll down to the bottom of the screen and click on Save Profile.


When you add your e-mail address in the above spot, it does not change the e-mail address that you use to log-in. I'm assuming that most of you have a personal e-mail address and generic blog e-mail address. I entered my generic blog e-mail address in that spot. My personal e-mail address is still where I recieve notifications of new comments and it is what I use to log in to blogger.

Pretty easy!

{you can click on the pictures to make them bigger.}

Easy enough? Check to see how you're coming up and let's all connect!

Monday, August 23, 2010

You Can Leave Your Hat On

Vannah again! So over the last few days/weeks of my quickly waning summer, I started making hats. Yeah, a little random, yes, but I found a tutorial on the internet. Also, when I was at an anime convention (it's pretty much a gathering of nerds who like video games and Japanese cartoons, just go with it) over the summer, there were at least three people selling adorable animal hats! The problem? They were all about $20.

I don't have $20.

But since I did find a tutorial on how to make these hats a few days before, I made my own! Several of my own!
You will need:
Pins and needles and stuff. Or a sewing machine and pins. Whatever you prefer.
Fleece of any color. If you buy 1/3 of a yard of fleece, it makes 2 or 3 hats and it's rather cheap. When I get mine it's on sale so the most I've paid was $2 for 1/2 yard of fleece.
Scissors
(Also shown: laptop with tutorial open, wighead, sketchbook)
Cut out your pieces of felt. Four triangles from the pattern and a 3 1/2'' x 22'' rectangle.
Also if you're going to put on silly ears or something, cut those out and finish those before you start sewing the hat! All my ears are just freehand drawn (the purpose for the sketchbook).
Now pin and sew together two of the triangles. SEW ONLY ONE SIDE. DO NOT SEW BOTH SIDES TOGETHER.
Sewn!
Now do the same to the two other triangles. Pin and sew one side.
If you're doing ears in your hat, put the ears on one of the pieces you've just sewn together. Use our measuring tape to make sure they're an equal distance from the center seam.
Now whether you're doing ears or not, lay the second piece on top of the first piece. Match up the edges and the center seam...
Pin...
And sew!
So far, so good!
Now take your 3 1/2'' x 22'' rectangle and fold it in half. Pin and sew the top part.
Good.
Now take your loopy-thing and fold it in half! Fold it so the seam is on the INSIDE. Facing itself. We don't want any nasty seams on the outside of our pretty hat!
Flip your hat so it's inside out.
The next part is a little tricky but bear with it! Pin the loopy-thing to the bottom of the hat base. Make it fit as well as you can and as evenly as it will go. It doesn't have to be spot-on-perfect for the outside to look perfect when you're wearing it! Don't worry or freak out!
Pin it, sew it~
Lookin' fabulous.
And if you prefer no ears, it's still a great hat!
Make a few more, make some silly bows to clip onto them, wear them in public PROUDLY.
And enjoy~

Yep, cute on their own, and imagine how EASY it would be to talk a toddler into wearing a hat if he or she could pick an animal a day! Vannah hand sews, and these work up quickly even without a machine, so adopt a few for your back to school crew. 
Visit thecsiproject.com

Friday, August 20, 2010

Featured Guest: I'm Late! I'm Late!

Let me start by saying there has never been a store bought costume in this house. And we have done everything from Barnie the Dinosaur in prison garb being led by an executioner (I was REALLY pregnant, and purple is a good color on me), Chinese New Year dragons, demons, trolls, princesses, knights, The Joker, and even Lord of the Rings elves for last year's Christmas portrait ("Merry Christmas from a Slightly Different Workshop"). As they got older, the Minions started chiming in on design and ideas.
My daughter, Savannah, and her friends make elaborate costumes for different occasions, like Anime' Cons and parties. These are original designs; they make their own patterns, dream up accessories, and even style wigs. Right now, they're all working on Alice in Wonderland for a competition. My little creative genius is the White Rabbit. I thought this might inspire some of you moms who already know Halloween is not far off.
Hey, she's not in a pool hall, right?

And so Vannah initiates take over of blog-land!
This project is for a costume of mine I was doing; an original design of The White Rabbit from Alice in Wonderland. And of course, I needed an over-sized clock/pocket watch! But where can one find a giant gold clock? The proper question is where can one find an old clock and a can of gold spray paint.
 
First we take our old clock. This one happens to be green, no longer 'fits' in the room it used to be in, has been sitting in a corner for months, and has no more real purpose. Now, mom's suggestion was to just tape up the glass (plastic) front and spray. Instead:
I found the little things on the back that hold on the plastic face and took it right off! Now I can make a completely new clock face and redo the numbers and hands to look more Alice in Wonderland-like.
First I took off the hands and the little thing that holds the hands on. This was a really cheap clock so the hands and stuff just came up when I pulled.
Next, trace the plastic thing to get a circle that's the size of the clock face. This will later be used as a new clock face with all new numbers.
Of course let's not forget to cut it out.
The hole in the middle for the hand mechanism was made by pushing the paper down onto the hand mechanism. Then I cleaned up the hole with an x-acto knife.
Now, since this is going to hang around my neck like a giant Flava-Flav clock, I need a hole to feed chain through. So get out your duct tape, handy dandy power drill, and the sharpest drill head you can find. Put duct tape over the area you're going to drill into, and start drilling. It might take a while to get some progress on drilling into the plastic, but have patience. And don't be afraid to put pressure on the drill, but not too much so you crack the clock (if you're using a cheap plastic one like I am)!
(Mom Note: she did not use the screwdriver head. She forgot to get a shot of the bit when she changed them out.)
Gorgeous!
Now tape up the little mechanism on the back and start priming! I believe I did 2 coats of this.

After that, go ahead and get out your tacky metallic gold spray paint!
Now the clock body is pretty much done, but not the whole thing. I added a few more details to things like the hands!
My favorite Japanese snack, Pocky, happens to have some very useful packaging. And since I happen to have a empty box of it lying around, we're going to use it.
Now, I say useful because of the kind of cardboard the box is made of. It's a very thin kind of cardboard (probably like card stock). Since I'm going to be making new covers for the clock hands and these covers will have to slide between/under the two hands, the material has to be rather flat.
Take the clock hand and trace
then cut out the new shape. This hand is going to be curvy while the other one is pointy. What can I say? Matching things are kind of weird to me sometimes. Just look at my socks
Cut out both new hand faces and carefully cut out the circle at the top with an x-acto knife. Now they can both go to the painting bench!
Much better.
As for the clock face, we do this in easy steps.
First in pencil.
Then inked in Sharpie.
Then finally colored (black and red like playing card colors). 
And maybe a little extra flare. Just for the lols.
Then we put it all together! (the heart on the hand thing is also cut out of the Pocky box cardboard!) Now just add huge gold chain and enjoy!~ 
Wanna make one for your little bunneh?