CRAFTS Index
Baskets
Beading
Boxes
Candles
Children's Room Decor
Clay
Clothing
Dolls
Faux & Other Finishes
Flowers & Foliage
Furniture
Garden & Patio
Glass
History
Holidays
Jewelry & Accessories
Kids Crafts
Lamps & Shades
Linens & Fabrics
Memory Crafts
Metal
Natural & Homemade
Needle Arts
Organizing & Storage
Painting & Staining
Paper
Photo Projects
Quilting Techniques
Recycled Objects
Ribbons & Bows
Rubber Stamping
Scrapbooking
Special Days & Gifts
Stenciling
Storage
Tabletop Decor
Toys & Games
Walls & Floors
Wedding
Wirework
Wood & Leather

BEST OF CRAFTS
Puttin' On the Knits
Knitty Gritty
Creative Juice
Sewing for the Home
Scrapbooking: Flowers
Scrapbooking Basics
Scrapbooking: Holidays
Scrapbooking: Vacations

SPONSOR LINKS

  • Sweet Dreams Nursery
  • From "DIY Decorating & Design"
    episode DID-155
    advertisement

    Click here to view a larger image.

    A set of children's blocks provides design inspiration for a whimsical painted nursery.

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Figure A

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Figure B

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Figure C

    Click here to view a larger image.

    A tree painted on the wall anchors the corner by the crib.

    Click here to view a larger image.

    This roly-poly clown painted on two sides of a closet door gives a puzzle effect.

    Awaiting the birth of her second child, expectant mother Laura Kohn employed artist Harriet Love to add a fun, whimsical look to her children's bedrooms. Harriet used a combination of sponge-painting techniques and illustrative painting to create wonderful rooms for the kids.

    A set of children's blocks provided the inspiration for the patterns painted on the walls. A glazing technique was used to give the background a washed-out blue-sky effect. The glaze was made from a mixture of 2 parts paint, 1 part glaze and 1 part water. Harriet painted a few stripes of color on the wall and moved the paint around with a worn sea sponge (figure A). The more the paint is moved around, the more depth is achieved (figure B).

    Harriet continued to pick up glaze with the sponge until the surface looked like light-blue sky (figure C). If you try this project yourself, work in one small area at a time, and keep a wet edge so the areas will blend together nicely. When the paint is dry, apply a coat of water-based varnish.

    The patterns on the wall were painted with the same type of glaze mixture to create a translucent look. The brushstrokes are allowed to show so the work looks hand-painted.

    Harriet first painted a tree in the corner of the room near the crib. Painted patterns of bears in hot-air balloons and clowns and elephants on closet doors evolved from there.

  • ALSO IN THIS EPISODE: