Showing posts with label gallery wall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gallery wall. Show all posts

Wednesday, 14 March 2012

{ let’s create } a gallery wall for the pinterest challenge

I’m so excited that I finally have a project that I can link to the latest installment of The Pinterest Challenge! The gallery wall that I revealed on Monday was inspired by not one, not two, but FIVE of my Pinterest pins. If that doesn’t qualify for the Pinterest Challenge, I don’t know what does! ;-) So I thought I’d combine my tutorial with this fun challenge and show you how to create a gallery wall, and how mine was inspired by images I pinned to Pinterest.swoosh

pinterest board 3 with numbers

1. Picture layout from Living La Vie
2. Picture layout from Martha Stewart
3. Layout template from ROOST Marissa Waddell Interiors
4. Homemade picture hanging tool from The Scrap Shoppe
5. Chelsea Gray wall colour from Restyling Home by Kelly

swoosh

Before you start laying out your gallery wall, you need to choose your art. My wall is a collection of ocean-inspired photos, prints, shadowboxes, tile art, and a canvas. Using art that’s meaningful to you makes your gallery wall extra-special, so incorporate as many personal pieces as you can.

If you want all your frames to be the same, a great choice is the Ribba series from Ikea. They’re inexpensive, include the brackets and wire for hanging, and come in both regular frames and shadowbox frames. Combining the two depths of frames adds some dimension to your wall.

ribbas

1. & 2.  { Picture layout }
Inspired by
Living La Vie and Martha Stewart

inspire 1 inspire 2

Now that you’ve chosen your art, you need to decide on a layout. There are all sorts of gallery walls – symmetrical, asymmetrical, structured, random… check out my Gallery Wall board on Pinterest for some ideas. I combined elements from two of my favourite gallery walls to create my layout. I like the shape of the layout on the left (it reminds me of a wave), and I like the straight line between the two rows of pictures in the layout on the right.

Find a big empty space on the ugly pink carpet in your uber-messy basement and lay your artwork out on the floor. Move things around until you have a layout that makes you say “Woot! YES!”. Take a picture to refer back to – this is REALLY handy! Combining elements from the two inspiration layouts, I came up with this layout {still hadn’t decided on a picture for the big frame in the bottom row at this point}:

LOGO layout 2OMG, the mess in my basement is horrible! Oh well, nobody ever said the creative process was pretty ;-)

3.  { Layout template }
Inspired by
ROOST Marissa Waddell Interiors

template

Once you have a layout that you like, it’s time to make your layout template. Instead of wax paper, I used brown kraft paper from the Dollar Store. Decide how much space you want between your pictures – I chose 1-1/2”. Lay out your pictures on the kraft paper in the same order you had them on the floor. Use a ruler or measuring tape to measure the distance between each piece of art. My gallery wall has three rows, so I laid out my artwork one row at a time. If you’re creating a straight line, line the frames up right against the edge of the paper to make your life a bit easier :-) Then trace around each frame – easy-peasy!

LOGO lining up frames on paper

Tape your template onto your wall. Use painters tape so it’s easy to un-tape and move around. Some measuring and leveling are required here to ensure that your template is positioned correctly.

LOGO gallery paper layout

Now the fun starts! ;-)

4.  { Homemade hanging tool }
Inspired by The Scrap Shoppe

hanging tool

Once you’ve attached the wire or other hanging mechanism to the back of each frame, it’s time to figure out where each nail or screw goes for each picture. A hanging tool makes this job a lot easier. Using the inspiration clothespin hanger as a guide, I made my hanging tool by hammering a small nail though one end of a stick of wood. I actually made two – one for smaller frames and one for bigger frames. You want both the head and the tip of the nail to protrude out from either side of the stick.

LOGO hangers

Hang a picture on the head of the nail on your hanging tool, and then hold the picture up against the correct position on the template.

LOGO line up frame with pencil line

When you have the picture lined up, push the top of picture against the wall. The tip of the nail will poke a small hole through the paper and into the wall. This is where the nail, screw, or hanger will go. {Hangers like the one in the picture below need to be positioned so that the bottom of the hanger is lined up with the small hole}

LOGO hammer nail into paper 2Can you believe all the frames are actually lined up properly with the edges of the paper!? I mean, see how easy it is to line up your frames perfectly when you use a template and a homemade hanging tool? :-)

Repeat for every picture. It takes some time and patience, but you can do it! I hung my pictures as I went along because I’m impatient and wanted instant gratification…

LOGO in progress

…so I had to take them down before the next step. Pull the paper off of the wall, and your nails & screws are all exactly where they need to be without any pencil marks on the wall.

LOGO screws paper removed

Now hang your pictures! I recommend starting at the bottom and working your way up the wall. Check your pictures with a level to make sure they’re straight.

LOGO level

And voila, gallery wall!

LOGO done 2a

But because I like to make my life difficult, I decided to paint the wall a darker colour so the white frames would really stand out. Or maybe I did it because I just really like painting ;-)

5. Chelsea Gray wall colour
Inspired by Restyling Home by Kelly

After agonizing over the right shade of gray, I finally decided on Benjamin Moore Chelsea Gray in the ulti-matte finish after I saw this bedroom painted Chelsea Gray.

inapiration colour[11]

It hurt to pay $60 for a gallon of paint – when did BM paint prices get up into the Farrow & Ball range? But a quart wouldn’t have been enough. Sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do. And yes, I just painted right over the screws and nails {I taped over them first}.

chelsea gray logo

And NOW the gallery wall is officially finished!

LOGO gallery done 1

LOGO gallery done 2

Thanks to everyone who inspired my gallery wall project. And thanks to the hosts of The Pinterest Challenge:

Be sure to stop by their blogs to see their projects, to link up your own Pinterest Challenge project, and to see what everyone else has linked up.

Erin at The Great Indoors { Mason jar chandelier }
Katie at Bower Power { watercolour jellyfish art }
Sherry at Young House Love { homemade beanbag }
Cassie at Hi Sugarplum! { DIY faux antlers }

If you’ve been thinking about creating a gallery wall in your house, I hope you’ll find my tutorial helpful. And when your wall is done, please let me know, I’d love to see it :-)

If you want to see more of what inspires me, click here to check out my boards on Pinterest.

kelly sig

 

Monday, 12 March 2012

ocean-inspired gallery wall reveal

tiles close 2 A few months ago, I wrote this blog post over at JAX does design about wanting to create an ocean-inspired gallery wall. And WOOT! It’s finally done. Another item knocked off the 2012 project to-do list – YAY! I’ll post a tutorial later this week about how I put it all together, but for today it’s just the reveal.
This is the long empty wall in the hallway that I walk by countless times a day. It’s so plain and dull and boring and naked – it was just screaming out for a little somethin’-somethin’.

blank wall

So a little somethin’-somethin’ it got with a collection of photos, prints, DIY art, and a mosaic tile. The hallway gets very little natural light and it’s too narrow to take a decent head-on shot, so they’re not the best pictures.

done 2a

done 1a

done 3

done 4

I  my gallery wall! But I knew I’d love it even more if it was dark grey. This is the picture at Restyling Home by Kelly that convinced me that the colour I needed was Benjamin Moore Chelsea Gray in the ulti-matte finish (that last part I decided myself).

inapiration colour

 

 

And I was right – I my gallery wall even more now that it’s Chelsea Gray :-)

DSC_0342

done 1

Thank god for digital cameras – it took a LOT of tries to get this head-on shot!

CG head on PN

All of the frames are from the Ribba series at Ikea, and all the artwork was created by me or talented artisans from around the world. I posted about creating this DIY shell art over at JAX does design a couple of weeks ago:

shell art

This is a picture that I took on the north shore of PEI that was made into a canvas by Posterjack.ca.

canvas

I took this picture at Brackley Beach in PEI – $3.00 to have it developed as a 12” x 18” photo at Costco, can’t go wrong with that!

pei stones 2

Hubby and I bought these two prints on a trip to Cape Breton, Nova Scotia about 13 years ago.

cape breton 1cape breton 2

Close-up of waves behind the whale-watching boat we rode on in the Bay of Fundy two summers ago {the one and only time I ever barfed on a boat – oh, the humiliation!}

fundy waves

This photo is called “Dancing Light”. I bought it from Anna’s Etsy shop my little pixels in Hobart, Tasmania.

pixels etsy

A few more Etsy purchases – the Nova Scotia Love print is from Elizabeth’s shop Poppy and Pinecone, and the sand dollar print is from Kerrie’s shop Seawashed.

ns map and sand dollar

Laura Trevey’s blue crab from her shop Bright, Bold, and Beautiful.

laura trevey

Last year when parts of Australia were hit with severe flooding, Kerri at Driftwood Interiors decided to donate proceeds from her Etsy shop sales to help the flood victims. It was the perfect time to buy her turquoise coral print that I’d had my eye on.

kerri driftwood interiors

I had this glass tile mosaic custom made years ago. I can’t for the life of my remember who made it, just that her name was Michelle and I found her on the Internet.

glass mosaic

I bought a set of six fish note cards two summers ago at The Maritime Painted Saltbox in Petite Riviere, Nova Scotia. I love the bright colours they add to the mostly-blue palette.

petite riviere fish

And this piece I bought at a craft show here in Ottawa last year. I’d admired these tile pieces made by Marie-Joel at L’atelier Trema at previous shows, and this one caught my eye with it’s watery colours.

tiles

This tile says it all…

tiles close“The family to the sea”

I’m telling you, writing a yearly project to-do list really helps to get your butt in gear!

done 2

CG done 1

As I mentioned at the beginning of my post, I’ve written up a tutorial on how to create your own gallery wall. I know I was intimidated by the work involved, which is why I kept putting it off. But it turned out to not be so bad, and I hope after reading my tutorial, you’ll be inspired to create your own gallery wall too. Trust me, you’ll be happy you did! Stop by on Wednesday to check it out.

Linking up to Metamorphosis Monday at Between Naps on the Porch and Inspire Me Monday at Create With Joy.

kelly sig