Sunday, December 26, 2010

Play Kitchen!

We built a play kitchen for Dorothy's birthday and it actually was done on time!  (Though it was a close call.)  The inspiration for our kitchen was this site, but we customized it to what we liked.  Here is the completed product.  The fridge is sticking out a little far because there is an air register behind it and it can't be pushed back any farther.  We will need to re arrange the play area a bit, but it will have to wait until after New Year's.




Kevin did all of the carpentry and I did all of the painting and other details. I also made a bought a few accessories. We are very pleased with how it came out and how much we spent, especially compared to the new play kitchens we thought about purchasing. Most importantly, the kids seem to really love it and I hope that they both have many years of creative play with it.

We were able to keep the cost really low by buying used pieces and salvaging other parts. The sink and oven unit is a former nightstand that I bought for $10 at a battered women's resale shop. The doors for the refrigerator and freezer were a dollar each at the Habitat for Humanity ReSale store, and the white handles were also purchased there for a dollar each. The hinges were still attached to our dollar doors, so we reused them, but painted them because they were incredibly ugly.

I found the faucet in our neighbor's garbage one morning while walking my son to school, and the bowl of the sink is a $2.00 bowl from Goodwill. The oven and burner knobs are from a dresser that we recently replaced the knobs on and the timer knob is the original knob from the nightstand. The rest of the sink/oven unit was constructed with scrap wood from the basement. The lower door was cut from the original drawer of the nightstand. The curtain was made from a scrap of fabric from my sewing room and I just happened to have snaps that matched the shade of blue we used.

I used up a lot of odds and ends of paint from our basement. The only paint we purchased was the exterior blue color, and that was only $10 on clearance. I had it custom mixed, but had been checking the "oops paint" section of several stores and did not have any luck. I did buy an additional can of white spray paint for the interior of the fridge because time was running out and spraying was faster than brushing it on.

Here is the original nightstand and the doors:





This is after Kevin did the construction work to the nightstand. He added a decorative back-splash and was excited to get to use his router. We decided to attach the curtain rod to the cabinet so that it couldn't be removed and used to poke each other.



Painting the oven cabinet was more of a challenge than I originally planned. There were lots of grooves, crevices, and alcoves that were difficult to reach. Because I was painting details like the oven door and the burners, some things had to be done in a particular order and I had a couple of times where I had to redo part when the spray paint or roller splatter got on a part where it should not have been.


Primed with the oven door painted.



Kevin had to build the box for the refrigerator which took a little figuring out since he had to make the face plate first to fit the doors, then build the box to fit that. He did a great job and it looks great.




Interior with a few accessories. I'm glad Kevin insisted on using the clear shelves; it looks nice. I bought the blue glasses, the white bowls, a baking pan, muffin tin, and red colander for only $5 at the dollar store. I love how little I spent, but that they have "real" accessories to play with.


The curtain snaps on to the rod so that I can remove it to be washed. I made the salt & pepper shakers out of wood candle holders and balls from the wood craft section of the hobby store and some paint that was in our basement. I used a sharpie for the "S" & "P" and very fine point sharpie to make the holes in the tops.

The burners don't show up well in this picture, but they are silver spray paint. Then I used a role of duct tape and just held it down and painted the blue around the roll. When it was dry, I used a sharpie to draw on the burner grates. We decided not to make it three dimensional since there is no real counter space, so the stove can also be used for prep-work.


We got lucky. We didn't really plan the size of the oven well and just happened to find a baking pan that is a perfect fit.

For the timer, I found a photo of an old fashioned timer, printed it out, and decoupaged it onto the back-splash. I poked a hole in it so that when we added the knob it wouldn't rip.

I also made a set of tea bags that are washable out of scrap ribbon, fabric, and poly beads (to make them "dip-able"). I saved a tin after we drank the tea to keep the pretend tea bags in.


The one on the far right was my prototype. I made some changes, and the next 3 turned out much better, but the kids don't seem to mind.

It was a lot fun of to make and to work on it with my husband. The kids are having a blast with it and I hope it remains a favorite for a very long time. 

Final shot of it in use.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Kitchen Stuff

Hooray!  I have several small completed projects to share!  I still need to take photos of a couple for shirts I appliqued for Malcolm, so I'll start with an apron and kitchen towel I made for a friend.

The apron is reversible, with a ruffled bottom. I'm hoping to use the same techniques on a dress for Dorothy very soon.



reverses to:


You might notice that the trim for the ruffle and the ties is not the same color. I managed to add the ruffle inside out and did not notice until the apron was completed. I am so accustom to putting the wrong sides of the fabric together that it didn't even occur to me that the ruffle was not actually going to get turned when I turned the rest of the apron right side out. Lesson learned, however, I sort of prefer the lighter shade with the other fabrics.


The towel was just a regular applique.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Fairies

Let's start off right, with a completed project!  I embroidered these shirts from Target for a friend who has two fairy obsessed daughters.  It was my first time embroidering fabric that has lycra in it, and I had a couple of tension issues, but overall, they came out well.  I used the same design, but varied the colors to include each girls' favorite color.  I hope they like them.








Intro

I have decided to make a blog just for my crafting stuff to keep the crafting and the kid stuff separated.  Now, neither will be cluttered with info about the other.  Hopefully, it will also help keep me a little accountable to get some projects finished.  My list of "things I want to make" is a mile long and I need to start attempting a few things.

I hope to have several small projects to share this month, but will have a big one to show you come January.  It is a joint project with my husband that involves  wood, screws, glue, power tools, paint, fabric, and so far, only a little swearing.  It will hopefully turn out to be incredible, but you will have to wait to see it.  Just a little teaser to kick things off.

Yes, I know how boring my layout is currently.  I am hoping to clean up my sewing room a bit, then take some photos to add as a banner to brighten things up a little.