Showing posts with label Scrap Space. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scrap Space. Show all posts
Thursday, April 27, 2017
Come Check Out Maja's Scrapbook Room!
Hello everyone :)
Today I'd like to invite you to the place where I spend my creative time. My craftroom is really tiny, but I love it nonetheless and I'm happy I can have it just for myself, no need to share ;) Well, it's actually so small that sharing would be rather impossible, it's even difficult to take photos of the inside - but do feel welcome and come in!
Yes, it's that small :) And I usually need to keep it tidy as there's no door, I didn't want to waste the space. I wanted to make the most of the little room I have and thus many drawers and shelves. Ikea white furniture seems quite popular with scrappers worldwide, and I'm no different ;) Their drawers and shelves are really great. I chose the glass-door showcases to give the room a sense of lightness, and to avoid mess I keep my stuff in boxes and d-ring binders.
The boxes on top contain, apart from embellishments, also cards and notebooks I made as I create for sale too. In the binders you can see on the shelves I store my stamps, stickers and rubons.
And here's how I store stamps: I place them on thick acetate binding covers and slide into transparent pockets. Tip: to avoid cutting the pockets, round the lower corners of the acetate sheets with a corner punch :)
The next two shelves contain my papers and DT boxes, 6x6 paper pads, BIA wires and my Biggie :) I also keep some of my layouts in the large white box on top:
The right side of the room is the work area. I built my desk using various pieces of the Alex drawer system, a Hemnes desk add-on unit, a 2 m kitchen top and white wall shelves:
I spotted these cute tins in some cheap this-and-that store - they contain mini roses organised by colours:
Here's a close look on the shelving construction ;) You can see a collection of my season-themed paper-mache houses as well as cards and tags by my crafty friends. Tin cars contain flair buttons, below them I placed my collection of Tim Holtz stamps. Boxes store various small embellies:
Here is my media work place ;) In the smal drawer organizers I keep brads and buttons. Above you can see my stash of dye inks. There's also my first diecutting machine, the good ol' raspberry Spellbinders :)
Another step to the right and...you're out of the room :)
I've been loving this space for about 6 years now, and it started a cappucino brown:
...but last year I fell in love with these babies:
..and had no choice but to adapt the rest of the room! LOL Which version do you like more?
Thank you very much for visiting my little creative escape :-)
Monday, March 27, 2017
Check out Jackie's Scrapbook Room!
* Warning - photo heavy post! *
Every month, one of the Design Team members for My Creative Scrapbook conducts a scraproom tour, and this month it's my turn! I would love to tell you that my scraproom (and especially my husband's side of "the office" - I'm not supposed to call it "my scraproom as it's a shared space and that isn't very manly LOL) always looks this neat and tidy, but truth be told, it took me several days of cleaning, organizing and decluttering to get it to look like this (and if you could see under my husband's desk, you'd see I just piled a lot of his stuff on the floor!). I'll try to keep it looking this way, but truth be told, by the time this post goes live, every flat surface will likely be piled with scrappy goodies again. I'm not a clean scrapper, and I tend to take out everything I think I might need for a project so that I have it close at hand.
Our office is located in the basement of our home, just off the entryway. It thankfully has its own door, so I can close that if it's a mess and we're having company over, or leave it open for people to admire my work. Here's the view from the doorway:
Here's the view toward my desk from his. As you can see, I pack a lot into the space I have. Organization is the key - everything has a place, most of it within easy reach (I'm lazy that way!). For the most part I manage to keep to my side, though you may notice that my two-tier Clip-It Up has intruded onto the corner of his desk.
I love my desk, also courtesy of Ikea. Regrettably, they have retired my tabletop, which is a real loss - it is two tiered, with a glass top over a wood base. The glass top is perfect: I can spray, paint, cut and heat set embossing powder directly on my tabletop without worrying about ruining the table top (I previously melted an indent into a plastic table - eek!). Although you can see dried paint on the tabletop in the photo below, it does come off easily when scraped with a gift card.
You can see the space between the tabletops in the picture below. I can tuck supplies I plan on using for my project, my laptop, remote controls, or anything I don't want to get messy under the glass while I work, providing extra space and keeping things safe. (You can also see the space heater tucked under my desk - it gets chilly down here in the winter!)
The legs for the table are also from Ikea (they are the Alex drawers).
I wanted a really big L-shaped desk to maximize my workspace. I used two Micke desks, you guessed it, from Ikea, set end-to-end to create the desk along the wall (see the desks to the right on the picture above).
As I mentioned earlier, I like to have everything within easy reach. I store supplies I like to have quickly to hand in the drawers under the main desktop.
To the right of me:
Drawer 1: Pastes, Gels, inks, foils, mica powders.
Drawer 2: Adhesives.
Drawer 3: Assorted tools (and lots of wet wipes!).
Drawer 4: cutting mats, gauze, extension cords.
Drawer 5: Stamps!
To the left of me:
Drawer 1: My general (non-scrappy) junk drawer.
Drawer 2: Embossing powders and enamels, glitters, flock, beads. (Tip: Notice the embossing powders in the centre; to get an accurate impression of how the EP looks once heated, I punched circles, applied embossing ink, heat embossed them and adhered them to each bottle - no more guesswork!).
Drawer 3: Inking supplies, pens, washi tapes. (Tip: to the left of the photo are empty matchboxes that I use to store my blending foams. Each is labeled with the name of the Distress Ink it corresponds with).
Drawer 4: Punches, corner rounders, crimper.
Drawer 5: Ephemera, glass pebbles, and lots of metal embellishments.
Under the desk along the wall are cupboards (intended for a computer tower).
Cupboard 1: Dry embossing supplies (dies, cutting plates), embroidery floss and a spray bottle for water when painting with acrylics.
Cupboard 2: Liquid adhesives, pencil case with coloured pencils and markers for travelling, Bind-It-All, drywall tape, foil tape, edge distresser, Wishblade.
There are three accessible drawers above these (the fourth is obscured by the main desk, but it houses all the manuals and extra hardware pieces in case we ever need to take it all apart).
The larger drawer contains painting supplies, Gelatos and pastels.
The two smaller drawers contain printed photos I may want to scrapbook on the left, and images for colouring and specialty papers on the right. (Tip: To be able to do something crafty when traveling, I stamp images on watercolour and marker paper and keep them in folders in this drawer; when I'm packing up I can just grab a folder of uncoloured images and my pencil case and be on my way.)
At the very end of my desk there's room for this paper tower from Costco, in which I store papers by manufacturer, as well as some embellisments that don't really fit anywhere else, and above it a little plastic drawer unit that stores random embellishments (stamen, shells, beaded baubles), loose flowers, fabrics and more dimensional embellishments. And to the left of it you can see my hand-me-down sewing machine, which only ever sews paper. To the right, you can see my Liquid Pearls and Stickles, hung upside down with velcro from my Martha Stewart wall unit, so that when I'm ready to use them I don't have to shake down the paint or deal with bubbles.
Here's the rest of the wall unit. I have interesting wine bottles and bottles I may want to alter on top. My Prima Chalk Edgers are stuck onto the side with velcro dots, making it easy to see what colour I'm grabbing, and easy to put away neatly.
I love looking at the rainbow above this portion of my desk. Here I keep most of my sprays (I have a bit of a spray addiction), sitting on top of a rail from Ikea which is designed to hold little pots, which I use to hold laces and trims (which long ago stopped having any semblance of order), alcohol markers, paintbrushes and palette knives and scissors and cutting tools - all within easy seated reach.
An Ikea Raskog cart stores my small/textural background stamps in a basket hung on the side).
On the top shelf, I store Prima embellishments I want to have close to hand to riffle through.
I have added a stacking drawer liner to the lowest shelf; here I keep my Silks, Prima Alchemy paints and various individual watercolor paints.
On top of my desk I have two Clip-It Ups. The smaller one contains Prima flowers (who can ever get enough flowers?) while the larger one contains an assortment of flowers from other manufacturers and embellishments.
Last but not least, my 4x4 Ikea Expedit. I use this to display off-the-page and altered items, as well as to store my completed scrapbooking pages.
I store my completed layouts in soft-sided bins that are designed to fit into the Expedit. All four are crammed to bursting, so I'm going to need to come up with another solution soon, but considering they hold about 6 years of layouts I'm pretty happy!
In the top left cubby, I have two K-cup storage units from Costco (designed to hold the little Keurig coffee thingies). I flipped the sliding drawers upside down and made a base out of chipboard, and use them for storing more paint. My Big Shot fits nicely out of the way on top.
Thank you for stopping by and letting me share a little bit of my happy place with you!
Jackie
Every month, one of the Design Team members for My Creative Scrapbook conducts a scraproom tour, and this month it's my turn! I would love to tell you that my scraproom (and especially my husband's side of "the office" - I'm not supposed to call it "my scraproom as it's a shared space and that isn't very manly LOL) always looks this neat and tidy, but truth be told, it took me several days of cleaning, organizing and decluttering to get it to look like this (and if you could see under my husband's desk, you'd see I just piled a lot of his stuff on the floor!). I'll try to keep it looking this way, but truth be told, by the time this post goes live, every flat surface will likely be piled with scrappy goodies again. I'm not a clean scrapper, and I tend to take out everything I think I might need for a project so that I have it close at hand.
Our office is located in the basement of our home, just off the entryway. It thankfully has its own door, so I can close that if it's a mess and we're having company over, or leave it open for people to admire my work. Here's the view from the doorway:
Fair warning, this tour might look like an IKEA advert; we did a major renovation of our upstairs 5 years ago, and though furnishing the scraproom was a priority for me once we were done, Ikea was what was within our budget. And it has worked out well for us.
We set up the room so that we can spend time together (though I have to admit, I have more fun in there, as I'm usually scrapbooking; hubby enjoys it less when he's paying the bills). I tend to work best when I have the TV on (even now as I blog I have a documentary on in the background), and the TV makes the room more inviting for hubby to come spend time with me.
My favourite feature of my scraproom is all the space to display my work. I think it's a pity to put so much work into something only to hide it away in an album (and besides that, my current scrappy style doesn't fit in albums!). My husband hung some curtain wire from Ikea (which can be found here) to the right of my desk, from which I can hang 14 of my current favourite layouts on display (using these curtain clips; Clip-It-Up clips also work well). It has worked out so well that he says he regrets that he didn't string it across the entire wall instead of just over my side.
As it is, though, it all works out; we use the blank wall beside his desk to hang some of the kids' favourite art projects. As you can see, I also have canvases and altered frames arrayed along the windowsill; every available space is filled.
Here's the view toward my desk from his. As you can see, I pack a lot into the space I have. Organization is the key - everything has a place, most of it within easy reach (I'm lazy that way!). For the most part I manage to keep to my side, though you may notice that my two-tier Clip-It Up has intruded onto the corner of his desk.
I love my desk, also courtesy of Ikea. Regrettably, they have retired my tabletop, which is a real loss - it is two tiered, with a glass top over a wood base. The glass top is perfect: I can spray, paint, cut and heat set embossing powder directly on my tabletop without worrying about ruining the table top (I previously melted an indent into a plastic table - eek!). Although you can see dried paint on the tabletop in the photo below, it does come off easily when scraped with a gift card.
You can see the space between the tabletops in the picture below. I can tuck supplies I plan on using for my project, my laptop, remote controls, or anything I don't want to get messy under the glass while I work, providing extra space and keeping things safe. (You can also see the space heater tucked under my desk - it gets chilly down here in the winter!)
The legs for the table are also from Ikea (they are the Alex drawers).
I wanted a really big L-shaped desk to maximize my workspace. I used two Micke desks, you guessed it, from Ikea, set end-to-end to create the desk along the wall (see the desks to the right on the picture above).
As I mentioned earlier, I like to have everything within easy reach. I store supplies I like to have quickly to hand in the drawers under the main desktop.
To the right of me:
Drawer 1: Pastes, Gels, inks, foils, mica powders.
Drawer 2: Adhesives.
Drawer 3: Assorted tools (and lots of wet wipes!).
Drawer 4: cutting mats, gauze, extension cords.
Drawer 5: Stamps!
To the left of me:
Drawer 1: My general (non-scrappy) junk drawer.
Drawer 2: Embossing powders and enamels, glitters, flock, beads. (Tip: Notice the embossing powders in the centre; to get an accurate impression of how the EP looks once heated, I punched circles, applied embossing ink, heat embossed them and adhered them to each bottle - no more guesswork!).
Drawer 3: Inking supplies, pens, washi tapes. (Tip: to the left of the photo are empty matchboxes that I use to store my blending foams. Each is labeled with the name of the Distress Ink it corresponds with).
Drawer 5: Ephemera, glass pebbles, and lots of metal embellishments.
Under the desk along the wall are cupboards (intended for a computer tower).
Cupboard 1: Dry embossing supplies (dies, cutting plates), embroidery floss and a spray bottle for water when painting with acrylics.
Cupboard 2: Liquid adhesives, pencil case with coloured pencils and markers for travelling, Bind-It-All, drywall tape, foil tape, edge distresser, Wishblade.
There are three accessible drawers above these (the fourth is obscured by the main desk, but it houses all the manuals and extra hardware pieces in case we ever need to take it all apart).
The larger drawer contains painting supplies, Gelatos and pastels.
The two smaller drawers contain printed photos I may want to scrapbook on the left, and images for colouring and specialty papers on the right. (Tip: To be able to do something crafty when traveling, I stamp images on watercolour and marker paper and keep them in folders in this drawer; when I'm packing up I can just grab a folder of uncoloured images and my pencil case and be on my way.)
Beneath this desk I keep my recycling box (after all, scrapbooking creates tons of recyclable waste!), mending basket, chipboard for traveling (I love chipboard; the black plastic box under the mending is packed full of it), and an old pizza-style shipping box I use for misting in to contain the over-spray.
Here's the rest of the wall unit. I have interesting wine bottles and bottles I may want to alter on top. My Prima Chalk Edgers are stuck onto the side with velcro dots, making it easy to see what colour I'm grabbing, and easy to put away neatly.
I love looking at the rainbow above this portion of my desk. Here I keep most of my sprays (I have a bit of a spray addiction), sitting on top of a rail from Ikea which is designed to hold little pots, which I use to hold laces and trims (which long ago stopped having any semblance of order), alcohol markers, paintbrushes and palette knives and scissors and cutting tools - all within easy seated reach.
An Ikea Raskog cart stores my small/textural background stamps in a basket hung on the side).
On the top shelf, I store Prima embellishments I want to have close to hand to riffle through.
On the second shelf I store big stamps I want to be able to riffle through - Bloom Girls, Julie Nutting, and Santoro, as well as boxes of Prima flowers.
On top of my desk I have two Clip-It Ups. The smaller one contains Prima flowers (who can ever get enough flowers?) while the larger one contains an assortment of flowers from other manufacturers and embellishments.
I store my completed layouts in soft-sided bins that are designed to fit into the Expedit. All four are crammed to bursting, so I'm going to need to come up with another solution soon, but considering they hold about 6 years of layouts I'm pretty happy!
In the top left cubby, I have two K-cup storage units from Costco (designed to hold the little Keurig coffee thingies). I flipped the sliding drawers upside down and made a base out of chipboard, and use them for storing more paint. My Big Shot fits nicely out of the way on top.
Jackie
Monday, February 27, 2017
Craft Room Tour: Designer Ashley's Scrappy Space
Today we are featuring Ashely's Scrap Space. Check out her tips and tricks on how she stores her supplies.. You will love it!
Hello. Ashley here with a tour of my scrap room.
My room is located in a small office on the first floor of the house. It's near the kitchen which is convenient. Luckily it has a door that can be closed to hide the mess that I always make when working on a project!
The wall above my desk is blank at the moment because I rearranged my room recently (the desk used to be under the window) and I'm still trying to decide what to put there.
I have two large bookshelves on each side of the room to store my paper and stickers.
The drawers are the Alex units from Ikea and I love them. They hold all my tools, adhesives, embellishments, and any other random supplies. They also provide counter space when I need more room.
My desktop.
I keep the Thickers stored upright in this basket, on my desk, to make it easier to flip through and find what I'll be using.
I keep my paper in these 12 x 12 vertical paper holders. I like to pull out the individual paper holder and flip through it to find what I'm looking for.
More paper and sticker storage.
Washi Storage. I like to keep them in a removable plastic container. When I go to crops, I just grab the whole thing and take it with me. I cut chipboard into strips and taped them into place to keep the washi from rolling around.
Stickles. Same storage as the washi. When I go to crops, I just pull the entire container out of the drawer and take it with me. I also used chipboard again to keep the bottles of Stickles in their place.
Sequins and small brads. I use clear containers that I found in the jewelry making (bead) section of the craft store.
Some of my embellishments are stored by color. Inside each drawer, I have further divided them into trays for flowers, tags and paper for layering, large brads and buttons, etc..
I took most of the embellishments out of their original packaging. Some of this stuff I've had for years and it wasn't getting used... Now that I can see it, touch it, and go through it, it's finally getting used!
Thanks for taking a look at my room!
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