Tuesday, December 11, 2012

PVC Bow and Arrow DIY

And the last of my DIY Christmas Gift Palooza... For the older kids PVC bow and wooden dowel arrow set.
You will need:
*Nylon string.. Home Depot
*1/2" PVC... Home Depot
* 2, 1/2" PVC caps... Home Depot
* PVC Cement Glue
* Duct tape in any color you like, I chose hot pink and camo...
Arrows:
*wooden dowels... Home Depot
* Felt for the arrow head... Michaels or craft store...
* Hot glue gun...
I found a tutorial here... I cut the PVC at 40"... You can make 3 bows from one PVC pipe... Then I held the PVC while Drew made a slit on each end of the pipe 7/8" deep with his skillsaw.... Talk about bringing a gun to a knife fight... Make sure the cut is facing the same direction in each end so the string lines up.

Then I took the nylon string and make a large knot. Melt the end with a lighter to avoid unraveling... Slip the string though the slits then measure the string and cut it 4" short of the PVC... Around 36".... Tie another knot and melt... Bend the bow and slip it through the other slits... The curve will be really drastic and the line extremely tight... It will relax over time...

I cement glued the end caps to the ends...

Then I wrapped with duct tale to add color and flair...

Then I took two sheets of felt and ran them through the sewing machine and stitched several triangles leaving the bottom open.

I cut the dowels around 15"... Trimmed out the triangle... Put hot glue into the triangle and shoved the dowel in.

I put squares of duct tape on the other end of the arrow and then made cuts to make it look like feathers...

And ta-da! Another cheap unique gift!

Monday, December 10, 2012

Reclaimed Wood Wire Frame...

Last week I showed our reclaimed wood frame DIY...

We made two frames... One for my Santa poster and one for part of my DIY Christmas gift palooza!

We built a frame the same as the other.... Instead of routing the back and installing plexiglass I bought some eyelets from Home Depot and twisted them into the inside of the frame.

Then took some rebar wire (not sure if that's the exact name but it's what Drew called it...) from Home Depot and thread it through the eyelets and twisted with some pliers.

Like so....

Then I printed out pictures from my Instagram account using printstagram... Printstagram was awesome! Super easy to use, super quick delivery and the photos are crisp, clear and printed on thick paper. I highly recommend them!

 

Friday, December 7, 2012

For Your Viewing Pleasure...

My brother and sister-in-law bought the cutest English Bulldog... Drew invited us over to go meet him.... You read that right.... And he's adorbs....
How sweet are puppies especially when you don't have to potty train them?
But if he doesn't do this I will be very disappointed!
Links from my brother:
My nephew might be the next Spielberg... Watch this video he made... Keep in mind he's 4, woke up at 4:30 AM found his moms phone and created this all on his own.... Special FX and all!...

My. Nightmares.... Here...

I need to travel to the Russian forest for this....

And who doesn't need this...

(via)

My sister shared these fabulous shirts...

 

(via)

Happy Friday!

 

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Collapsible PVC Teepee DIY...

I need to start again by saying I am not a seamstress.... I have minimum sewing experience so take this tutorial for what it's worth.... That being said, if I can do this YOU CAN TOO.... where is an Uncle Sam poster with my face on it when you need it? I followed these instructions.... No picture tutorial just a list of steps! They were great, but I will say I could not fit all the cut pieces on one 9x12 drop cloth like she suggest.... I just couldn't get it to work... Maybe you will have better luck. I ended up just using a spare drop cloth for the doors. They are different colors but I didn't mind. I think even if you used an entirely different fabric it would be darling!

My teepee is different than Smile and Waves because I wanted mine to be collapsible.... It's hard to store something that is 7 feet tall.... Mine breaks down and folds down to 4 feet... I know that collapsible is a big selling item because my Collapsible A-Frame Pup tents have been a huge source of traffic to my blog!

So here goes nothin'....

Shopping List:

* 1 9x12 drop cloth.... If you can find a way to get it all in... I'm not sure if there is a larger scale drop cloth or just get the 9x12 and a smaller one for the door... Or different fabric for the door...

* 6 -ten foot 3/4" PVC pipes (Drew called it Schedule 40 PVC, whatever that means!)... We purchased these at Lowes... Can also be purchased at Home Depot... We got the thick lining PVC so it was sturdier...

* 12 -3/4" end caps

* 6 threaded female couplings...

* 6 threaded male couplings... (The more time I spend in hardware stores the more I realize it was designed by men.... Who else would say male and female fittings, nipples and boob lights...) I giggle every time.... Yep... 12 years old....

* PVC cement... You don't need primer because there will be no water in the PVC...

* 1/4" rope (same one I used here)... I believe I got this at Home Depot... Smile and Wave used leather... Whatever your pleasure be here...

* 3/4" ribbon from Joanne's... Enough for 17 twelve inch ties...

We also had on hand PVC cutters from Home Depot and a drill for the holes at the top of the teepee.... However I think you can ask the people at Home Depot to cut the PVC down for you... I cut them down from 10 ft to 7 ft.... Then cut the 7 foot pipes so that one end was 3 ft long and the other end was 4 ft long. I wasn't sure if I wanted a 7 foot teepee or a 6 ft so I was cutting a little at a time... I suppose you could cut the 7 ft pipes in half and be just fine!

I conveniently found a square piece of wood in our garage measuring 38" wide... Fate! You could use two yardsticks taped together... Something to help make the long triangles...

Directions say make: 5 panels 38" wide at the base and 4" at the top, 80" tall... This is where maybe you could adjust the measurements to fit all the panels on one drop cloth... Maybe 36" at the base and 4" at the top 80" tall...

I measured the bottom of the drop cloth 38" and marked it with chalk... I did this in the corner of the room to help make even measurements... I also marked the center of 38".... Measure the other edge of the drop cloth on the left of the picture up 80" laid my wood across at 80" so it was parallel to the bottom of th drop cloth where I made my first measurements and marked where the center of the 38" was...then added 2" on either side of the mark for 4" top...

(Ignore the little marks at the top of the picture below... I was trying to figure out how to get all the panels out of one drop cloth... Never quite got it...) Then I used my piece of wood and set it in the corner and eyeballed it to the edge of the top 4".... This is where two yard sticks would have been handy... With a little luck this worked out perfect for me. I set it down and drew a line, then moved the wood halfway up so about a foot was still on the chalk line...

Then I cut the chalk lines out... I used that first panel as my template for the rest....remember to only use the first one... If you switch panels they have a tendency to grow over time... I unversed the panels every time, top to bottom and bottom to top to fit more in...

This project took twice as long because the pooches had to "help"...

Then I pinned and sewed the panels together.... Laying one on top of another as you can see below...

Sewed the side that was pinned together.... The pups wrestled...

I sewed two together and two more together, opened them and laid them face together and pinned one side, sewed that together, opened it and sewed the remaining panel on....

Now for the door... I cut the top triangle out of the original drop cloth and the door panels out of a new drop cloth... The top triangle measurements were 5" top x 19" tall x 21" base... The door panels were 12.5" top, 33" base and a straight edge that measures 58"... I used the corner of the new drop cloth for a straight 33" bottom and straight 58" edge... Cut this out and used it as the template for the next panel... These could be smaller too... I probably would have done an 11" top and 31" base... Line it all up straight sides together, then hem the straight sides in... I had to turn the ends in 1.5" because the panels were so big... Then sew the upper triangle to the door panels making sure the doors hang straight... Then sew the door to the rest of the teepee...

Then with an inside out teepee I folded the top over...

Ran my rope through amd pinned it in, sewed underneath it...

Ended it like below... This helps cinch the top tight... The directions said to do elastic but the rope works just as well and can be clinches as tight as need be....

Phew.... Did you follow that? Now for the posts...

Like I said before I cut the 10 ft PVC down to 7 feet, the cut again at 4 ft... Leaving a 4 ft piece and a 3ft piece... PVC attracted every single piece of dog hair.... It was driving me crazy... So I apologize for the hair in the pics... It was a nightmare...

Took the male and female fittings...

And the PVC cement glue.. Swabbed the glue on with the swab that is on the glue cap...

And fit them on... I tried to put all the male ends on the 4ft sections and female on the 3 ft.... I messed up and it really doesn't matter...

Then you can screw them together... The glue dries crazy fast so make sure you are paying attention....
Then I had Drew drill a hole 8 " from the end of each post.... Proud to say this was Drew's only contribution. Thread the rope through each hole... Then glue the caps on to the ends of every pole, opposite of the threaded fittings...

A close up.... Now for the ribbon ties... On the door I did a 6" piece 6 " down on either side of the door... Make sure the two pieces line up on each panel... Then repeat in the middle and bottom of the door... I also did 6" pieces on the outside to hold the door up on open...

I set the teepee up and pinned the ribbons two on each post all around the teepee...

Each inside ribbon was 12" long sewn in the middle of the ribbon...

Directions said to hand sew it.... That sounded like death... So I pinned them where I wanted them, took the teepee off the poles, turned it inside out and sewed all the ribbon with the machine...

And done!

The pups were crazy about it! Cleo the 160 lb Great Dane has plenty of room....

Two snuggling Springer Spaniels.... Do you see Mac's arm around Polly... Can you stand it?

Close up of the ribbon ties...

Now to break it down... Gather the poles together, lay down the teepee with the door open unscrew the fittings... Make sure the ribbon ties are tied... Pull the pipes apart, close the teepee and fold...

I tied it with leftover rope... I might go get a thick ribbon...

Ta-da! Collapsible Teepee!

Looks oh so charming with my felt campfire and roasting 's'mores!