Frugal
Wall Art Gifts for Your Home
By Monica Resinger
There are some lovely pictures available in retail
stores, but they can be very expensive. I'd like to suggest some less
expensive ways to make your own decorative wall art that will be more
charming and beautiful in your home than any picture that can be purchased.
To get started, you'll need frames. Frames are also
expensive when purchased retail, so I suggest buying them used. You
can find good picture frames at yard sales and thrift stores for a
fraction of the retail price. If there are minor problems with the
frame, such as chipped paint or nicks and scratches, don't worry,
you can cover that part up with the decorative ideas that follow.
What to Put in the Frame
Family pictures are a great, personal way to warm
your home. Looking at them brings back memories for the owner or brings
up conversations with guests. These also make great gifts for family
members. If you're planning on designing family pictures to give as
gifts, it's a good idea to start getting double prints developed from
your films.
Pretty pictures cut from magazines, calendars or
holiday cards are other items that make great wall art. You can choose
pictures that have to do with the theme or colors in your home or
in someone else's home if you're planning to give the picture as a
gift.
Pressed flowers and leaves are beautiful framed.
Outdoors, try to find flowers or leaves that are naturally flat and
will lie between paper well, then press them between pages in a book.
After a week or more, check to see if they're dry and crisp to the
touch.
Frame crocheted doilies on a contrasting background
for a beautiful picture. Hankies are another item that's easily framed.
These are really special if the item belonged to a family member.
Save memorabilia from vacations such as ticket stubs,
menus, napkins, pictures or other flat surface items and frame these
for a unique picture that brings memories and conversation.
For a garden look, a pretty seed packet could be
framed with a complimentary background. Hot glue small pinecones or
other natural material to the frame to finish it off. If you don't
have a pretty seed packet, you could cut a pretty garden picture from
a magazine or birthday card.
Frame a recipe. What I like to do is copy and paste
a recipe into a card/calendar or art program on my computer and change
the colors and fonts of the text then add clip art, pretty backgrounds
and/or a border. Print it out and you have a nice item that can be
framed and used in the kitchen. You can also photocopy your own recipes
to be framed and take a picture of the finished recipe to include
with it.
Decorating the Frames
Decorate a picture frame by covering the entire frame
with shells, buttons, pebbles, bottle-caps or other small items. Hot-glue
would work best for attaching items. If you'd like, you could finish
it off with a complimentary ribbon bow. You could also use these items
or silk or dried flowers as accents and attach a few to a corner with
a ribbon bow.
Paint it. Choose a color included in the picture
you're framing and paint the frame that color with acrylic paint.
You may need to apply 2-3 coats to cover the frame completely; be
sure to let each coat dry before applying another. When the frame
is completely covered and dry, you can then sponge paint a darker
or lighter shade over that for a very pretty look. To sponge paint,
simply dip a small area of a sponge in paint, blot on newspaper a
few times to get excess paint off, then blot the sponge onto the frame.
Another idea is to paint polka dots, squiggly lines or another small
design in a contrasting color.
When decorating a frame to be given to a family member
or friend, think of their favorite color, the color of the room they
will most likely display the picture in, their hobbies, or what they
enjoy. You could design a garden picture for your gardening friend,
a family picture for a family member or a doily picture for your grandmother
or mother. Have fun with it and unleash your creativity, the possibilities
are endless!
Copyright, 2003, Monica Resinger
Monica Resinger is a loving wife and doting mother
of two who enjoys gardening, painting, dancing and homemaking. She
edits and publishes the e-zine The Homemaker's Journal, a
free e-zine published Monday through Friday, that features a useful
homemaking tip and scrumptious recipe of the day;if you'd like to
subscribe, just send a blank e-mail to:
HomemakersJournal-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
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