Sunday, August 11, 2013

Custom and Crafty

You can get just about anything these days customized, personalized, and completely fit for your style and desired look when you delve into online shops.  They go beyond the big box stores and department stores to offer products you can handpick from creative designers who are both operating their own storefronts somewhere as well as those working out of their homes.  If you have something less mainstream in mind, just see what all you can find online.

Websites like Etsy.com provide an online marketplace for custom shopping.  From home décor to clothing to jewelry to wedding accessories, designers are selling products in their online Etsy shops they are making themselves.  You can search by any number of things, from item type to colors and styles and pull up pages and pages of goods to choose from. 

Etsy designers are great sources for sewing projects, especially if you are not crafty at that skill yourself.  Can’t find throw pillows in a store to suit your fancy?  Someone is sewing them somewhere, and they will ship you what you want right to your door.  Want to give a baby shower gift personalized for the recipient’s nursery style?  You can find outfits not sold in stores as well as wall art you haven’t seen before.  Working on a wedding, shower, or other big event?  You can find neat products and work with the designer through email to custom design the item you want.  The purses I gave to my bridesmaids to carry down the aisle came from an Etsy designer, and I selected all of the components.  The beaded sash I wore on my wedding day was handmade by an Etsy designer, and the vintage buttons added to part of my wardrobe came from an Etsy shop all the way from Ireland.

Zazzle.com is my source for all things of the paper goods variety and more.  Invitations, stamps, stationery, and a slew of other products like t-shirts, mugs, office supplies, canvas art, pillows, and so forth can be customized and bought without leaving your home.  Again, there are a ton of products in the galleries to choose from and customize if you like, or you can start from scratch using Zazzle’s easy software and work on your own designs to both buy and sell.  I create invitations and custom stamp designs in Publisher and then upload my finished products into my gallery or order for both personal and professional use.  For your next shower or party, you have options you can fully personalize for a look that’s all your own from what you mail out to what guests see when they arrive, all without struggling with printing on your own.


It’s fun to shop in person, we all know that.  But it’s also a real treat to find something new, different, and even something you had a hand in designing without ever leaving your computer.

DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star August 11th.



Sunday, August 4, 2013

Sharpen Those Pencils

Summer has flown by, and the school bells will be ringing again right around the corner.  As you soak up what remains of this sultry season, finish it off in style while looking to and preparing for the months ahead.

If your family took any trips since May that now have your camera’s memory card chalk full, take the time now to turn those images into memories well kept.  It’s a good idea to transfer the files from the camera to the computer, and then on to a backup system like an external hard drive. The more often you do this, the less likely you are to lose your photos due to camera loss or a computer crash. 

Plus, while the details are fresher in your mind, work on a photo book now using online book making software to have a professional book of your vacation or summer memories printed.  I know the difference between a book I work on shortly after the images were taken versus a book I try to pull together much later, and the difference is in the details: captions, dates, and a storyline come to you much more easily the sooner you get to it.

As school supplies are topping the shopping list, add a few more items that can take you to the front of the class.  Now is a good time to plan for another year of school keepsakes by buying file boxes, project cases, or archive boxes to hold artwork, papers, and awards.  Utilize the sales on back-to-school supplies to restock your home office with the essentials.  And if you are really on the ball, buy additional school supply type items to hold for church donation projects at Christmas time.

Look into plastic storage containers for summer gear to keep your garage shelves or attic space tidier as you eventually put away pool and other outdoor toys.  Consider items you might need to get or replace to transition into the school year setting more easily, like a gentle alarm clock, study desk lamp, new printer ink, or a family wall calendar or organizer pin board.


The staples of each cycling season come and come again, and it’s always nice to be prepared as well as excited by the renewal.  It makes me think of a movie line I have always loved, spoken by Tom Hanks’ character, Joe Fox, in “You’ve Got Mail” – “Don’t you love New York in the fall?  It makes me wanna’ buy school supplies. I would send you a bouquet of newly sharpened pencils if I knew your name and address.”   

DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star August 4th.




Sunday, July 28, 2013

A Royal Residence

In honor of the new addition to the Royal Family across the pond, let’s give a stately nod to some regal touches to add to make our own castles feel a little more majestic.  No jeweled crown is required to put an imperial spin on the space we live in.

When you think high-class, you can easily think high-end.  But there are plenty of options short of the lofty price tags.  Take classic furniture pieces with European roots like armchairs, buffets, armoires, and bureaus, which can all be found in second hand stores and other options other than retail outlets. You can take the “good bones” of old pieces, as they say, and give them a makeover to the extent you desire.  Sanding, painting or staining, recovering, and reupholstering can all go a long way to giving an older piece new life with real appeal.

If the proof is in the pudding, then the design is in the details.  Decorative accents can go a long way to giving an individual piece or an entire room a look and feel of quality and upscale style.  Think button tufts, nailhead trim, turned wood furniture legs, rolled arms, extensive carvings, and other dressy finishes.  Playing up these accents and clustering decorative furniture together can provide a more pronounced impression for the grouping.

Up the ante with more formal decorative pieces in little touches throughout your home.  Hang a Venetian style mirror over a foyer table or dining room buffet in place of more casual canvas art.  Use a polished tray to hold remotes, magazines, candles, or coasters on a coffee table in lieu of a woven basket.  Display China pieces or pretty ceramics in open or glass kitchen cabinetry or shelving.  Embrace more decorative finishes over contemporary clean lines.    

You also cannot go wrong with the more stereotypical approach in your decorations if that suits your space.  A chandelier style lighting fixture over your dining table is automatically going to give the room a more formal feel.  A portrait mirror with a decorative metallic trim is going to look more elegant that a wood framed one of the same size.  Forego a drum shade for a scallop, bell, or empire shape for your lamp instead.  Accent pillows with silhouette prints like candelabras, chandeliers, and crowns are all cheeky show pieces that state you enjoy a little grandeur.


You may not sip tea with your pinky up in the air, but if stately style suits you, show it off with luxury and lavishness fit for the palace you call your place of residence.      

DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star July 28th.


     

Sunday, July 21, 2013

What Lies Beneath

Flooring is a big design choice for your home. It literally covers a lot of ground and makes quite the visual impact.  If you moved into a home with someone else’s design selections in place, you may be wishing for a change.  With some budgeting and some creativity, you can make it happen.

Hardwood flooring comes at a high price, but wood laminate flooring can provide you with a similar look and texture for less.  Laminate works well for any room of the house, but if you would love the look and want to really keep the cost down, consider smaller areas only like bathrooms, walk-in closets, and hallways. 

If you have tile or laminate in a large space like the living room but would like to create a cozy and inviting, anchored seating area, you have an option beyond an area rug.  I love rugs, but with their set dimensions, you can feel limited on size and shapes.  Just recently, I ventured into carpet floor tiles to replace a rug in our high traffic laundry room and garage entry.  You can buy individual carpet tiles online you attach to each other with peel-and-stick adhesion.  Because the carpet tiles can be cut to fit wall-to-wall, you can cover less desirable hard flooring with a style you handpick.  Or you can create a custom size area rug or hallway runner that fits perfectly amid your seating areas, furniture groupings, and walkways.  You have the option to blend individual pieces, offered in a variety of solids, stripes, gradients, and graphic prints, to create a custom design.

Another flooring technique we will be seeing more of, as it has certainly hit others areas already, is seeing flooring material being carried right up the wall. Using subway style tiling and wood pieces as a wall finish in bathrooms and kitchens in particular is a popular technique on home design television.

With a fresh take on what lies beneath, you might just kiss the ground you walk on.             

DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star July 21st.

             

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Beat the Heat: Summer's Indoor Projects


We know it’s going to be another scorcher out there.  Amid the climbing temperatures, stifling humidity, and scorching sun, looking for things to do indoors sounds like a pretty good plan.  If a few random projects could make your summer more productive, try these on for size:

Organize a Closet – Yes, I started with a biggie, but turning boredom into bustling results could be well worth it.  Try on clothes for fit, make piles to donate or sell, hang your clothing up by color, give your folded laundry and shoes new order, and arrange accessories to be easily seen and retrieved.  A pretty closet can be a thing of real beauty. 

Sort Your Stacks – Go through DVDs, CDs, and books, arranging your keepers by category - or alphabetical order if you’re feeling scholastic – and making a stack for donation or resale at a local shop.  You may find a great summer read that’s been stashed away or get motivated to organize a group movie night.

Paint Something – New hooks for entryway storage, picture frames for a cohesive gallery look, or a wrapped canvas ready for a movable wall decal can all be quick and easy afternoon projects with just a brush and some acrylic paint. 

Tend a Garden . . . in the Kitchen – Some small pots, pea gravel, and kitchen herbs can bring a little of the outdoors in and provide fresh additions to your summer meals.  Enjoy basil, rosemary, thyme, or another favorite variety, all while watering right at the kitchen sink. 

Take Pictures – Capturing a great outdoor scene is customary.  Why not turn the lens around and focus on things inside, like taking a snapshot of your life today.  Get artistic with a dressy pair of shoes, a stack of recipe books, a keepsake piece of furniture, or the lamp that shines down on your bedside table.  

Beef Up Your Cold Storage – If you’d like to enjoy that delicious field corn or family summer dish a little longer, make extra batches for freezing and eating later.  If you’re already working in the kitchen, you might as well make it count twice. 

Go, Go Gadgets – Wrangle all of your chords together and make them user friendly, perhaps tying individuals in tight bundles and labeling or color coding them.  Sync your music player.  Charge all of your electronic devices to start fresh.  Organize your remote controls in trays where they are used.        

Turn on the Tube – I admit I can watch the same reruns over and over again in my favorite TV series.  But this is a great time of year to tune into, we’ll say, more productive television, and watch cooking shows to find a new recipe to try, home makeover shows to inspire a DIY project, and travel shows for a little future vacation inspiration.

The beach is a great getaway.  But if you had something a little cooler in mind, beat the heat and make your air conditioned time count with projects fit for the great indoors. 
DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star July 14th.





Sunday, July 7, 2013

Going Old School Summer


There is nothing like a throwback to simple summers past to round up a little seasonal fun for the boredom bunch hanging around your home.  If the kids could use something less electronic to fill their day, rely on go-to activities with some old school flair.  You remember, don’t you?   

Sidewalk chalk can keep them entertained outside for some time.  Use the driveway or patio as an oversized canvas for a creative display.  Fill the cups in a muffin tin with water based paints they could use in their masterpiece as well.  One water hose and some drying time, and there’s a fresh slate to work with all over again.   

Blowing bubbles has gotten fancier over the years with better solution and more complicated plastic wands.  Stock up on some bottles, introduce a fan, and watch the fun fly.  Additionally, anything water related is a great time passer at home.  Soaker guns can offer a little cool-off backyard competition, as can an ice chest full of carefully filled and tied water balloons.  Bring a little bit of the beach to your place by using bags of playground sand to build your own dune.  Traditional plastic buckets, shovels, and molds will give them a taste of being oceanside.   

For the youngest in the bunch, craft projects can keep them entertained indoors.  The bird feeder made with toilet paper rolls, string, peanut butter, and bird seed is a classic.  A craft store beading aisle is chalk full of supplies for making necklaces and bracelets by hand.  Scrapbooking paper, brads, tape, and colored straws can become pinwheels.  And crosscut sections of vegetables like potatoes, okra, and celery make surprising stamps for ink pad art on cup towels.   

What’s an old school summer without fitting snacks?  S’mores are the quintessential build-your-own treat with a toasty outdoor twist.  The build-your-own set up also is perfect for ice cream sundaes, hot dogs, burgers, and taco salads.  For a sweet afternoon snack, make your own popsicles, mixing juices and diced fruit in paper cups with craft sticks to freeze in the centers.  

It doesn’t have to be bright, shiny, and new to be a summer ton of fun.  Kids today may or may not have experienced some of these time-honored activities.  This is a chance to make sure they can add to their memory bank the simple things you used to enjoy in summers gone by.     
 
DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star July 7th. 
 
 

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Red, White, and Beautiful


The 4th of July is one of those special holidays where you’re feeling patriotic and celebratory, so why not throw in creative as well?  There is still time to pull off a get together before next weekend with flair, pizzazz, and plenty of 4th of July festiveness. 

This is the one day in which red, white, and blue shines even more brightly than the others.  The tri-color grouping is an easy theme to play off of in what you decorate with and what you eat for an evening party for family and friends.  Party and craft stores have aisles designated just for them this time of year: flags, paper lanterns and fans, banners, streamers, and the like are quick picks.  If you want to add some DIY projects in the mix, take three large mason jars and spray paint the insides in each of the three shades.  Use them to hold your utensils in rolled napkins for your buffet line.  Fill just the bottom of some clear glass vases with Red Hots® candy or blue rock candy or jellybeans, place a votive candle in each, and use the set as a staggered centerpiece on your table.  Mix sets of red, white, blue, and US flag paper plates, napkins, cups, and striped drinking straws for easy serving and cleanup.    

To go along with your all-American hotdogs, hamburgers, or barbeque, show your true colors with the sweets.  Mix crispy rice cereal, peanuts, and red and blue M&Ms® with melted and drizzled white chocolate and serve in cute Chinese takeout containers.  For a pretty fruit tray, dip strawberries 2/3 of the way into melted white chocolate, and then immediately dip the lower 1/3 into blue cupcake sprinkles.  Make a layered cake or even cupcakes with batter you tint with food coloring and alternate the three colors, and stick (safe and adult-monitored) sparklers in place of candles you light before serving.  If ice cream is going to be your hot weather go-to, dip the tops of sugar cones in melted white chocolate and then into assorted red and blue sprinkles or decorative sugar and let them dry before scooping.  For a fancy blue punch, mix equal parts Sprite® and white cranberry juice with packets of blue Kool-Aid® until you have the shade of blue you want.  Serve in mason jars over ice with paper straws.   

Make your family’s 4th of July red, white, and beautiful with a little creativity and a lot of patriotic love for the independence we celebrate.  Happy 4th of July!   
 
DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star June 30th.
 
 
       

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Color Up Your Kitchen


The kitchen is filled with cabinets, counters, and appliances, which are all long-term, high-dollar fixtures in your home.  Changing out any one element would easily rack up quite a bill and work up quite a sweat.  If you wish your kitchen would take on a new look, play with smaller, simpler elements of color to bring pops of shade and a burst of new life.  

In lieu of the extensive project of painting your cabinets, give them an updated look by removing your cabinet hardware and drawer pulls, sticking them into a large sheet of cardboard, and spray painting them in a modern metallic finish like brushed nickel or chrome.  If you have a painted wall surface showing between your upper and lower cabinets, paint just that area an interesting shade as a solid backsplash. 

Play up any open shelving or glass cabinet doors by displaying brightly colored dishes and utensils in that space.  Stack a set of colored plates, ice cream bowls, or nesting bowls where they can be seen.  Store a series of Italian soda bottles here instead of in the pantry.  If you have a few ceramic pitchers or decorative glass pieces in different shades, group them together into an eye-catching collection. 

Bring bright serving bowls out, along with a colorful colander, to hold fruit or vegetables on the countertop.  Take a dated set of canisters and give them a spray paint makeover in a glossy finish.  Fill a displayed utensil holder with spoons, spatulas, whisks, and other silicone kitchen tools in bright shades like pink, yellow, and aqua, or in primary colors like red or green.  If you have a bright solid or striped glass cutting board, rest it against the backsplash between countertop appliances or canisters.

Fill two or three small ceramic pots with a little layer of pea gravel, followed by potting soil, and top them off with some countertop herbs like basil, thyme, and rosemary.  You add greenery to your space that can be plucked and added to dishes while you cook.  If you have open wall space, frame bright prints or attractive food magazine pages in matching frames for easy custom artwork. 

You can spruce up the look and perception of your kitchen as the hoppin’ hub of the household with some vibrant shades in little doses her and there.  You don’t have to go over budget to makeover this popular room with stylish and bright pieces you will use again and again.      
 
DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star June 23rd.
 
 
          

Sunday, June 16, 2013

What Your Dad Taught You


We can see Dad’s influence in a variety of things we still do around the house.  As we honor him on Father’s Day, let’s recount some ways our fathers’ words and actions are still resonating today.

Turn the lights out when you leave a room; why not save a little energy where you can?    Put the remote back in its spot when you’re done, because we all hate the hunt next time.    Have a stocked toolbox to meet those little around-the-house needs like fixing a squeaky hinge or a leaky faucet.    Take pride in a manicured lawn, complete only after mowing, weed eating, trimming, and planting to the best of your hardworking ability.    Come to the dinner table, appreciative of the plate in front of you.  And sit up straight.  And go back for seconds without persuasion.    Secure your daily drop spot for your keys, wallet, glasses, loose change, and the like [hopefully contained in something stylish].    Take pride in a neat collection of neck ties or an orderly sock drawer.    Sort the mail in the same spot everyday, pulling out the important items right off the bat.    Have “your spot,” whether in the recliner or a certain section of the sofa, that is always reserved as your place to kick back and put your feet up.  •  Be known for a signature dish prepared out on the grill or barbeque pit that gets rave reviews and repeat requests.    Amid all the go-go-go, slow down to enjoy a hot cup of coffee or a favorite slice of pie.    Be on time, which to you could mean always allowing for time to be a few minutes early.    You drive like you mean it.  Which could illicit a few gasps or door handle grabs by your passengers on occasion.    Offer sound advice, a listening ear, and  an opinion others tend to seek both personally and professionally.   

Happy Father’s Day to the men who have taught us, provided for us, protected us, and opened the door to the opportunities before us today!   
 
DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star June 16th.
 
                               With Dad   
                               Krystal Stenseng • Steve Krenek
 

Congratulations to the 2013 Royal Algodon Court and the Don and Dona named last night!

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Vacating for Vacation


To truly vacate the everyday and fully enjoy your vacation time away, prepping beforehand and keeping your real goals in mind during will help set you up to make a clean getaway.

Some might feel a rush from the hurried, night-before-at-midnight packing spree.  I disagree.  Packing as much as you can in advance helps ensure you don’t forget anything and you’re not getting your trip off to a breathless start.  If you’re a list maker, write or type out the number and types of each clothing item you’ll need, plus all the extras.  Before items go in the suitcase (neatly!), lay everything out – shoes, jewelry, accessories, and so forth.  Picturing each outfit fully loaded helps easily forgotten pieces make the trip.  Also, planning in advance for what you want to wear helps eliminate those last-night loads of laundry, for specific pieces were already pulled and not available for you to wear in the days prior to your departure.  Lay all the applicable toiletries out on the bathroom counter the evening before, and add each item to your cosmetic bag or dopp kit after you use it for the last time at home. 

Pack the “extra” bag; whether riding in the car or flying on a plane, prep snacks, reading material, music, and electronics with all the right chords and chargers.  Think about food and magazines while at the grocery store the last time before you leave and avoid the higher prices at convenience stores and airports.  If you will be gone for more than a couple of nights, make all the arrangements to have your home checked on, the mail picked up, and the lawn taken care of if need be.  

Prep for comfort.  Look up the weather patterns – or swings – to expect, and plan your shoes and layers accordingly.  Going to a hot spot but might want a jacket on a chilly plane?  Going to a cold spot but need your flip flops to accompany your swimsuit for the hot tub?  

While you’re away, take photos with purpose.  Will you be running a slideshow for family when you return?  Then perhaps don’t take 15 shots of essentially the same thing.  Will you be putting together a photo book you build online and have printed?  Capture the little things that will help tell your story, like signs that welcome you to a city, state, or resort; a well-crafted food dish; or the attractive room where you stay.

A real key in vacationing is focusing on getting away.  That means phone calls and emails that fill your time at home need to be kept to a minimum, and be confident the world will continue to turn at the office without you in it.  Let your mind get away with the rest of you, and enjoy the sights, the meals, the entertainment, and the deeper rest you truly intend to soak up this summer vacation.  
 
DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star June 9th.
 
 
 
          

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Energize Your Summer


June has arrived, and those sultry weeks of sunshine, barbeques, beach trips, and cold treats are here.  Summer elicits a laidback, low key feel centered on fun, travel, and kicking back.  If you want your home on board, energize your space with simple looks of summer.

A little can go a long way toward adding a seasonal element to your space.  To capitalize on a summer feel, think color.  Give your traditional couch throw pillows a break until September and replace them with brighter colors and vibrant patterns.  Drape a similar throw blanket over the end of the couch or loveseat.  Be willing to stretch past your usual comfort zone and consider combinations of teal, turquoise, grass green, hot pink, coral, and vibrant yellow that are hot this season. 

Sprucing up the table is easy when you incorporate casual placemats like white with a colored print or a bright shade in a repeating pattern.  Forego the cloth napkins and use summer print paper napkins from the party supply aisle.  An inexpensive set of plastic drinking glasses or melamine dinner plates in a new shade are simple ways to serve sodas and floats alongside burgers or hotdogs off the grill, right along with your everyday lunches for the next several weeks.  Put away the ceramic pitcher and keep a colored plastic pitcher handy to keep mixing up batches of lemonade or sweet tea. 

Fill a glass bowl with lemons or limes for the kitchen counter.  Use online references or food magazines to pull together some easy weeknight dinners that use summer produce.  Stock up on popsicles, crackers, dip mix, and summer veggies and fruits for afternoon snacking.  Bring out a pretty melamine tray and stock with bar napkins, stir sticks, and a little plate to hold freshly sliced fruit for drink mix-ins.  Splurge on some new colored mixing bowls or serving utensils for your summer entertaining. 

Change out sheet sets and extra blankets with breathable cotton options, and pop more vibrant pillowcase colors on top of simple white sheets.  Replace raggedy kitchen towels with a new set in bright colors or a summery repeating print.  Lay out a new welcome mat at the front door with a fun print painted on.    

Hit up those aisle end caps in stores that beckon with a slew of seasonal goodies for the homemaker and entertainer.  Little pops of color here and there can take your rooms right into summer fun for a stylish backdrop for your energized summer to come.            
 
DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star June 2nd.
 
 

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Collection Perfection


If you’ve got it, flaunt it.  That’s what we’re told.  When you’re dreaming up new ways to enhance your interior spaces, you may have some options already on hand that could take to the walls and beyond.  If you’re a collector of fine things – or simply fun things – consider showcasing them in a whole new light.

Putting like items together with purpose can take some scattered finds to an eye-catching collection.  It is all in how you display.  Take, for example, your jewelry.  It can stay in a drawer, waiting to be worn.  Or it can dress up your bathroom or bedroom on a day-to-day basis.  Bulletin boards upholstered in simple, ironed pillowcases or push pin boards in decorative frames can be hung on the wall just like art, making attractive backgrounds to pin up necklaces and bracelets.  Use clear or fancy push pins and hang pieces in neat rows by color or size for an organized look.

Living so close to the coast, you may have some boxes or jars of shells, sand dollars, and other beach-combing finds stored away.  Bring them out front and give them a spot on a shelf or side table.  If you have unique collections on paper, like postcards from cities visited, paper menus, play bills, or items where your monogram is displayed prominently, frame them in a similar fashion and hang as a cohesive wall grouping.  If you have another type of wall art item spread throughout the home, like several small to medium mirrors, wrapped canvases, or nature photos, hang them together to provide a gallery feel in one room. 

Line living room shelves with your glass bottle collection.  Use plate hangers to group your plate collection on the dining room wall instead of having them stacked in storage.  Use a shadowbox with cubby holes to display a teacup collection or a set of small figurines.  If your hobby lends itself to a collection, like a music lover rounding up old guitars or a photo buff gathering cameras through the decades, mount them up on the wall or on shelves where you can show them off proudly. 

Sometimes all it takes for a fresh look is taking what you already have that has value to you and letting it shine like the grouping is worthy of an admission ticket.     
 
DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star May 26th.
 
  

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Go Big. Go Bold. Go Home.


The saying “less is more” can actually work in a big, bold design premise when it comes to quantity.  Some people find layering little trinkets and accessories too fussy for their style or skill level.  Instead of trying to master the perfect arrangement of many pieces, focus on larger statement items to make your rooms pop.

To give a more subdued furniture arrangement some life, let a graphic printed rug make a statement from the ground up.  Or hang drapery panels from the ceiling height in wide stripes or another large repeating pattern to draw the eye up.  Instead of a cluster of smaller frames or canvases you select for a wall grouping, hang an oversized wrapped canvas with a simple, large scale image on it on a blank wall space.  If your “builder beige” home leaves the backdrop in each room a little too muted, paint an accent wall here and there in an attractive accent color, which will enhance anything you hang in there, large or small.     

Within a more plain bedroom design, throw in a surprising end-of-the-bed bench or ottoman, or add a comfy side chair, all in a stand-out pattern.  To dress up a blank entry or hallway, position a chest of drawers or buffet in a painted color instead of a standard wood stain finish.  If outfitting a dining room table with layers of linens and dishes and centerpiece components is not your norm, let design be served up in that room every day of the week with beautiful upholstered dining chairs with some eye-catching color in their fabric.

Trying to really give your home a fresh look amid a simpler canvas can be overwhelming if you think your shopping list may very well drag the ground.  Instead of thinking about quantity, look into some quality pieces on a large scale that can make big impacts where you choose to place them.  Area rugs, draperies, upholstered and painted furniture, and big wall art all take up designer space in style.   
 
DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star May 19th.     
 
      

Sunday, May 12, 2013

What Your Mom Taught You


Have you ever counted the things you do a certain way because of how your Mom did them?  It’s funny how household traditions both large and small can carry on from one generation of ladies to the next.  In honor of Mother’s Day, let’s recount some of those tried and true home ideas that only Mom could have instilled. 

To get your mirrors clean and streak free, spray on glass cleaner and wipe them down in big circles with newspaper print instead of paper towels.    When you put clean sheets on the bed, tuck in the ends using “hospital corners” for a neat look that stays put.    Vinegar, baking soda, and cola can do more good at cleaning countless things than we could have imagined without her.    A little salt in the water adds flavor and helps keep noodles from sticking together in a pot of water on the stovetop.    Run a hard-to-open jar lid under hot water and tap it with the handle of a butter knife to make it easier to open.    When adding fresh flowers to a vase, pour in some Sprite or Gingerale with the water to help keep the blooms fresh longer.    Hang all the shirts and pants in the closet in a uniform way and in the same direction, making pieces easier to see and neater to hang back after laundering.    Make up the bed every day, whether you’re in a hurry or not; you never know when someone might drop in.    Write and send thank you notes for gifts you’re given.    Don’t let clean laundry just sit and wrinkle in the dryer; keep your loads moving.    Pull out Grandma’s recipes from time to time to keep them in circulation and pass them on to the next generation.    When getting ready for a party or a holiday dinner, set the table and lay out the serving pieces the day before in the interest of time.    Keep a consistent schedule of cleaning the bathrooms, dusting, vacuuming, and doing the laundry so as not to fall behind.    Use a checklist when packing for a trip so you don’t leave something behind.    Test baked goods in the oven to see if they’re done by sticking a toothpick in the center and seeing if it comes out clean.    Used towels belong on hooks or bars and not on the bathroom floor.    And don’t let the dirty dishes sit in the sink overnight.    

Happy Mother’s Day to the special women who have taught us, led us, molded us, and set us on the path to where we find ourselves today!      
 
DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star May 12th.
 
With Mom
Kandice Duke  Melanie Krenek  Krystal Stenseng 
 
   

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Light. Bright. Beautiful.


Bright, light, and airy.  Sounds cheery to me!  When you need to lighten up your space without considering a remodel, think about these bright ideas to do just the trick.

You cannot go wrong with lamps.  Whether you add a floor lamp to the corner of a darker room or add two standard lamps to a sofa table or buffet piece along the wall, bringing your lighting down from the ceiling level with add both light and warmth to your space.  And going beyond the one lamp on the living room end table will add more lighting diffused throughout the room.  Update your bulbs to brighter daylight versions and lighten the material of your lamp shade choices to create even more ambiance. 

Use part of your wall space to hang mirrors, which visually open up a room while reflecting light back from windows and doors.  A large portrait-size mirror on larger, open wall space or a cluster of smaller decorative mirrors both offer form and function, brightening and decorating at the same time.  Positioning them in well-lit spots helps carry their lightening effects around the room.   

Light reflecting accent pieces like side tables, trays, benches, wall art, and accessories with metallic finishes can also help bounce your lighting around a given space.  Mirrored legs, glossy frames, and shiny surfaces in gold, silver, champagne, and nickel finishes all contribute to a brightening enhancement.  Consider this method for your living room seating area, a dining room sideboard, a narrow entryway, and any shelf or surface in need of a boost. 

Light a few candles and relax in a space that can easily be lightened and brightened without any drastic or harsh steps being taken.  Soft, warm light generously reflected can be a beautiful, glowing thing to soak up.  
 
DesignInMind column; appeared in the Valley Morning Star May 5th.