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The Best Label - MADE in the USA

Craft Projects Information
Craft Projects- Step by step Instructions using American Craft Supplies. The first project by Deb Roberts of Greenleaf dollhouses, is for a miniature bed for a doll house, with the simple use of a piece of foam and a swatch of satin for the mniature mattress. The second is for a cold frame, very useful indeed for starting plants in spring before the weather outdoors is warm enough for planting out. For the DIY person, places like Home Depot or Lowe's or your local lumber yard can be very helpful cutting the lumber and plywood for you for easier transport. And what makes the project really practical are the free step by step directions from Garden Gate magazine. For additional crafts projects see Crafts.

With a minimum of tools the cold frame below was built with a little added help from Home Depot who were able to cut some of the boards which gave a head start to the project. The plywood, a stock size of 4 foot by 8 foot sheet, was cut by Home Depot to specified rectangular dimensions, and the two by two lumber was cut from eight foot lengths to required lengths, all making the transport and the project itself easier. Also, some Home Depot stores sell acrylic plastic sheet "cut offs" (for the windows) which helped keep costs down. The plans can be downloaded from GardenGate gardening magazine.
Miniature Bed
Mini Bed by Deb Roberts, with kind permission of Greenleaf Dollhouses

Cut the foam or batting to fit the top of the box and then cut the fabric you wish to use for the mattress. The easiest way to do that is to lay the foam on the piece of fabric and then cut the fabric about two inches away from each edge. Fold the edges of the fabric over the foam (hospital corners work well) and glue into place. You can use tacky glue and pin it down until the glue dries or just use a hot glue gun. All the gluing is done where it can't be seen so you don't have to worry about it being pretty. Repeat the same steps to cover the box.

Now you can simply glue the mattress in place on top of the box.


Foam makes the mattress. A half CD makes the Headboard.
From Deb Roberts, Mini Bed


A cd half makes a great headboard and is fairly easy to cut with an EZ cutter or by scoring it with an exacto blade till it can be broken on the scored line. (be sure and wear eye protection when you do in case small shards fly off) Then glue the cd in place as the headboard.

Take your second piece of fabric (I used a coordinating piece with a tiny pinstripe) and cut it large enough to drape over both sides and the end of the bed. Put the bed on a piece of cardboard and then position the second piece of fabric as a bedspread or sheet. I like a rumpled look to a modern bed………let’s face it, most people don’t have time to make their bed every morning and a rumpled bed gives a live-in look. Once you have the exact look of draping, rumpling or fussiness that you desire, use pins to hold it all in place

Mix liquid starch with water; about a half and half solution. Using a soft brush or sponge, dab the starch onto the fabric. Be careful not to use too heavy a hand with the brush or sponge because that will flatten out your draping. A light dabbing motion will coat the fabric without pushing it flat.

Leave the bed overnight for the starch to dry. After it has dried thoroughly, remove the pins. With a sharp pair of scissors, trim the edges of the fabric. That will remove any frayed edging or threads, as well as give the finishing touch to the fabric shape.

Place small dots of glue on the bed frame where it can’t be seen to hold the bedspread onto the bed.

To create a pillow for the bed, cut a rectangle of fabric to fit the width of the bed. Fold it in half and glue the edges together, leaving the top open. After the glue has dried, turn the pillowcase inside out and stuff it with cotton. Fold the edges under and glue or blind-stitch the ends shut.

There’s your bed! Sleek and shiny and perfect for your modern bedroom!

Contact Us

Please feel free to contact with any coments or suggestions about our newsletter.

phone: (800) 253-7150

web: http://www.greenleafdollhouses.com

 

 

 


Cold Frame
Supplies from Home Depot, workbench from Sears
Free Cold Frame design from Garden Gate Magazine
Two by two lumber was used to construct the windows
Winter Project
Acrylic sheets were random sizes cut offs,  keeping cost down,
Home Depot cut all lumber to size except angle cuts
Two by two re-enforcements
Taking shape slowly
Two by sixes make the front and back.
Starting to look like a coldfarme
The acrylic sheets were smaller than specified
Making the Window Frames
A hand truck enables one man to move the cold frame
On its way to its resting place
Painting the inside white  to reflect the sun's rays.
It will get the sun until the trees leaf out
Bricks as a base help prevent wood from decay.
Tomatoes, lettuce, basil, parsley and geranium cuttings

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