25 May 2012

Metal Labels

Hello and Happy Friday! As you know by now, I like to rescue even the ugliest of boxes. Just imagine when I come across beautiful ones!

Like these for instance. The one on top was a stationery box and the one on the bottom, a gift box from Victoria Secret. I adore the happy pink palette. They're made of hard cardboard, making them ideal candidates for blah to TADA! 

Not that they need a major make-over, just an accessory.

I found this at Staples.

A pack contains 6 adhesive metallic bookplates with corresponding paper inserts. They're simple to use, just attach:


TADA! Don't they look pretty AND smart?

You can fill them with odds and ends and 
instantly know what's inside.

Have an incredible weekend!

24 May 2012

Inside the Closet

Sometimes, I think about my dream home and one of the rooms in it is a walk-in closet. Wouldn't you want one, too? Not that I have a huge wardrobe or a massive shoe collection; storage space is always welcome. Today, let me show you one walk-in closet that I covet.

via Time Out New York
It's owned by Mary Alice Stephenson, a fashion and beauty expert who's also a mom, and ambassador to the "Make a Wish Foundation."

via Time Out New York
Step inside her closet...TADA! It's an extra room in her Brooklyn brownstone home.


via Time Out New York
Apart from her sumptuous dresses embellished with beads, feathers, and prints...

via Time Out New York
It also houses her stilettos...

via Time Out New York
 And bags and clutches...

via Time Out New York
Plus her collection of sunglasses (it's representative of high and low picks from Balenciaga to Kmart).

via Time Out New York
There's a storage island with velvet-lined drawers that, when pulled-out, reveal the jewelry that she's been collecting over the years. OMG!

via Time Out New York
One of the reasons why I love Miss Stephenson's closet so much is how it's organized -- you can see everything, making it easy to get dressed everyday.

via Time Out New York
There are shelves that display framed black and white prints and fashion books that are both purposeful and pretty. 

Notice the blue boxes with black bows? They're Lanvin boxes. Aren't they lovely, all stacked together? They're the inspiration for today's blah to TADA! transformation. 

 blah: an empty cardboard box

 Make a lid with another piece of cardboard.

Attach the lid to one side of the box with packaging tape. You can then cover this with paper or cloth. But I still had some left-over picnic mat "fabric" from yesterday's project, so I used the same material to cover the box (attach with hot glue):

TADA! -- a homemade storage box for accessories.

It ain't Lanvin, nor is it part of Mary Alice Stephenson's closet, but I can line it in velvet, and it can hold all my favorite stuff that makes me squeal, "TADA!

23 May 2012

Storage Solution

Do you like to shop on-line?

If you do, maybe a box like this one looks familiar. To turn it from blah to TADA!, I would collapse it and store it in a closet. When it's time to send a package, I take the box out of hiding, and re-use it for mailing.

 But today, I have another idea. I'm turning this box into a cute storage solution.

Here's another blah that I'm using for my project. It's a picnic mat that has been used and abused, on grass and on sand. It's seen better days. Right now, it's ripped at the seams.

I could send it to early retirement, but hey, it deserves a little TADA! time. So I've cut it up into strips.

 I'll treat it like fabric and wrap it around my box.

 Attach the trimmed mat to the box with hot glue.

 Looking good already.

 I added an inner lining made from a dish cloth, 
sewn at the edges. TADA!

 Who would guess that this was once a blah packaging box?

I'm ready to use this box in different ways:

  • Kitchen: to organize deli containers & matching lids
  • Bathroom: to hold rolls of toilet paper or hair primping supplies (ex. hair dryer, curling iron, hair brushes, hair spray, headbands)
  • Closet: to keep small items like socks, scarves or winter gloves together
  • Laundry: a place to temporarily store items that need mending
  • Office: an "in box" to hold mail that needs attention

Now that I have many uses for this box, I think I'll make a few more!



22 May 2012

Party in a Box

This week, I'm turning empty boxes from blah to TADA!

Today, I'm shining the spotlight on this flat box with a plastic lid. It once contained holiday gift tags from Ikea. Now that it's empty, it's looking blah. But not for long!

It's now a birthday box. TADA!

I made a label from paper cut-outs and rubber stamps. I attached this to the clear box cover with glue. I also covered the inside of the box with a stripe-print paper. 


 I filled the box with a few supplies that a birthday 
party can't do without.

 A festive noisemaker, some balloons, confetti, 
and a birthday candle.

I also made a miniature bunting using string and shapes punched out from old security envelopes. TADA!

This birthday box can be mailed to a dear friend as an interactive gift or greeting card.


 If you're feeling extra generous, throw in a cupcake, too.

Then the recipient can set this up on his/her office desk for well-deserved VIP treatment!

21 May 2012

Fill a Box with Happiness

Happy Monday Lovelies! I'm back from my break where I did a bit of travelling, and spent time with family. I think family time is always TADA!, don't you think? 

Have you read the book "The Happiness Project" and its accompanying blog by Gretchen Rubin? All of us strive to be happy. Happiness is a choice and having it in our clutches requires some effort. In the book, Miss Rubin suggests ways on how to be happier, all these based on her experiences and scientific research.

One of her suggestions it to create a Happiness Box, which she describes this way:

I started a "Happiness Box" in which I'd collect all sorts of little trinkets meant to trigger happy thoughts and memories. I had the perfect box - a box I loved but that had never really been suitable for any purpose. My college roommate had given it to me. It was old, with a lid decorated with two panels painted with roses and two panels of cloudy mirror. It bothered me to have it sitting around, unappreciated; now I had a special plan for it. I put in an ancient, tiny Snoopy memo pad that reminded me of my sister when she was little. I added a miniature china teacup from my grandmother's teacup collection. I put in a figurine of Dorothy to remind me of home and Eliza's {her daughter} early love of ruby red slippers. I put in my last pair of Coke-bottle glasses, made before they had the technology to make the lenses thin -- they're hilarious, now that I don't have to wear them. A small cloth Little Red Riding Hood doll reminded me of all the times I'd read the story of "Little Red Riding Hoodie" to Eleanor {her other daughter}. A tiny Lego cone-shaped tree stood for all the Christmas trees of my childhood. I put in a New York Public library bookmark -- a reference to my favorite New York City institution. I put in an old, worn set of dice, to symbolize chance. I put in an American Girl miniature card featuring a bluebird.

I thought this was a brilliant idea. First because an old, blah box was being transformed into a TADA!, and second, it was a perfect project for a sentimental gal like me. I was making a treasure box of sorts, but the value of the treasure was priceless only to me.

I started by deciding on the box I was going to christen my "Happiness Box". Clearly, any box can be used. But I wanted the even the box to have some significance.

I thought about using an old confectionery tin that I owned as a little girl. These ones in the picture are a little too vintage. The one I had was a yellow M&M's peanut tin. It's where I would put my stationery, gathered as gifts or exchanged with classmates. Because some of the stationery were scented, a floral fragrance emerged every time I opened the box.

I also thought about using an old metal lunchbox. It brings back so many recess-time-at-the-playground memories. However, I no longer had the candy tin or the lunch box. I had to buy someone else's. Until I found this:

It's a plastic box with my favorite Sanrio characters, Little Twin Stars. It was a gift from a well-traveled aunt, a Christmas present from Japan.

It became a pencil case, a crayon box, and a sewing kit as I was growing up. I found it in the back of a closet, ready to be used again.

I've filled it with more childhood paraphernalia.

Like these hair clips. I wore one or a pair to school everyday. The yellow clip in the middle reminds me of corn cobs. The white clip with flowers was something I wore during my first communion. These are still in good shape, I don't see why I can't wear them today.

More favorite barrettes and colorful hair ties.

Accessories for braids.

Hair pieces I wore as a teenager. 
The gold one {now faded} was my mom's.

I put in a few time pieces, too.

This was one of my first wallets. When I learned how count and discovered what money was for, all my precious coins were kept here. 

A deck of Little Twin Stars cards reminds me of card games and magic tricks my older cousins taught me.

All these treasures go inside my "Happiness Box". A memory is attached to each one and they tell a story of a safe, happy childhood. When I'm having a rough day, all I need to do is to open the box!