I am up to my forehead in projects this week and I have been missing you guys! I thought it would be fun to pull one of my favorite projects from the archives and give you an update! I made this rug almost 2 years ago (CRAZY!!) and it was one of a couple of projects that seemed to put my blog on the map. It did a GREAT job holding up, notice I said did. When I decided to change up my living room I rolled it up and put it in our garage. Well it then became the practice balance beam and was.not. meant for that. So because I was not planning on using it anymore (and because it was white and needed a good cleaning) I decided to let it go. If it had stayed flat it would still be in great shape, you live and learn! So here is the tutorial if you are looking for a fun, messy, INCREDIBLE project!
Original Post from 2/18/11
So ya’ll know that sometimes I get these ideas. And these ideas kind of grow until they have a life of their own. And once they grow to that size there is just no stopping them.
Such was the case with the rug in my living room.
This was my perfect rug. Zebra, Gray, Not to jaggedy, Big stripes, 5x8 and only $600.00 Son-of-a. Good bye perfect rug.
So I decided to make my own. I got 2 rugs. The 5x8 white one is from Home Depot ($77.00) the 4x7 gray one is from Walmart ($19.00) *Note: If you use 2 that are the same size you can technically make 2 rugs.
Oh and you will see my house progressively get messier as the pics go on…nice.
I unrolled the white one face down and drew on the back where I wanted my stripes.
The I used a box cutter with a new blade (it has to be sharp…it makes it SOOOO much easier) and cut out my pieces. I actually did this with the second rug underneath and the razor on the shortest settings so I didn’t ruin my wood floors.
Then I laid my “patterns” on the second rug
And traced them out.
Then using my box cutter I cut them out. This time I did it in my daughters room on her carpet…you know, cause of my floors.
Then you start piecing it together.
The tape that I used is pressure sensitive seaming tape. If you are using the same pile height of carpet you *may* be able to use normal carpet tape that you melt the glue with a seaming iron BUT I would recommend this so much. It is soooo sticky and lets face it. I am not an exact person so even though my lines weren't perfect everywhere it still worked. You can only buy it at specialty carpet supply stores, the one I bought mine at in St. George is GS Distributing. The brand is Orcon, it was about $6.00 a box and I used 5.
I actually found about 1/2 way through that it was easier to tape it from the back so that is what I am going to show you. That way you can trim where it overlaps. Like the pic below.
Then you tape over it.
I am sure you are wondering about binding it. I just made sure that each of the pieces that touched an edge had binding on them, ( I didn’t cut them out of the middle of the rug) and it lined up pretty great.
Oh and this is what the back looked like when it was all done:
Not so cute. But no one is going to see that….
I love it. The total cost was $119.00 and about 4 hours.
Let me know if you have any questions!!
UPDATE 2/19/11
Just to answer a few questions! The finished rug size is 5x8.
If I had 2 rugs that were the same size to begin with then I would have 2 rugs. I couldn’t find the right gray in a 5x8 so that is why I bought a 4x7. BUT if you can find what you want in the same size totally do it! Its like 2 rugs for the price of 1! Or you and a girlfriend could each buy a rug and do them together….
As far as durability, I am sure that there will be some shedding since it isn't seamed *perfectly* everywhere. But my plan is if it starts to fray really bad, to put a line of hot glue along the edge to seal it. (after I trim all of the threads etc.)
There was also a wonderful suggestion to glue the back of it to a drop cloth.
Love Your Guts, Mandi
I'm relatively new to your blog so I'm sorry if you've shared this info before but, I'm in love with your wood floors!!! Like mouth drooling, been looking all over for the same thing kind of in love. Do you know the type of wood and style of cut. I can tell its hand scrapped but I'm just wondering if its a particular kind. Truly love your guts:)
ReplyDeleteSweet jeebus you are good, lady. I have a high confidence level in my DIY ventures but this one really intimidates me for some reason! I absolutely love it, more than the $600 one!
ReplyDeleteChampagne Lifestyle on a Beer Budget
I think you're crazy.
ReplyDeleteCrazy awesome, yes. But still crazy. Love the rug! I don't think I'd have been brave enough to do that, but that's why there are people like you, huh?
I still love this project!
ReplyDeleteWow. That is one incredible project! I would never in a million years have even thought of doing that, let alone actually done it. Give yourself a pat on the back, that was a great idea, and beautifully done!
ReplyDeleteUnbelievable! I can't tell at all that your rug is homemade. Beautiful job!
ReplyDeleteThis may be the most perfect DIY project ever! Love. It. Pinned it with your blog name!
ReplyDeleteWow...great job. Love it more than the $600.00 rug. You're amazing!
ReplyDeleteDid you ever post the new living room? I've been following your blog for several months now but wondered if I missed it.
ReplyDeletethis is definitely MY FAVORITE project of yours, I love it! :)
ReplyDeleteSTOP IT! You are giving crafters around the world a bad rep. PLEASE STOP WITH THESE CHEAP ASS PROJECTS!
ReplyDelete