Let me
begin by apologizing for the pictures.  The mr. took
off with my camera this morning – rude –  before I realized that I had not downloaded
the pictures of this project.  So, stuck
with crappy phone pics.
|  | 
| Ruthie's lampshade | 
Like
most of my plans, grandiose visions were high and pink.  The pink lampshade idea came from an old Ruthie Sommers image.  A small snippet in HB a while ago (probably the awesome 'pink' issue) about her kitchen lamp with a pink shade.  People have been poking fun of my adoration
of pink – ahem, Lulu and Ayars
-  for even longer than they have poked fun of my love of
animal print.  But hey, I cannot deny who
I am and what I love.  So a pink
lampshade should come as no surprise.  Not
bright pink, not little girl candy pink, but more like a Georgia O’Keefe great pussini
pink.  Rich, lovely, and deep.  That’s what I was going for anyway, and not exactly what I
got.
I don’t
hate it but I don’t worship it either.  Not a
total wash because I learned a couple of valuable things.  First, it has finally come to my attention,
that ALL of my grandiose plans require a bail out from the mr. at
some point in the project.  I grossly underestimated the amount of water required to dip
a 16” lampshade.  Second, before
you dip your proverbial lampshade in the dye waters yourself, consider starting
with a smaller one.  Third, get more dye
than you will think you need.  Nothing is more annoying than making 3 trips to the craft
place for more dye.
Project
lampshade dip went down like this:  after
a long, exhaustive search for colored lampshades or fancy trims, I determined
that both were cost prohibitive for the size of shade I needed.  I briefly considered spray paint but given my
proclivity of catching things on fire, I thought the risk not worth the
reward.  Not to mention that I can’t
spray paint to save my life.  Drip city.  Not
wanting to rely upon the mr. on this one (he is a spray paint master), I
decided upon dye.  Super cheap.  I scoped out dye colors for months.  Finally I pulled the trigger and quickly
realized that like Donny, I was out of my element.  How many liters in a gallon?  How many gallons per packet?  How many dye packets would I need?  What container can I use?  Where do I go with all that dye water?
You can
see where I am going with this.  Help!  Sink
was not an option b/c it wasn’t big enough. 
A laundry tub would have worked but ours is not plumbed at the
moment.  The biggest container we had was
a plastic bin that while empty, was deep and wide enough for the lampshade, but
when filled with vast amounts of pink water looked like a disaster waiting to
happen.  Could not fill up high enough to
cover the entire lampshade so I had to flip that sucker every 15 minutes in
hopes that I would get an even dip.  I
did not want ombre.  In the end, we
avoided disaster but it took two of us to deal with the water disposal b/c 20+
gallons of water is HEAVY. 
Doing this twice is not necessarily fun.  Having to do it a third time to get the color
I want, is even more not fun.  Plus, I
feel like fate and the DIY gods will conspire to bring me those darker floors
that I have always wanted, albeit it in a pink shade.
|  | 
| this is happening in the kitchen so I put trash bags down over my hardwoods massive bowing out on the sides = pink floor anxiety | 
|  | 
| when i dip, you dip, we dip and then we flip, many times to avoid a dye line | 
So I will live with it for now until the weather is warmer
and I can do this shizzo
outside.  Thumbs down for now.  To be continued…
All photos and layouts by mrs. V
kisses,  mrs. V 
 


 
2 comments:
You are brave all the way around on this one. First, I have not had much luck with dyes...kudos to you. Next...In your kitchen?! It looks fantastic, well done.
I tried to paint a raffia shade to make it whiter and it came out all clumpy...I did it in the kitchen too. But now I have to buy new lamp shades. :( Yours is pretty.
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