CWTS Side Board Tutorial

Well…my crafting partner and I made it through Round Two and into Round 3 on Crafting With the Stars…YAY! Heidi from HoneyBear Lane, my partner, was the creative genius behind this and did all the hard work. Isn’t she amazing? Well, she is going to be sharing her tutorial here with my Idea Room Readers.

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Now that the voting is closed, here is the tutorial for my sideboard that I made for Crafting with the Stars Round 2.  I have to say, this project turned out even better than I imagined.  I actually sat it in my living room after I finished and stared at it for like an hour.  (Also I couldn’t get up because I was so tired.) 

The first thing I did was make my letters out of paper mache.  I was planning on attaching them to the door itself in a random pattern, but after I finished they didn’t lie flat.  I’m sure I could have done it more carefully but oh well.  It all worked out in the end anyway.  

Supplies for Paper Mache Letters

Newspaper

Cereal boxes

Flour

Water

Masking Tape

Spray paint (or craft paint works too, just takes longer.)

Supplies for Sideboard & Shelves

Old door

Paint for the door

Sanding bar

Letter stencils

Spray paint

Wood for shelves

Screws

Paint for the shelves

Drill

Start with your cereal boxes to make your form.  (I did NOT purchase that Captain Crunch-that’s disgusting!)

Open up the boxes and draw your letters.  I used a plate to help out with the circular form.

When you cut it out, cut two (two thickness at a time)

Start twisting and shaping newspapers and tape them into one of your letter shapes.

When you’re all done, tape the other letter shape on top, making a little sandwich.

Finish all your other letters, you can experiment with size, case, and font (cursive vs print.)

Dig up your paper mache skills from elementary school…rip or cut up newspapers into strips.

Mix your paste…mine is us a bunch of flour and water.  I didn’t even measure anything.  I don’t have a picture of me doing the paper mache because it’s WAY too messy.  Basically you just dip your paper in the paste and squeeze off the excess with your fingers.  Then carefully wrap the paper around your form.  Cover the whole form.

I laid my letters down on plastic wrap to let dry so they didn’t adhere to the table or something.  I had to let them dry for a good 24+ hours.

Sand your letters a little to get a smoother surface and then spray paint them!

The letters “A” and “e” are paper mache…the others are some old wood ones I had.

For the sideboard:  Paint your door.  Here’s a painting tip:  paint one coat and then let it fully dry.  Your painting job will look pretty bad at this point and you will be tempted to just keep painting.  But you have to let each coat dry fully to get the most mileage out of your paint.  So just go over the surface once and then let it dry.  Repeat, repeat, repeat.

After I painted the door, I sanded some corners to distress it a little.

To stencil the letters, I bought this pack of stencils at Walmart for like $3.  I laid them haphazardly on the door, making sure that the letters were not in any particular order.

To spray paint, tape down the stencil first with masking tape.  Then I cut a rectangle out of some cardboard to make a guard.  Mine wasn’t nearly big enough though so I had to do a lot of re touching. 

Spray on your letter!  Then go crazy with all different colors!

I was loving this…but it needed something, since my paper mache letters wouldn’t cut it.  I considered putting up a big word in white, (like DREAM) but then my sister suggested some shelves. 

Genius.  I. LOVE. THEM.  I am a huge lover of shelves anyway, or organization in general. 

To get the tutorial to build these shelves, check out Ana White’s blog Knock Off Wood.  It was super easy and made me feel all handy (not as awesome as Sandra from Sawdust & Paper Scraps though, have you seen what she can do?)

Little projects like this totally push me out of my comfort zone though and I want to tackle more wood projects!  And I’m going to be putting these type of shelves all over my house, since they are a super easy way to display tons of framed pictures.  I made my shelves with cull wood from Home Depot so they were also really inexpensive.

To attach the shelves to the door, I just screwed them straight in.  And to hang the sideboard up, we screwed long screws straight into wall studs.  Shh, don’t tell my apartment managers!  That’s what wall putty is for, right?

I have been in the process of decorating my kids’ room for a long time now, and it’s been going very slow since I keep getting interrupted with other stuff.  So expect to see lots more little things on this process in the next year.  This sideboard really makes a huge decorative impact though, I love it!

–Heidi from HoneyBear Lane

★Amy