The weeks surrounding Christmas were ridiculously busy and included a lot of traveling, then getting sick. But finally yesterday I got to do a real craft project, for the first time in aaaaages (that wasn't related to crocheting). My step sister and I asked my step mom if there was anything around the house that needed to be craftified. After listing off a few things that would have been far too ambitious for us to take on, she also mentioned an ugly lamp she had acquired at a thrift store that was currently sans-shade. And that's where we came in!
Article 1: The heinously ugly lamp.
It just screams "great aunt's house", but my step mom adores it. Yes, that is light pink and with gold curlicues. My step sister and I went to JoAnne's Fabrics to see if we could find something to work with it. After locating the lamp shades in the very back corner of the store, we went to work trying to find a fabric to match it, a far more difficult task than one would think. Any mostly pink fabric was too overwhelming, and most other fabrics didn't look quite right with it. We finally settled on a cream colored muslin. Then we went into the findings sections and found a stencil for curlicues, some gold piping, 9 gold buttons, and some tacky glue. The idea was to cover the (pre adhesived) shade with the muslin, trace the curlicues around the base of the shade with pencil, then sew on the piping in the pre-traced curlicue pattern, and finally sew the buttons around the top of the shade.
It just screams "great aunt's house", but my step mom adores it. Yes, that is light pink and with gold curlicues. My step sister and I went to JoAnne's Fabrics to see if we could find something to work with it. After locating the lamp shades in the very back corner of the store, we went to work trying to find a fabric to match it, a far more difficult task than one would think. Any mostly pink fabric was too overwhelming, and most other fabrics didn't look quite right with it. We finally settled on a cream colored muslin. Then we went into the findings sections and found a stencil for curlicues, some gold piping, 9 gold buttons, and some tacky glue. The idea was to cover the (pre adhesived) shade with the muslin, trace the curlicues around the base of the shade with pencil, then sew on the piping in the pre-traced curlicue pattern, and finally sew the buttons around the top of the shade.
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