Our family loves the beach. We're landlocked here in Indiana, so a beach themed room may be out of place, but it fits our personality. I decided to use some shells from our trip to Myrtle Beach last fall to decorate our downstairs bathroom. My first step was a trip to Goodwill from some cheap frames. I knew I wanted to distress them, so size and shape was important, not color. Here's what I brought home.
Last year when we listed our house for sale, I was looking through some old pictures of our previous houses. Instead of feeling nostalgia for my old homes, I felt disconnected. It was like looking at someone else's house. It took me awhile to realize why, and the answer was the same thing that has always bugged me about decorating shows. The rooms didn't reflect me at all. I had picked paint colors and accessories that looked great, worked together, and had mass appeal, but they said nothing about me. It could have been anyone's house. I read a decorating book once that suggested you step outside and then come into your house as if you were a stranger. Walk from room to room and make assumptions about the family who lives there. What do they like to do, what are they like? I'm not sure I'd like what a stranger would assume about me if they came to my home. I vowed that this time around would be different. I would decorate with only our family's favorite things. I would pick colors we love, not necessarily the latest trend. I would personalize with my photos, my kids' art, and momentos of our family's life together. Everything would have a purpose or a meaning. It's been a long journey getting to that point. Most of my walls are still blank because I'm finding it a bit overwhelming. However, I'm taking baby steps, and I thought I'd share a few ways that I've incorporated my personality with some very inexpensive artwork. Our family loves the beach. We're landlocked here in Indiana, so a beach themed room may be out of place, but it fits our personality. I decided to use some shells from our trip to Myrtle Beach last fall to decorate our downstairs bathroom. My first step was a trip to Goodwill from some cheap frames. I knew I wanted to distress them, so size and shape was important, not color. Here's what I brought home. I'll show you why I bought the mirrors later (they're part of a birthday surprise for Bug). The frames cost $1.99 each. The white frame was a bit plain, and the back was more detailed than the front. I didn't need the glass anyway, so I flipped it around. I then sanded it to distress it and put a quick coat of polyurethane on it. That's it. I adhered some scrap mat I had laying around, used some foam tape squares to stick my shells on, and printed out the latin name for the shells on scrapbooking paper that had a linen look. Simple! I bought the second frame for a starfish that Bug picked out at a souvenier shop. I sanded the frame and painted it and one of the mats brown. I painted another mat blue and dry brushed some blue paint onto the frame. I backed the frame with some scrapbooking paper that looked like sand and stuck the starfish inside. Here's the final display with the addition of an old souvenier from The Man's childhood, some store bought starfish that I already owned, and some photos from a 2008 trip to Florida. Not crafty? That's OK. Coming up I'll have some free printables you can download and print to dress up your walls. Thanks for stopping by!
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Annabelle's BlogI'm Annemarie Varga. Thanks for joining me as I blog about life as a stay-at-home mom to my two gorgeous girls, the triumphs and tribulations of fixing up our latest fixer-upper, and, of course, photography! Click here for more information about me. Categories
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