I wanted to do a post for the archives with some DIY floor/rug ideas especially since I’ve received a few more related projects to share. First to recap, here is the link to my painted floor:
and the zebra rug from Chantel at Haas Home I shared earlier in the week.
============================
***
====================
***
====================
Nicole from Design Blooms did a beautiful job on her floors with a pretty diamond pattern. She makes it look so easy:
“Check” out my floor!!
I have been very busy this weekend, working on our entry way floor. My legs are sore -its like doing twister for 5 hours but you can’t move because you can’t mess up the paint! But it was well worth it! I’m not a mathematical person AT ALL, and when it comes to painting checks on a floor I thought that I wouldn’t be able to do the measurements and it would be waaaayyy off when I got the the opposite wall. But-turns out I didn’t have to do ANY measuring, all I needed was a few tiles to trace!
Here’s what I used:
pencil
a few floor tiles (standard size)
a cat (you’ll see in a minute)
floor paint
polyurethane
paint brush……yeah that’s it!!!!
My house owner friends…..if you have an area that needs to make a statement (like an entryway) painting the floor can give the space a more defined purpose. If you don’t want to do it…call me and I will paint it for you…no joke. Just bake me some cookies and have a glass of wine ready for me when I’m done, that’s all the payment I need.
Here’s what I used:
pencil
a few floor tiles (standard size)
a cat (you’ll see in a minute)
floor paint
polyurethane
paint brush……yeah that’s it!!!!
My house owner friends…..if you have an area that needs to make a statement (like an entryway) painting the floor can give the space a more defined purpose. If you don’t want to do it…call me and I will paint it for you…no joke. Just bake me some cookies and have a glass of wine ready for me when I’m done, that’s all the payment I need.
Dip helped….he made sure my pencil stayed in place..how sweet of him.
I laid the tiles from wall to wall, traced them, and just worked backwards. A professional probably would have laughed at this process.
Always sweep the space before you paint.
I didn’t tape it off, because it would have just confused me even more so I just painted very slowly and made sure I stayed inside the lines. Lastly, poly it to protect it. Now I have a defined entryway!
============================
***
====================
***
====================
And Suzannah from Adventures in Dressmaking created a stunning chevron rug. Here is her post:
I am SO proud of my DIY zig zag rug–Tutorial!
You’ve all seen those zig zag rugs around on design and home dec catalogs, websites, magazines… The zig zag/chevron pattern is everywhere this season and I have been craving it as I redecorate our bedroom with something more contemporary!
I was s
o excited to copy these gorgeous zig zag rugs:
I was s
o excited to copy these gorgeous zig zag rugs:
(West Elm)
(Madeline Weinrib Atelier)
(West Elm Rug, Rachel of Kenzipoo’s house)
(West Elm rug, from Four Walls and a Roof)
(Madeline Weinrib rug in Nicole Balch’s home, from Making it Lovely)
(Domino)
Anyway, LOVING these zig zag patterns, and the West Elm one really isn’t that overpriced, but I didn’t want to spend $100-600 or whatever, depending on the size. But I really thought my bedroom needed some zig zag in it! And I have enough to put on the walls, so I wanted to make a zig zag rug. I thought about taking a plain white cotton rug and freezer paper stenciling the zig zags, then painting black on it, but I couldn’t find any plain, cheap white rugs and they all had to much texture anyway. So I went old-school. Remember floor cloths?
To DIM (do it myself), I bought a yard of white “duck cloth,” which actually comes in a lot of lovely colors at JoAnn for $7.99/yard. It’s really sturdy and has a clear weave to it, not like twill, just straight-grain. Anyway I had a coupon, but because of some sale and the piece I got had some dust on it so she counted it as a remnant… it ended up being $2.73 for the yard-sized piece. It’s about 60″ wide, too, so it was about the size of a 3’x5′ rug. See, here is it is folded in half.
Anyway, LOVING these zig zag patterns, and the West Elm one really isn’t that overpriced, but I didn’t want to spend $100-600 or whatever, depending on the size. But I really thought my bedroom needed some zig zag in it! And I have enough to put on the walls, so I wanted to make a zig zag rug. I thought about taking a plain white cotton rug and freezer paper stenciling the zig zags, then painting black on it, but I couldn’t find any plain, cheap white rugs and they all had to much texture anyway. So I went old-school. Remember floor cloths?
To DIM (do it myself), I bought a yard of white “duck cloth,” which actually comes in a lot of lovely colors at JoAnn for $7.99/yard. It’s really sturdy and has a clear weave to it, not like twill, just straight-grain. Anyway I had a coupon, but because of some sale and the piece I got had some dust on it so she counted it as a remnant… it ended up being $2.73 for the yard-sized piece. It’s about 60″ wide, too, so it was about the size of a 3’x5′ rug. See, here is it is folded in half.
So here’s my tutorial.
- Fold a 1-2″ hem around all the edges . I wanted mine to be sturdy and have a lot of weight on the edges, so it won’t roll or fold up a lot.
- I tested the freezer paper with my craft paint (black acrylic paint mixed 2:1 with fabric medium). You can sort of see the freezer paper scrap on the underside of the hemmed rug, with a smudge of black paint on it.
Then I peeled it off.
- Cut your freezer paper strips into 2″ long pieces. Cut those into pieces 3 3/4″, 5 5/8″, and a few pieces just under 2″ squares. I didn’t count how many I needed, but… a lot. Most of the ones I needed were the 3 3/4″ size.
- Lay the strips out on the rug at one corner. I used a 45 degree angle. Iron it down in rows.
- In order to space the next row, use the spare strips or a ruler to measure 2″ from the top row.
- Repeat this all the way down! I stopped halfway through to paint the first side, because I was so excited to see the end result and because I was sort of afraid of the corners coming up as I kept moving the rug and bending it a little to get the next row down. Sorry, no pics of this part…
- Peel the freezer paper off! It’s not perfect, but it gets the look!
- Last step: I realized I needed to protect the unpainted parts from dirt, so I added a coat of polyurethane. Stinky! Hopefully when it dries it will be evenly plastic-ey.
Yay! I’m so excited about this! I put a rug pad under it even though it’s on carpet, just to make it even stickier.