T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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745.1 | Bradlees.. | CTHQ::MACARTHUR | | Mon May 23 1994 13:08 | 5 |
| You could check out Bradlees - or some store like that. I've seen wall
murals in there before in the wall paper section. I believe they come
in boxes.
Good luck!
|
745.2 | Project it.. | NAPIER::HEALEY | M&ES, MRO4, 297-2426 | Mon May 23 1994 13:12 | 18 |
|
My sister in law is a dance instructor and does all her
scenery for her dance shows. The technique she uses might
help you out... she takes a picture that she likes,
makes a transparency, and uses an overhead projector to
project it onto her scenery. She actually takes pictures
out of childrens books which has colors so she has to
do some work (photo copying, tracing to remove shaded areas)
in order to get a transparency that she can use. I think
that coloring books might work better. Project the picture
onto the wall, draw it in with pencil, then use paints to
fill it in. You could even involve your son in the painting
process if he is somewhat artistic (ie can keep within the
lines).
Karen
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745.3 | beach scene mural | MSDOA::GUY | Do you really read this? | Mon May 23 1994 18:08 | 7 |
| I had one as a young teenager of a beach. The carpeting matched the
sand where the wall met the floor. AWESOME! I have seen some at
Sherwin-Williams Paint stores. They had several selections and
had quite a few to choose from to go on a door. A door mural
is big enough bit isn't as permanent.
Good Luck!
|
745.4 | some other ideas... | WECARE::BULL | | Tue Jun 07 1994 15:05 | 9 |
|
You could create large dinosaurs, Barneys, whatever on refrigerator-box-quality
cardboard. Paint them brightly and create a sort of 3D Mural of your own.
This is good because it is not permanent...so when the child grows out of
Star Wars, he/she is not stuck with C3PO's and R2D2's on the wall.
My aunt had a great solution for her son. She covered one entire wall with
Corkboard. That way HE could decorate it as he saw fit and when his tastes
chenged, so did the wall!
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745.5 | And it took my mind off work for a few days :-) | CHEFS::WARRENJ | how did that get in there? | Tue Jun 07 1994 16:30 | 21 |
| Another alternative you might like to consider would be stencilling -
either completely DIY or with ready-made ones.
I went the DIY route and have just completed Kathryn's room with a
"teddy/balloons/butterfly" scene...which kind of tells a story ..
teddy sitting on the skirting board with one balloon
floating in the air with three balloons
climbing onto a shelf...balloons floating in the air
swinging by feet from a trapeze under the shelf
diving off as though going to land in a beanbag
If you move the beanbag though, there's another teddy behind it looking
up at a butterfly
and the occasional butterfly dotted around the room
Kathryn thought it was great - and I had such fun :-) The longest part
was tracing/cutting out the stencils, but it was worth it!
Jackie
|
745.6 | Curtains | XCUSME::HATCH | On the cutting edge of obsolescence | Mon Aug 29 1994 14:28 | 16 |
| I've casually been searching for curtains suitable to decorate the baby's
room. The regular department stores carry many children's bedroom
accessories (sheets/comforters) but no curtains. Home Decorating shops
(Bed & Bath etc) carry little for kids rooms.
I do not want trendy "child's movie of the month" curtains, but
something with a classic theme, cheery but not to loud. Am I stuck
getting plain colored curtains? Also, the windows are 45" wide, fairly
big as windows go. Where where you able to find reasonable prices curtains?
Also, has anyone seen boarder paper that has the alphabet on it? I've
seen only Disney characters that repeat just ABC.
thanks,
Gail
|
745.7 | | DELNI::DISMUKE | | Mon Aug 29 1994 15:25 | 23 |
| Couple of ideas, Gail...I bought a few yards of a Waverly print that I
really liked and my sister made curtains for my sons room. I have no
sewing machine or talent to run one, so she just hemmed up the top and
bottom , poked a rod through them and hung 'em. They are a circus
print with brights yellows, reds, oranges, etc. Nice for a boys room.
As far as borders go, my sister used an alphabet stencil on her
daughters walls in the colors she wanted to use for the room. She also
added little handprints and bought the Alphabet lamp shade and the
balloon curtains that matched. Nice touch - the walls were white and
the curtains had the white background.
I had a real hard time with my other sons room. He is now 9 and didn't
want baby prints, but I didn't want character prints. We opted for the
red with white stripe valance that JCPenney offers. He has a red
bedspread, white walls, wood trim...his room looks nice. I can add
blues or even sports stuff or car stuff if he wants later. I think if the
room is going to be their room for awhile and you won't want to re-dress
everything with each change the child goes through, use a basic room
and dress with pillows, wall pictures, etc.
-sandy
|
745.8 | | CSC32::P_SO | Get those shoes off your head! | Mon Aug 29 1994 15:43 | 18 |
| You can make your own border using contact paper. When Nathan was
1 year old we cut the alphabet out of contact paper and placed
all over the room. When he was 3, he was into modes of transportation,
so we cut out space shuttle, airplane, train, bus, car, boat,
submarine and started in the upper corner of one wall and slowly
sent down making hills for the cars and then to the floor
of the opposite wall. Last year, in 1st grade, we cut out
beginning reading words and pasted them all over his room and
used them to make up stories at night, interjecting words not
on the wall...ex. *Ashley* and I went to the *store* to get
some *milk*. As we made up the story we would point to the
words. This year we will be cutting out his spelling words
and putting them all over the walls.
You don't have to go to the trouble of changing them so much
but we enjoy it.
Pam
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745.9 | Does the contact paper come off easily? | LEDZEP::TERNULLO | | Mon Aug 29 1994 15:48 | 17 |
|
Pam,
From what you've described, it seems like the contact paper must
just peel off easily when you want to change it? Is this true?
Do you have any trouble with it pealing off before you want it to?
Does it take the paint off with it when you take it off?
My sister-in-law did this with her son's room. He has the race
car theme. She wanted a black and white checker border but couldn't
find one, so she bought contact paper, cut it in half and used that.
I remember her saying it went up really easy. But since she hasn't
taken it down (and probably won't for a few years, I was curious
how it is coming off?)
Thanks,
Karen T.
|
745.10 | | CSC32::P_SO | Get those shoes off your head! | Mon Aug 29 1994 15:55 | 9 |
| It comes off very easily and does not take off the paint.
Occassionally we will have a problem with one or two of the
letters and it usually has something to do with Nathan
playing with them and getting the back 'unsticky' but
he is almost 5' tall, if you have a little one and keep them
up high enough you shouldn't have any problem. We had the
alphabet on the wall for 3 years with no peeling problems.
Pam
|
745.11 | JC Penney | NAPIER::HEALEY | M&ES, MRO4, 297-2426 | Mon Aug 29 1994 16:43 | 30 |
|
Have you checked out the JC Penney catalog? I just happen to have one
in my office so I decided to take a look. The have bedding and coordinates
which includes curtains, wall paper and/or borders.
Here is some of what they have:
Teddy bear on rocking horse theme
Solids in various colors
Eyelets in various colors
Blue and White Country hearts
Teddy bear with clown and ballons, primary colors
Ballons, primary colors
Floral, pink, green, lavender, yellow
Jungle theme, bright aqua, green, pink, yellow
Elephant theme, soft pastels
Rocking horse quilt, pastels
Boynton, blues and greens
Another floral, beige, green, mauve
Alphabet theme, primary colors
There are another dozen or so and each one is cuter than the last!
They do have an alphabet border but it only goes to the letter D. They also
have an alphabet Wall hanging and an alphabet print.
The prices of three piece sets (comforter, bumper pad, and fitted sheet)
vary considerably, from $55 to $160.
Karen
|
745.12 | Make the curtains - it's a Cinch! (use a sheet as material!) | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue Aug 30 1994 16:27 | 64 |
|
If you don't mind curtains that aren't so fancy, they're EASY to make,
and you can make them to fit whatever size window you like. Also, if
the closet has a sliding door, you can hang a matching valance above that.
To determine how much material you need, Measure the window length.
Add 6" for the bottom hem (5" fold plus 1" turn), and 6" for the top
hem (3" ruffle, 2" for rod, 1"turn). We'll assume the window is 3'
long. Each panel then will require 4' of material. One window would
thus require (2 panels) 8' (2 2/3 yards) of material. Get your 8' of
material, cut it in half, so you have 2. 4' sections. Wash, dry and (if
necessary) iron it (I usually skip the washing step and have never had
a problem).
On the bottom of one panel, fold up the material 6" (if you're a
little shakey with straight lines, iron the fold - it makes it LOTS
easier). Then on the raw edge (that's now folded up), tuck it down and
inside, an inch or so. Again, iron this if you like. Using thread
that matches the curtain, sew a straight line. Repeat for the other
panel. To make sure it 'looks' right, it's helpful to physically
compare the two pieces when making the folds.
On the top of one panel, fold the material down 6" (again, ironing
helps). On the raw edge (that's now folded down), tuck it up and under
an inch or so. (iron if you like). Using thread that matches the
curtain, sew a straight line where the fabric meets. Repeat this for
the other panel. **It's more critical that both panels match, more
than the exact measurements**. Compare the two panels before sewing
the top of the last panel, and make any adjustments necessary to the
top of the last paneling, by moving the fold.
To create the 'ruffle' on the top, on the top of each panel, mark down
3" from the top. Sew a straight line across the top. When you put the
curtain on the rod, leave the 3" ruffle on top.
There's not usually a need to sew the sides of the curtain, since
they're finished from the bolt. Typically your total width should be
at least 1 1/2 times the width of the window. Not more than twice the
width. So, for 45" windows, you'd want material that's somewhere
between 30-45" wide. If you find a 60" width that you like, then
you'll need to cut it *straight* up the middle, and hem the 2 inside
edges *before* doing the tops and bottoms.
A valance is exactly the same, only they're usually about 10" long,
total length, and is frequently the same width as the window. Tiebacks
are typically made with a piece of material that's about 2/3 the width
of the window, by 7" wide. (a 45" window would require a piece about 7"
wide, by 30" long). Fold it in half, with right sides together, and
sew the 2 long edges. Turn it rightside out, turn in the edges of the
short side, and sew the shortside closed.
Not so hard at all! Or find someone who can (kinda) sew, and ask them
to help.
As for the alphabet .... I haven't seen any borders, but the children's
toy/education store at the Pheasant Lane Mall used to sell Frieze's.
They're about 8-10" long, and I bordered the whole toy room with them.
Numbers and letters. The letters had a picture of something that
started with that letter, and the numbers had a picture with that
number of items in it. The room is about 8'x10' and it went around 3
walls. (and geez that room is crooked! (-;)
Hope this helps....
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745.13 | Patchwork Pooh | STOWOA::NAHABEDIAN | | Mon Jan 20 1997 10:00 | 9 |
745.14 | Try contacting the mfgr direct | LINGER::PINEAU | | Mon Jan 20 1997 11:56 | 7 |
745.15 | Nursery Decorating Hotline | STOWOA::NAHABEDIAN | | Wed Jan 22 1997 09:19 | 10
|