About Me

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My personal style is minimalist or totally over-the-top. I don't like anything in the middle. This blog is a collection of all things I love or find interesting.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Designer Secrets

Here are some designer secrets as featured in House Beautiful May 2012 issue.  Happy decorating!

- If you're going to paint the walls white, you need art.

- When you're hanging a series of pictures together, keep the gap between then 2" to 2 1/2" to really utilize the wall space, and keep a minimum of 9" between the art and tops of sofas and chairs.

- If you have a painting that looks too small above your sofa, don't center it.  Offset it in a few inches to the left.  The negative space - called "ma" - becomes part of the image.

- The ideal height to hang your flat-screen TV is at eye level when you're in viewing position.  The ideal viewing distance is 1 1/2 times the size of your flat screen.

- Float something in the room - a sofa, a lounge chair - to avoid the "dance hall" look.  Think of it as an opportunity to show off the back (do something with the back".

- A bed should be 23" off the floor, no higher.

- Instead of a towel bar, mount 5 robe hooks 68" high for towels and robes.

- When it comes to bookcases, stick to books.  Nothing is more visually chaotic than 46 shelves of random stuff.

- Dining room chandeliers should hang 60" to 66" above the floor.

- Surprise the eye with scale.  Use one large lamp with a large lampshade, or an oversize ottoman.  One large-scale element takes a room up a notch.

- Measure the depth of your dressers, desks, and other furniture before purchasing a rug.  The rug should stop before the furniture in most cases.

- A dining room rug should extend a minimum of 3' from the edge of a dining table - dining chairs should always be fully on the rug - not two legs on and two off.

- The minimum break for drapery panels that hand to the floor is 1/2".  Anything less is like wearing high water pants.

- The only time white curtain lining should be used is with white curtains.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Lavender Bath Salts Recipe

I found this great recipe in Whole Foods magazine.  It smells fantastic and the bath was wonderfully relaxing.  The best part is that it comes out to be $1.45 per bath!!!

Here's what you need:

- 2 cups coarse sea salt
- 2 cups Epsom salts
- 8 drops of lavender essential oil (sold at Whole Foods)
- 5 drops of chamomile essential oil (sold at Whole Foods)
- 3 drops of eucalyptus essential oil (sold at Whole Foods)


Combine all ingredients in a large bowl and whisk until oils are evenly distributed throughout.  Transfer to a sealed glass jar for storing.  When you're ready for relaxation, add 1 cup to a hot bath and enjoy!

If you're especially crafty, transfer the mixture into cute jars and give out as gifts or party favors!

Saturday, January 21, 2012

4 Cheap & Natural Cures That Work

I found this article in Glamour April 2010 mag and decided to share.

1) Lemon Juice on a Bug Bite
Acidic liquids 1 like lemon juice or 1 vinegar can act as powerful anti-sting treatments, says Evangeline Lausier,
M.D., director of clinical services at Duke Integrative Medicine in Durham, North Carolina.
Why It Works: Venom in stingers tends to be alkaline, so applying something acidic can counteract the poison,
preventing it from spreading. (Dab a drop or two on the spot as quickly as you can after you're bitten or stung.)

2) A Pinch on Your to Lower Anxiety
This acupressure move is often prescribed to reduce stress: Squeeze the fleshy portion of skin between your thumb and pointer finger (it should feel uncomfortable but not painful), and hold for three minutes.
Why It Works: Experts believe the pressure can raise levels of endorphins, your body's natural feel-good chemicals, says David Kiefer, M.D., assistant clinical professor of medicine at the University of Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine in Tuscon. Western medicine doesn't fully understand acupressure's effectiveness, but we've had success using it for everything from stress and nausea to insomnia,"he says.


3) Honeyed Rum for a Cold
Before NyQuil, there was this cure for stuffiness and a sore throat: a toddy made with a few ounces of hot water, one tablespoon of rum, the juice of one lemon and three teaspoons of honey.
Why It Works: A small amount of alcohol can relieve pain and relax you. "Nighttime cold medicine devotees probably benefit as much from the drug's alcohol content as anything else, because it helps put you to sleep," says Dr. Kiefer. But that's not all this drink has going for it. Honey is antiviral and coats the throat, having a soothing effect, says Dr. Kiefer.

4) Aloe Vera for Tummy Troubles
Hawaiians revere aloe as a cure-all wonder plant:  Not only do they rub it on cuts and sunburns, they ingest the gel to calm upset stomach and and nix constipation.
Why It Works: According to some research, aloe gel may soothe ulcers and improve regularity, says Jamey Wallace, N.D., medical director at Bastyr Center for Natural Health in Seattle.  Be sure to buy the kind of gel that's meant for internal use; aloe gels for sunburn relief often contain ingredients like alcohol!  (You can find bottled aloe gel in health food stores like Whole Foods.)

Monday, January 16, 2012

Lovely Lace






















I love the idea of a lace-printed mat, as featured in Martha Stewart's magazine.  I have some great picture frames, but I really don't like the matting, and this will be a great way to spruce them up.  Lace mat frame would also make a great gift!

Lace Frame How-To

1. Learn the lace-printing technique.
2. Carefully apply strips of painters' tape to the four corners of a photo mat, so the edge of the tape runs from the inner corners to the outer corners, enabling you to create a mitered effect. On two sides of the mat, make pencil marks on the tape to serve as guides so you can position the lace in a straight line.
3. Ink the lace and print borders on the two marked sides, using the technique described above. Peel off the tape while the ink is wet. Let dry 30 minutes.
4. Retape the four corners, this time exposing the other two sides of the mat. Repeat the process.

Resources

Alencon lace trim, from Lace Star, lacestar.com.