Friday, November 13, 2015

Grain Sack Shower Curtain: My Experience and Additional Tips

Hola my friends!

I hope this post finds you happy, well and in a creative mood because today I am going to chat up my experience in following the The Cozy Old Farmhouse's blog on how to make a DIY Grain Sack Shower Curtain made with a painters drop cloth. I found this shower curtain on Pinterest one day, and knew I had to give it a try. 

*I would suggest to first read the The Cozy Old Farmhouse blog through, then read my comments and tips, so you know what I am referring to in the step process.*

Finished product: My farmhouse bathroom with a handmade grain sack shower curtain and tin wall paneling.  
The first step in Stephanie's post is to purchase a painters canvas drop cloth. And just like she promises, the drop cloth is only about $9.97 at the good 'ol Walmart

As suggested in her blog, I bleached the drop cloth according to Miss Mustard Seed's blog (#2 "How to bleach a drop cloth"). This step was very easy. 

All was good and dandy until...

I finished washing the drop cloth. (Insert a face of frustration). Stephanie from the The Cozy Old Farmhouse said she washed the drop cloth, and "kept the width the same, but cut quite a bit off of the length" and simply "sewed a wide double layer tab/seam along the top". I was not as lucky (or as skilled as Stephanie I am sure) to wash my drop cloth and have it come out in an appropriate size which would allow me to keep the width, chop the bottom and simply sew the top. I'm not sure why but my drop cloth shrunk after washing it. So in a panic (and predictable Sarah Beth move) I called my mom. She is the sewing queen and I had faith that she would know how to fix this. After about two hours of arranging, re-arranging and measuring, we figured out a plan to cut and sew. Here is what we did;

  • We laid the drop cloth on the floor, with the longest part as the "top" of the shower curtain (folded over for the grommet placements to come). Then we placed an old shower curtain (or the current one on your shower) over the drop cloth to use as a measuring template. 
  • We cut off the "extra" that was overflowing from the "top" of the drop cloth shower curtain. 
  • We took the "extra" that we had just cut from the "top" and sewed it to the "bottom" of the shower curtain because it was not near as long as the old shower curtain! 
    • Please note in my example picture below, when we sewed everything together, the tracing nor painting had taken place yet!
Showing where the "Top", "Bottom" is and where the "Extra" came from and went to.
Looking back on this sewing process now, it seems easy and logical. But when I was trying to figure it out it was very difficult and irritating! I was very thankful to have my mom there to help, and to sew... and make me dinner that night. I love you mom! :) 

To create the main logo/design, for anyone who doesn't have Photoshop, it would be difficult to change the wording or design of Stephanie's example. I would suggest finding a clear design online to use. But for me, I have Photoshop and I was able to re-create Stephanie's design but with "Coal Canyon Falls" written into it, to represent my home roots in Butte County. Or, if you had a small print from a logo, or something you found in a book/online/magazine, you could have the image scanned and then printed on a transparency sheet. (P.S. I skipped the "side" grain sack lines because I was starting to get lazy and wanted to do the minimum at this point... and I don't regret it). 

Stephanie used a lamination machine for her projector sheet, I used a transparency sheet that just runs through a regular printer. *Tip: instead of buying a whole box of transparency sheets, ask a teacher friend for one.*

Next in the blog, Stephanie tells you how to create your own projector with a cardboard box and your iPhone and by golly... it works! And it works well! So i suggest to just follow her steps because it was easy and successful. 

Now, about the tracing part. All I have to say is, be patient, give yourself lots of time (or a few days to do it) because it is very time consuming and your arms/hands will become very tired, very quickly. Drawing on a painters drop cloth with a pencil isn't as easy as it sounds. Good luck! 
I was unable to find the Extra Large eyelets (or grommets) in Walmart here in Chico, but had much better luck at Jo-Ann's (look in the sewing section of the store!). And the installation of these are simple enough. Follow the directions on the back of the grommet box and just hammer away! It was actually a lot of fun putting these in :) 
*Tip: Trace the holes from an old shower curtain to the drop cloth so you have measured-out grommet spaces*

Now that the shower curtain was washed, sewed, traced and grommet-ed- it was time to paint! Stephanie wrote that she used "craft paint". I may be missing something here from a lack of experience but I had no idea what just "craft paint" was because when you go to a craft store... nothing on the shelves says "Craft Paint"! Everything has a title or special name or special use. So I took a wild guess and purchased basic Arcylic Paint from Jo-Ann's and guess what... it worked! So if you are going to attempt this project I suggest Black acrylic paint. :) 

And again, just like the pencil tracing, be patient, give yourself lots of time (or a few days to do it) because it is very time consuming and you will want to make sure the paint has time to dry. If you have limited space (like me, I only had my kitchen table) I would do it in sections and roll up the space I wasn't painting. It took my about three days to get it all painted (only painting after work for about an hour or two).  
*Tip: if you want it to be more "worn out" like Stephanie's picture and not as dark as mine, paint very thin layers. I painted my layers thick, thinking some of it would wash out... it doesn't wash out! Paint it the way you want it to look!*

Left: "worn out" look from The Cozy Old Farmhouse Right: thick layered paint from Calamity Jane Would Have

So there you have it!

Pro's:
This project was cheap. 
It was fun to make.
No one has one like it.
I get compliments on it ALL THE TIME
It makes a gReAt shower curtain! 

Con's:
It is very time consuming. 
You must be able to sew (or know someone who does).
You might have a hard time if you don't have Photoshop? 



All in all I love my shower curtain and would do it again in a heart beat. A special THANK YOU to Stephanie from The Cozy Old Farmhouse for sharing her special ways so DIY-selfer's like myself can make pretty things! :) 

Thanks for stopping by! 

xoxo- Sarah Beth 

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Welcome! A Little (more) About Me

Hello amigo/amiga! 


Welcome to my blog. This is a beginning of a new chapter for me, a new chapter of the blog- that is no longer located in Nashville, TN. I am happily settled in the Vina Plains of Northern, CA where I am surrounded by cattle and nut trees. So here are 13 facts "About Me" in an update since my Nashville days. 

 Vina, CA
1) My name is Sarah Beth Angle. I am in my late twenties and I still love Shrek, The Little Mermaid and coloring. 
a kid at heart
2) I am dating #MrHandsome. I stalked him on Instagram and now he is mine-all-mine. Moral of the story is, it's ok to stalk your crush sometimes ladies. Just don't be a creep about it. ;)


#MrHandsome and myself

3) I am addicted to coffee. I drink it black Monday through Friday and indulge with creamer on the weekends. 



coffee, coffee, coffee
4) I am a mother to three fur babies. Bluebell, an Australian Shepherd mix, Jerry, a red Border Collie and Taylor The Dog, a black border collie mix. 


the gals on the Vina Plains
5) I LOVE to make something new out of something old. If you can't find #MrHandsome while I am at home, that's because he is most likely hammering something together for me. 


6) I am into fitness, workout and eat healthy on a regular basis, but I am not a model by any means. I represent the average American in the fitness industry. And I am perfectly ok with that. Why? Because I LOVE food and I LOVE wine. :) 



7) I bought another Jeep Wrangler. Oops. I once owned a 1997 Jeep Wrangler that was the most unreliable vehicle on 4 wheels. So I sold it for a reliable car with air conditioning, power windows and a back-up camera. But what did I do a year later? Turned that car in for another red Jeep Wrangler. What can I say, once a Jeep lover, always a Jeep lover. 



Oops, I did it again. Sarah Beth's Jeep #2
8) I work at California State University, Chico in the College of Agriculture, where I graduated from in 2012. 


9) I am the only person in my immediate family with my own birthday. My mother shares her birthday with her father, and my brother and my father share the same birthday as well. So I always get my own cake and my own birthday song (neener-neener!)



10) I love Jesus Christ. And He loves me. 



11) I am also an avid REAL country music fan. I don't like much of today's modern country music. 



12) I buy most of my clothing and jewelry on Instagram. It's almost a negative thing. Its too easy to spend your money on Instagram. #ButSoMuchCuteStuff !!


13) I make simplistic jewelry, when the mood strikes. 


handmade pieces

So there you have it. The basic boring stuff about lil 'ol me. 



xoxo- Sarah Beth

Monday, May 11, 2015

Up's and Down's of Living in Nashville, TN

The Up's and Down's of living in Nashville, TN;

Picture vintage red brick buildings that hum of a bass and rhythm of a drum, neon colors glistening over the streets drawing you in like a moth to a flame and the endless options of specialty boutiques so full of history you wish you could go back in time and relive it all at once. That's Broadway street of Nashville, Tennessee. I moved to Nashville in January 2013. I was living in California again 8 months later, in September 2013. Did I go for Nashville or Bust? No. Did I give up on Nashville to early? Maybe. Do I regret the decision to move back? Not at all. Nashville has made itself the hometown to MANY of MANY people, so please don't let me drag you down, or dampen your hopeful spirits in making the move to Nashville. Bit if you're interested, here is my real, raw opinion and experiences of living in Nashville.

I had considered myself a seasoned mover by the time I made the move East from California. I had traveled and moved many times throughout college. Moving to Nashville, TN was the hardest move ever (for me). Nashville is a great city. There are unlimited events, festivals, markets, clubs, and happenings in Nashville to keep you awake for 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. But being new to a city full of musicians, you tend to only meet musicians and then you end up only knowing musicians. Since I am not a musician, I was left bored and feeling out of place. (If you are a musician, your transition into the city may be much easier for you than us "non music folk"). So I really had to make an effort to meet people who didn't play an instrument or sing for a living. I started working as a waitress to meet other's my age. I also drove all the way to Williamson County once or twice a month to join the Young Farmers and Rancher's committee to meet others in agriculture in hopes to make friends and make potential job contacts. Looking back now I probably should have joined every club I could get my hands on; a running club, a dog club or a "Lonely Newcomer Club". I was just so lonely and frustrated! Meeting new people and making friends had never been so hard before! I was totally out of my element in Music City.

I had a few folk's ask me "How could you be bored with all the music and happenings in downtown Nashville? Why didn't you go downtown every night?" Well I don't want to discourage anyone, or make it sound that Nashville is boring, but once you go downtown Nashville a few times.... you've seen it all. And being from Chico, CA the whole downtown bar scene is OLD NEWS to me. A bar scene is a bar scene no matter where you go, the crowd is just a little different every night. Its a beautiful place downtown Nashville, don't get me wrong, but once you go there a few times and once you live right down the street, the whole Broadway music scene gets old. So in that sense, I became a local. When you speak to local Tennessean's (people born and raised in Tennessee with accents and blood veins full of sweet tea) most of them have never been to downtown Nashville and almost 100% of them have never been to the Grand Ole Opry. The locals know the history, they hear the music from afar, but they have no interest in the drunken tourists, over priced parking, and they don't fit in the music crowd either. Ok, now that I've made you feel bad for me I'll move on ;)

I wrote this list in July of 2013, and here is what I had to say.

"I have been here since January, so its been 7 months that I have lived here. Has it only been 7 MONTHS? 'Cause it feels like 3 years..... Anyway I keep telling myself that I have not given Nashville a fair amount of time to win over my heart. This being said, I know I have not lived here long enough to give a true Nashvillian's opinion, but I'll tell ya what I know so far about living in this big, bright, loud, crowded state capitol known as Music City.

The "Up's" to Living in Nashville, TN:

1. Endless Music. Good and bad music. Music is either free or cheap. There is SO much and so many shows that they cannot charge very much due to the competition. I have seen Ashley Monroe, Craig Campbell (twice already), and Phil Vassar for free and Mark Chestnut, Daryle Singletary, Jo Dee Messina, and Vince Gill for a decent price ($5-$15).

2. I have seen more celebrities in these few months than I have in the last 24 years of my life. Easton Corbin walked right past me at work, John Oats (Hall and Oats) sat a few tables away from us, I met Vince Gill and Daryle Singletary at a show, we were one bar over from Jenny Garth, Buck parked Hillary Scott's (Lady Antebellum), Deirks Bentley, Vince Gill, and Cesar Millan (Dog Whisperer) cars' for them, and the list goes on and on.

3. Restaurants EVERYWHERE. You could never go hungry in this town. We are a fan of Demo's downtown. It is delicious Italian food that is CHEAP. There is a parking garage right across the street so parking isn't THAT difficult if your willing to pay for the hour or so. If you like BBQ or Meat and Three's your gonna be in heaven. There are too many to count. Most of the locally owned restaurants close at 2 pm though, so you better like lunch.

4. There are some really nice areas of Nashville. My favorite area to shop, eat, and do business is in Green Hills. The traffic in Green Hills can be annoying as there is only a single lane for each direction of traffic and it gets crowded down there, but I believe its worth it because there are nice stores and businesses that you can trust. There aren't any scaring or sketchy people or businesses in the Green Hills area. If your from California you'll love it because there is the only Trader Joe's in Tennessee. There is a really fancy mall (Macys, Dillards, and actual Free People store) so if your on a budget... don't go to that mall for a deal. I would suggest the Cool Springs mall (about 20 minutes away). They also have a really nice Kroger. There are Krogers ALL OVER this town, and some are wayyyyyy worse than others. The Kroger in Green Hills is like a laid back version of Whole Foods or a nice Raley's. They have a Starbucks inside, a bakery, a deli, a salad bar, a sushi bar, and a clean store. The Gulch is a newer part of downtown that is really, really nice but extremely expensive. Midtown is where the locals hang out, and where Taylor Swift lives. East Nashville is an up-and-coming area where the houses are extremely expensive but the streets are still relatively unsafe. East Nashville is known for the "hipster" culture/vibe and gay friendly community.

5. The fitness trend has defiantly came to Nashville. I'm used to the healthy living and fitness lifestyle, being from California and a college town, but Nashville defiantly offers a good amount of that lifestyle here. I enjoy Hotbox fitness, a heated kickboxing and interval training studio on 12 st downtown. Its a little pricey but worth it if you need instruction and a class environment rather than an open gym. If you want the open gym environment I liked the Nashville Athletic Club, its cheap and decent but its located on the south end of Nashville and can be difficult to get to with the traffic on 24 during traffic hours. The farmers market is very popular here and is open EVERYDAY downtown. There are numerous other markets too that are scheduled at different times and different locations throughout Davidson County. Calypso Cafe is a popular natural food restaurant, as well as Nashville Juice company (gulch area and mobile).

6. The Nashville Flea market comes every 4th weekend to the Nashville fairground. I LOVE the flea market. Lots of vendors come with junk, used goods, and antiques. It is so much fun to wonder and look through the junk that people bring to find a treasure.

7. I almost forgot to mention how cheap it is out here!! A boring fixer-upper house in California on average runs you $200,000 and a $200,000 house here in Tennessee is a NICE one! The gas prices are better too for the most part.

8. Nashville is part of the "bible belt" so you have numerous churches to choose from (which is actually a daunting task) and they are all bEaUtIfUl buildings. Tall, tall steeples that you hear about or see in the movies? They exist here.

9. Lightning bugs. AMAZING. Beautiful. Things I thought I would never say about a bug, but these little suckers are just cool. I accidentally crushed one with my broom once and its lightning juice spread all over the cement and it stayed glowing for a while! I was in awe. :)

10. People are just friendly. Not necessarily in Nashville, but in Tennessee the people are nice, they smile at strangers and talk to anyone, anywhere. I had the hiccups last night in Barns and Noble and this man chased me down just to tell me how to get rid of them. I also had the hiccups a few weeks ago in an antique shop in Franklin, and an old woman came to my rescue there too!

11. The history. The history of this town, the south, the civil rights movement, and of course the music is amazing. President Andrew Jackson lived here in Nashville once upon a time. Martin Luther King Junior was shot right down the road in Memphis, TN. Lots and lots of history.

12. The farmland out here is beautiful. If you can get out of Davidson County, you will see beautiful hills, gorgeous farms and small streams running throughout. I haven't seen it all, but I am in love with Columbia, TN and College Station, TN.

13. Southern charm and old money. If you want to get a feel of old money and feel like you should stop for afternoon tea while gazing at the million dollar southern homes, drive through Belle Meade. Goodness gracious.


The Down's to living in Nashville, TN:

1. There are some seriously sketchy areas in this town. One minute your on a multi-million dollar street and you turn a corner and then your locking your car doors. Its really that scattered and really that scary sometimes. So if your trying to rent a house or apartment BEFORE moving out here via the internet... BE CAREFUL. We got extremely lucky and almost rented a beautiful house in a terrible, terrible neighborhood. My advice is to crime map all your potential locations on the Nashville Police Department website. It will give you an idea on the neighborhood.

2. Nashville drivers are horrible. You will see a crash or two in one day. Everyone, and I mean EVERYONE in Nashville is from out of town, so no one knows where they are going. Some of the roads are bumpy with pot holes and they have really short interstate exits with multiple lanes with short notice signs. And news says that Tennessee is ranked the highest in texting-while-riving related deaths. Just drive slow, watch out, and stay off of your phone.

News link:

http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130724/NEWS21/307240154/Tennessee-ranks-worst-nation-cellphone-related-driving-deaths?sf15351909=1

3. Undercover cops and the cop car lights. Almost all the police cars you see that have a vehicle pulled over with be an undercover cop. The majority of them are silver Chevy Impala's. Just a heads up. Drive the speed limit in city limits. And some people like the lights, I don't really care for them. The cop car lights out here are strobe like lights that blink very very fast and bright, rather than the smooth rolling around like lights back in California. I do not know if these lights benefit the cop somehow.... but they drive me crazy and i'm sure any individual with epilepsy must hate the lights too.

4. The Mexican food and Chinese food. We are hard to please since we both were brought up on delicious authentic Mexican food from California, especially with Buck's mom being full blooded. So we are never pleased. But we find some satisfaction with Oscar's Taco Shop and Chuys. And the Chinese food. Don't even get me started on the Chinese food! There is NONE! Chinese food here is Panda Express. That's it. SO, so, so, so sad. If your a donut lover though, you'll find a doughnut shop on every corner.

5. Traffic. If your used to traffic and are used to planning around it, it may not be such a downer for you. But I never had to deal with traffic jams really, so they utterly frustrates me.

6. The weather. The weather is terrible as it starts out as a perfect day and then halfway through it rains and gives you 70 mile an hour winds. And it rains on you when your wearing shorts and a tank top.... because its hot and humid outside. The weather is bi polar. And you get flash flood warnings and tornado watch warnings all the time. I don't know about you, but I am NOT looking forward to a flood or a stinkin' tornado thank you very much! I still don't really know what to do in a tornado except crunch down in the bathtub with a mattress over us. Our mattress wont fit in our bathroom and there is no way I'm going to be able to keep Bluebell in the bathtub for that long if she is scared. We are hopeless. But..... I do know that the weather could be worse though. Tennessee just gets a lot of "warnings" and humidity.

Well, I'm sure I could go on and on the more I think about it, but for the most part this town is nice. Busy and never ending, and great for musicians. Though the musician life isn't easy here, but we will save that for another blog. ;)

XoXo-
Sarah Beth"


Broadway during CMA Fest 2013.

Percy Priest Lake

Ronnie Dunn's equipment truck right by my house!

A "normal" sized bee for TN.

I saw and met Ashley Monroe for free downtown Nashville at the Country Music Hall of Fame 2013.

I met Daryle Singletary at the famous old Station Inn downtown in the Gulch area.

A $5 Mark Chestnut concert!! Front row seats.

Brisket, baked beans, mac n cheese, and sweet tea.... testing the local foods. Tasted delicious but we felt really greasy and heavy for a fees after.

Another bee that we murdered.

Bluebell at the downtown Centennial Park.

Ashley, myself, and Bailey.

Bluebell in our backyard. Lots and lots of green with all the rain we have.