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Easy DIY Home Improvement and Decor

July 20, 2012 by The Motherhood

I have some dear friends whose motto regarding home projects is, “There’s a service for that.” If something needs painting, trimming, sprucing up–they’ve got somebody on speed dial to handle it. While that is convenient, it’s also expensive–and somehow, not nearly as satisfying as tackling a project yourself.

 

Today in The Motherhood, we talked about turning our DIY talents on our homes, with the help of talk host Kelli of Lolly Jane and guests Jaime of Crafty Scrappy Happy, Andrea of Queen B and Me, Tausha of Sassy Style, Maggie of Midwestern Girl DIY, and Aimee of It’s Overflowing. I’ll confess to being one of those people who always has a vision for a project, but who lacks the magic touch to make the reality line up with the vision. So I was especially eager to hear what everyone had to say.

 

 

Like, for instance…how to get started, especially if you’re not a natural DIY-er.  Aimee’s sage advice: “Know your style.” If you’re not totally sure what your style is, the Internet, especially Pinterest, can help you figure it out. As Maggie points out, “as far as Pinterest goes…start pinning things you love…after a while you may see a pattern in what you like…the same color wall over and over, etc.” Kelli suggests that once you know what you like, you may be able to find instructional videos on YouTube.  And it may be best not to start by biting off more than you can chew. Andrea suggests, “Pick something really easy at first, like painting a picture frame, or a shelf. Then try different techniques with it like distressing, or painting stripes! It will spark those juices and you will be unstoppable!”

 

Before a lot of us can get to “unstoppable,” though, we have to face the fears that are making us unstartable. (If that’s not a word, it should be, shouldn’t it?). Many of the less-experienced talk participants, me among them, have a fear of screwing up the project. But even those, like Maggie, with a lot of DIY decorating experience, will cop to the same fear. Jaime says, “I would have to say my biggest fear is re-doing something and liking it less after…. BUT I have yet to actually feel that way in the end.” It’s good to remember Maggie’s reassurance that “Unless you are doing a MAJOR overhaul, there’s really nothing that can’t be UNdone.” Andrea’s biggest fear had nothing to do with the decorating itself: “I never fear the decorating… I fear not having enough money!”

 

One thing some of us need to get over is the fear that others won’t love our pet projects. Of course it’s nice to have people ooh and ahh over what you’ve done, but keep in mind Kelli’s advice: “If you decorate for you, you’ll love it even more.”

 

 

Pinterest came up over and over as a source of inspiration, but by no means the only ones. Maggie and Jaime love poring over blogs, Kelli still gets lots of inspiration from magazines, and as Tausha says, “I love a good catalog and nothing beats a new, decorating magazine. Sorry pinterest…there is just something about touching the page.” So wherever you find your inspiration–just go for it!

 

“Go for it” seemed to be a theme of the conversation. Kelli encouraged us to not be afraid of color on our (till now) boring white or tan walls. If a whole room full of color is a bit too much to take, consider one bold accent wall. Tausha had some good advice as far as furnishings are concerned: “I love to do the big pieces in a neutral color than add pops of color with accessories, pillows and curtains. it’s much cheaper to change accessories than a couch.”

 

 

And speaking of furnishings, being a DIY-er means you can pick up items on the cheap, often for free, and make them fabulous. Kelli likes Goodwill, and Aimee’s had luck with Craigslist (Kelli says you can often talk a seller down on price, but don’t wait until you go to pick up the item).  Jaime loves garage sales and estate sales. Tausha enjoys yard sales, too. In addition to garage and estate sales, Maggie has found some treasures out on the curb on trash day (guess it was only trash to the untrained eye).

 

Of course, transforming all these treasures into even-better treasures requires using some tools. Now, my mother didn’t let me cut my own meat at dinner until I was ten, so I may have an unreasonable fear of the pointy and sharp. But Kelli enthused, “I love my drill, my chop saw, my level and my brad nail gun. They’re easy to use, easy to learn and I’m not afraid I’ll cut myself.” Andrea says she loves her staple gun and finish nailer, both of which sound kind of pointy and sharp to me. So, if I want to become a serious DIY-er, I may have to put down the two-dollar hot glue gun and go get myself some big-girl tools.

 

And when I do, I suspect I’ll feel really good about using them to create my own idea of beautiful. As Jaime said, “Remember…your house should make YOU happy! It doesn’t matter what the neighbors think!” And even if the neighbors don’t like it…who’s going to say so to a girl with a staple gun in her hand?

Filed Under: Research & Insights Tagged With: Becki King, community, crafts, DIY, home improvement, Live Talks, organization, Pinterest

Making Tech Work For You with Carley from Digitwirl

January 30, 2012 by The Motherhood

With gadgets galore and thousands upon thousands of apps to choose from, it can be tough to know where to start when it comes to tech that makes your life easier.

 

“I tend to feel so overwhelmed by the amount of app choices that I neglect to download the ones I need!” said Holly at The Culture Mom.

 

That’s where the awesome Carley Knobloch of Digitwirl, along with a team of tech-savvy bloggers, can help. They dispensed advice and recommendations for apps of all kinds during a highly useful live chat in The Motherhood today.

 

http://youtu.be/v6P2T_kHaIM

 

By category, here are their favorites!

 

Entering the World of Apps

 

“I agree with Carley to focus first on what you actually need a specific app for. General organization? Grocery lists? Calendaring? And then go from there,” recommended Jeana Tahnk, Tech writer for Parenting, Cool Mom Tech, Mashable and others.

 

“You could really start with the basics and begin using all the native software: Calendar, Reminders … also apps like ZipList to solve the grocery list problem (i.e., not remembering to take it with you to the store!)” said Carley.

 

Sarah Kimmel at Technology for Moms provided a brief list of must-have apps for newbies:

 

Google for calendar
Toodledo for tasks
Grocery IQ for shopping
Evernote for keeping notes

 

Time Savers

 

Said Sarah at Technology for Moms, “I love using ToodleDo.com for my to do list. Recurring tasks, organized into folders, synced with every device I own.”

 

“One of the browser extensions I’m most addicted to is Read It Later. Every day I see so many articles I want to read, but don’t have time to do it right then and there,” said Betsy Cadel at Gray Matter Matters. “I press the ‘Read it Later’ button on my tool bar and read it when I have time.”

 

When it comes to managing Twitter for your blog or business, “LOVE Hootsuite! And Buffer is my new favorite for scheduling tweets!” said Carley of Digitwirl.

 

“Yelp. I use it so often to find new places to go when I meet up with friends,” suggested Betsy of Gray Matter Matters.

 

Organizers

 

“I manage our family calendar on Google and grocery shop with GroceryIQ,” said Grace Duffy of Splash Creative Media and Formerly Gracie.

 

“I’m a big fan of Cozi for calendaring since I can access it via the web, iPhone, Droid, Blackberry, etc. and it works with Outlook and Gmail,” said TechSavvyMama. “So easy to have everything in one place and updating in real time!”

 

“A few great apps for organization are Intuition, Paperless, Evernote,” suggested Jeana. “TeuxDeux is a very simple app (and website) for making lists as well.”

 

“I LOVE Notability,” added MJ Tam. “I write notes with my iPad pen and it records sounds too. It converts my notes in PDFs or however I want to convert it so I can share.”

 

Babysitters

 

“In terms of finding great sitters, I’ve heard SitterCity is great,” said Betsy at Gray Matter Matters.

 

“Have you seen SitterScout? It texts all of your sitters at once and helps organize who is coming, when. Brilliant!” replied Grace of Formerly Gracie.

 

Finders

 

“I love AroundMe for the quick ‘where’s the nearest pharmacy’ type questions,” said Carley of Digitwirl.

 

Recorders

 

“Another app I use a lot is Dragon Dictation (free),” said Jeana. “It’s like having a personal stenographer with you at all times!”

 

“If you use Evernote‘s voice record, you can have it transcribe your voice notes as well,” added Carley of Digitwirl.

 

For real paper “recording” needs, “I LOVE our HP Photosmart Premium printer – we can print before we even get home and then it’s waiting there for us – gotta love wireless printing!” said Sarah Burns, mompreneur and writer at The Ohana Mama.

 

Money Managers

 

For overall budgeting and tracking, “Mint.com all the way!” said Grace of Formerly Gracie. “Pulls in all of my accounts, sets up budgets based on expenses, and reminds you when bills are due.”

 

“Expensify is great when dealing with bills/receipts and working with a couple of people together,” said MJ Tam.

 

“Manilla is great for keeping all bills in one place,” added Jeana.

 

“NeatReceipts and the Neat scanning software is also great for when you’re scanning receipts for an expense report — or just for personal stuff. And TONS of other uses too,” said Carley of Digitwirl.  “Also loving Lemon — a receipt tracker.”

 

Unclutterers

 

“Some of you have asked about going paperless: We’ve done some research at Digitwirl and here are a few simple tips,” said Carley:

 

 

She added, “I also love the Doxie scanner — you don’t even need a computer to scan while you’re on the go… and the new Doxie is WIRELESS… you don’t even have to connect it EVER!”

 

There is MUCH MORE in the conversation – be sure to read the whole thing! And visit Carley and our other tech savvy friends on their sites:

 

Carley Knobloch, Digitwirl,@digitwirl @carleyknobloch

Betsy Cadel, Gray Matter Matters, @graymatterbc

Sarah Kimmel, Technology for Moms, @tech4moms

Sarah Burns, The Ohana Mama, @theohanamama

Jeana Tahnk, tech writer, @jeanatahnk

Grace Duffy, Formerly Gracie, @graceduffy

 

Filed Under: Influencers & Impact, Research & Insights, Trending & Social Media Tagged With: apps, business, Digitwirl, gadgets, kids and technology, Live Talks, organization, tech, Top Lists

The Best Ideas for Getting Organized with Asha Dornfest of Parent Hacks

January 24, 2012 by The Motherhood

Hundreds of women came together in The Motherhood to get tips and tricks for getting organized from the brilliant Asha Dornfest of Parent Hacks, Christine Koh of Boston Mamas and Meagan Francis of The Happiest Mom.

 

The biggest organizing challenges for everyone?   Paper clutter, kids’ arts supplies, kids’ outgrown and out-of-season clothes, family schedules, and finding time and inspiration to actually get organized.

 

From the wildly inspiring conversation, here are the Top Twenty Tips for Organizing Your Life:

 

1.  Simplify: 1) don’t organize more STUFF than you need to. (Declutter first.) 2) don’t organize more FINELY than you need to. (Don’t create files if a shoebox will suffice.)   – Asha Dornfest, Parent Hacks

 

2.   The key to getting organized isn’t finding that one true perfect system.  It’s creating A system. Any system. And then doing it!   – Meagan Francis,  The Happiest Mom

 

3.  Papers have a way of attracting more papers, toys more toys, junk more junk, etc. Attack it before it has a chance to grow! BE RUTHLESS!   – Meagan Francis

 

4.  I put a recurring Outlook to-do reminder to reconcile my paperwork every month. Since I love checking off to do items, it really helps! – Christine Koh, Boston Mamas

 

5.  For old papers you don’t want to part with – but aren’t sure where to store – use the scanner out and convert it to digital clutter! – Homa24

 

6.  I try to consolidate as much of that stuff as I can, right away.   So, for example, instead of hanging on to the school notices, I enter the information into my calendar/notebook right way and then ditch it. For bills, I have two pockets that stick to the wall – one for ‘to pay’ and one for ‘recently paid. –  Meagan Francis

 

                      (Photo: Wren)

 

7.  Hang clipboards like these to categorize and keep track of paper piles without taking up desk space. – Christine Koh

 

8.  If it’s not tax related or if I can get it online in the event I need it, it goes. – saracarl

 

9.   Make photobooks out of the photos of her kid’s art. They love looking through them. – Homa24

 

10.  The kids all have boxes to keep the papers they want to keep.  If they don’t put it in their box, it gets recycled. – Brandie

 

11.   Coupon binders are awesome! You get a binder and the baseball card holder plastic sheets {know what I’m talking about}. One coupon in each slot, then you always can see exactly what you have when you shop! – Brandie

 

                                      (Photo: Christine Koh, Boston Mamas)

 

12.  One of my key strategies to establish household harmony is getting stuff BEHIND DOORS. – Christine Koh

 

13.  We do bi-annual consignment sales for the kids’ clothes/toys. – loranstefani

 

14.  Think in terms of the concept that the more space you allocate the more you will fill it.  We have one cardboard box per grade to store art/papers from school and one large plastic bin for clothing. When space is limited, it forces you to trim down and only save what you really want to save! – Christine Koh

 

15.  Absolute necessity as you undertake getting organized: a calendar and a to-do list. Whatever format works for you…use it and keep it with you every day.   The important thing is to get into the habit of writing things down.  Initially it feels like more time taken away, but soon this amazing feeling of clarity comes. – Asha Dornfest

 

16.  We have one of those huge desk calendars hanging on the door to our garage.  Everyone has to write down anything they want us to know about on that calendar.  – Brandie

 

 

17.  My kids have trouble in the morning. Not morning people. So I write down their routines with them and they draw pictures, then they can check the chart to make sure they are getting through it all. – Julie Pippert.

 

18.  Jedi to-do list trick: You WILL be interrupted throughout your day. So add rough time estimates to your to-do items (5 mins, 15 mins, 1 hour, etc.). That way, when your kid throws up and your three hours of writing time gets reduced to 15 minutes, you can plug something into that open slot. – Asha Dornfest

 

19.  You do NOT need to do this alone, nor should you. Delegate to your partner, your kids, and to paid help if need be. Swap organizing ‘services’ with a friend. – Asha Dornfest

 

20.   I look at organizing as a PRACTICE, not a process. There’s always going to be setbacks and do-overs when you have kids. Embrace the endlessness! – Meagan Francis

 

Thanks to the great advice, we are itching to de-clutter our own desks and homes!

 

Asha of Parent Hacks shared a link to an organizing resource page.

 

You can find Asha, Christine and Meagan, the fantastic hosts for the Talk, here:

 

Asha Dornfest, Parent Hacks, @parenthacks

Christine Koh, Boston Mamas, @bostonmamas

Meagan Francis, The Happiest Mom, @meaganfrancis

 

Be sure to check out the full transcript of the “Getting Organized” Talk for tons more great tips and advice!

Filed Under: Influencers & Impact, Research & Insights, Trending & Social Media Tagged With: cleaning, declutter, organization, Top Lists

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