DIY Explanation

pour améliorer, meaning 'to improve', is a humble record of our renovation, home improvement and landscaping projects, with our travel adventures thrown in.

21 October, 2011

Operation Gallery Wall

I discovered a few things while making our gallery wall:

1) It takes a LONG time.

2) No matter how many frames you've got, it's not enough. Get more.

3) It takes a REALLY LONG time.

I managed to find the box in which I'd packed away most of our existing photo frames. I thought I was doing very well that I had quite a few that were already black. I knew I needed more though, so I paid a little visit to my local Salvation Army store and picked up a lovely pile of frames for about $20.


I gave them all a quick once-over with fairly fine sandpaper, and laid them carefully on bricks under the house.


I sprayed them with undercoat...


And then with black glossy spray paint. I didn't realise until afterward that it's probably not normal to have glossy black frames, so I worried that it they would look strange on the walls, particularly amongst all of the other frames we already owned that were a matte black. They turned out ok, though, and I actually think the difference in finishes adds to the texture of the walls as well.


While I was at it, I grabbed the wedding photo we'd had printed on canvas. When I ordered it I didn't realise that it would look a bit strange not having the photo extend onto the edges of the canvas as well. So I taped it up and gave it the spray treatment as well.



Then I moved on to this mirror. I mentioned it yesterday. I bought it on Ebay around the same time as I bought our new bathroom mirror, and was horribly disappointed when I found out that the glass is actually a convex shape.


I decided to give it a chance though, and very carefully taped up the mirror.


I realised about here that I wasn't going to have enough frames. Very serendipitously, I found this lot for sale on Gumtree for $15. And I pounced!


They very quickly experienced the same treatment as the other frames.


Even just with the undercoat the mirror started looking much better.


And the coat of gloss black really made a difference!



Once all of the frames were dry, I traced the outline of each one onto newspaper...


And then it was finally time to start planning what should go where.


I attached a little slip of doubled-over painters tape to the back of each piece of newspaper, and started playing with placement, starting with the round mirror.


Then it was just a matter of alternating frame sizes and orientations, and fiddling until it looked right.



But I wasn't done yet! There was another wall to go! I quite like the fact that I've somehow managed to get a nice round shape onto both walls. On this one the clock, on the other one the mirror.


Soon, it was taking shape as well.


As I said, this is definitely time consuming. These walls actually stayed like this with newspaper all over them for at least a week. This wasn't because I was sensibly trying not to rush things, but because it's hard to pin down my husband long enough to attach the frames themselves! As it turned out, it was probably a very good thing that it took us a while to start making holes in the wall, because I kept shuffling things around until I was completely happy with them.



The mirror was the first to actually hit the wall. Please excuse Tom's indecency here. Much too much nipple and underarm hair in this photo!


We removed all of the things from the back of the frames that you use to rest them on tables (since we didn't want them sticking out from the wall too much), and a lot of them needed some help becoming fit for hanging. We bought a little packet of these things. I wish I knew their names!


And then both walls sat like this for weeks (although I only have a picture of this wall during this stage for some reason!). Can you spot the remaining newspaper?


I eventually decided to take things into my own hands, put up the remaining few frames myself. Wno needs a man?!


And so, after much jumping up and down off the couches and many many weeks, we finally had these finished (for now) products!



If I could offer a tip for creating your own frame wall, allow yourself a LOT of time, and definitely take your time between the newspaper and hole-drilling stages! It's all worth it in the end though!

19 October, 2011

On The Gallery Wall Bandwagon

I've been admiring these pictures on Pinterest for a while now.










Gallery walls seem to be all the rage right now, and whilst I would normally at least make an attempt not to blatantly follow a trend, I really wanted to!

So I decided to just give in, hop on that bandwagon and make my own in the lounge room!!!


Most of the pictures inside the frames are pictures from our Europe trip. I just printed them on plain paper, and intend to change them out over time as new art takes my fancy.

The black fan we got from a dollar store (if you can even call them that) in Barcelona. The owl necklace above it I bought on Ebay for $1.99 a few months ago. The clock we bought online while we were still living at our last house. It used to live above the bath in our ensuite.


I made the mask up the top about ten years ago for a friend's fancy dress masquerade-themed birthday party. Next to that is a shot of some graffiti in Rome, saying "Buongiorno Principessa"


This is the only wedding photo we've had printed onto canvas. It's in pride of place. The little photo next to it is a postcard from Paris, showing the roads branching out from the Arc de Triomphe. I love that view. Above that, a photo I took of a random canal-side doorway in Venice, and beside that, a photo of us in a gondola in Venice.


This shadow picture is one of my favourites. We took it while standing on the town wall surrounding Dubrovnik in Croatia. The ferris wheel picture above it is the Prater in Vienna.


But there are two opposing walls in the lounge, one behind each couch. So why stop at one wall? Then the room would just be unbalanced! So the other wall got the same treatment.


This mirror is one of my favourite things on the wall. I didn't realise when I bought it on Ebay (around the same time as I bought the bathroom mirror) that the glass in it was a convex shape. I was actually quite disappointed when I realised it wasn't an ordinary flat mirror and experienced some serious buyers remorse. But... with a fresh coat of shiny black spraypaint and a prominent spot in my little gallery, it's got a new lease on life, and I love it!

You can see the entire room in it, including the opposite wall!


Next to it is a necklace, which interestingly enough also came from Croatia. Above that is a postcard of the ceiling in the Sagrada Familia church in Barcelona. Sorry about the blurry shot.


This is one of my favourite shots from our holiday (one of them). A canal in Venice by night.


The pebble heart photo at the top was actually something I noticed in the original main street in the Roman Forum, and just happened to snap a photo of. Beneath it is a little plastic butterfly clip from France, and beneath that a quote from Pride and Prejudice. It doesn't quite seem the right place for that quote, so I will probably switch it for something else.


On the other side, the rose ball I actually found in a shoe shop last year for $10. It was apparently left over from a previous window display, and they were trying to get rid of it! Next to it is a framed postcard from Mont St Michel, France. Beside that, a little wooden statue of a father holding his baby from Tom's parents.


Above that, a little leather rose purse from Florence, another shadow picture of Tom and I in our dorky hats in Santorini,  a little owl made of Belgian lace (from Belgium) in the little oval frame, and the very faint picture on the bottom left is actually a biro-drawn picture of the landscaping plan for our yard at our last house that we made one day while making plans on the run.


Decorating those two walls has made an enormous difference to the room! Even though you wouldn't expect it from black frames, they've warmed up the space so much. We've got very high ceilings, and having painted the walls a light colour, it can feel a little cold. Adding a bit of colour to the walls has made the room feel cosier, but made the most of the height at the same time.


Plus, we get to look at our beautiful memories of our holiday, and can change out the contents of the frames really easily when the mood strikes.

Don't let me fool you though, this definitely didn't happen quickly. Making these frame walls has been quite the extended operation! It's taken weeks to get them finished. And they're still not technically finished, since not only do I want to change some of the photos, but there are still a few spaces around the edges that I haven't yet got frames to fill. I think I'll write a separate post on the steps of the process thus far.

What do you think of them? Love them? Hate them? Indifferent them?













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you are talking too much
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