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Tag "Anthropologie"

Four very cool blog things happened these past couple days.

one
My tutorial on making stamps out of pencil erasers made it to the WordPress homepage (i.e. was Freshly Pressed.) This is such an honor!

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two & three


Beckie from Knock Off Decor emailed me to say she’d be featuring my Anthro bookcase on her site. Woohoo! I emailed my dad to let him know, since he’s the one that helped me make it. His response? ‘Cool.’

Check out Knock Off Decor when you get a chance. It launched pretty recently, and there are some great DIY ideas.

 

Apartment Therapy also did a post about the book case! They do post a lot every day, but it was still exciting to see my work on their site.

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three

I did my first guest post for the etsyDallas blog. As a member, we’re required to join one of the subgroups of etsyDallas. I chose to be part of the blogging group. Each of us picked a topic to blog about every month. Mine is called Craft Blast from the Past, where I take grade school crafts and glam them up. This month’s post is the eraser stamp tutorial I posted last week. I’m pretty excited about future projects. Bring back the puffy paint perhaps? Or maybe gimp? Whatever it is, I’m planning on having fun with it.

Have you ever seen something in a catalog, gawked at the price tag, and thought ‘I could totally make that?‘ That was my reaction to this bookcase in the Anthro catalog. Cool vintage books, beautiful bookcase, but why the heck does it cost $1400?

So I set off to make my own. The case is custom made to fit certain books. I wanted to make one for our cookbooks, so that’s what I based my measurements around. It’s made by gluing a lot of slivers of plywood together.

At first, I thought I could just buy a big piece of birch plywood and get the guys at Home Depot to chop it down to the many individual pieces. I never got around to trying that. I asked my dad instead, when we were home for Christmas. Lucky for me, my dad’s a pretty great woodworker. And he’s got all the necessary tools to cut the wood. After seeing how much work it was to cut all the 1-inch, and 2-inch segments, I’m glad I didn’t ask at Home Depot. They would’ve laughed in my face and told me to buy a saw instead.

I had my dad cut several pieces of wood at these heights (below). The book ends are 8.5-inches tall. And yes, I carried all the pieces back to Dallas with me in my carry-on!

To determine how many pieces I needed at each height, I measured the spine of the cookbooks we had at home.

I sanded all the pieces with super fine sandpaper. In the process, I inhaled a bunch of sawdust and injured my shoulder. Next time, I think I’ll have to get an automatic sander. After sanding, I arranged the wood pieces to make sure the books and case would look nice together.
Then it came down to gluing and staining the case. I used strong wood glue and a dark wood stain (no varnish).
The wood was actually kind of tough to glue together, because all the interior segments are different heights.

So the steps were: glue, wait 24 hours, then stain. I did two coats of stain, sanding the wood down with steel wool after each coat. Here it is after the first coat:

I haven’t had a lot of experience with wood glue or stain, but I learned that I should be more careful with the glue. The areas where the glue dribbled over ended up being stain-resistant. And that’s even after I wiped off the excess glue and sanded the area. It didn’t ruin the case, but it’s not very pretty.

After the stain was all dry, my bookcase was ready to go.

By itself, the case isn’t that impressive. But once you load the cookbooks on, it looks pretty sweet. I especially like how the cookbook colors accent the dark wood.

So there you have it: the Anthro bookcase. And done for waay under $1400. If I had my own fancy saw, I’d make more of these and give them as gifts. Some day, perhaps?

 

 

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