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Transforming Living Space, Chores Made Easier

Friday, April 24, 2009 | 7:05 AM

Lisa Quinn shows us how to transform your living space with color, flowers, and china! Plus, we'll learn some simple ways to make those household chores go faster, leaving you more time to have fun!

Floral Arrangements

Does your house need some color to brighten things up? The answer may lie in your china cabinet. We've got beautiful ideas for using your old china-just add flowers!

To create the floral pieces, you will need the following:

  • Floral arrangement created with a floral foam -
  • Use a serving bowl, compote dish, or berry dish (basically anything from your china collection that is large enough to host flowers).
  • Floral foam soaked in warm water for about 3 minutes.
  • Floral tape (if you don't have any, simply use scotch tape)
  • Flowers of your choice.
  • Steps:

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    1. Take your china dish and clean it with soap and water.

    2. Cut floral foam to size ( measure the overall interior diameter of the vessel)

    3. Use a floral tape or scotch tape to secure floral foam in pace. Adhere the tape on the tip of the "lip" of the china.

    4. Add a little bit of water into the bowl

    5. Take the flowers you have selected and begin to design.

    Floral arrangement created without a floral foam:

    • Use a serving bowl, compote dish, or berry dish (basically anything from your china collection that is large enough to host flowers).
    • Floral tape (if you don't have any, simply use scotch tape)
    • Flowers of your choice.

    Steps:

    1. Take your china dish and clean it with soap and water.

    2. Use a floral tape or scotch tape to secure floral foam in pace. Adhere the tape on the tip of the "lip" of the china. Create multiple "tic tac toe" pattern.

    3. Add water into the bowl.

    4. Take the flowers you have selected and begin to design.

    Other fun and creative ideas:

    • Create an arrangement on top of your cake stand.
    • Create an arrangement inside your teapot
    About Ria Sim: She is the owner of Twigsstudio - the destination floral studio in Danville Ca. Ria is inspired by her love for fashion, colors and textures she sees everyday. Her floral creations are unlike any other and Ria is insistent that flowers are the focus. "When I design each arrangement, I love to bring forth the beauty that each flower possesses." Ria focuses on simple, elegant floral designs resulting in timeless beauty for her clients' weddings, events, and special occasions. Aside from her passion for creating and designing floral arrangements, Ria's true love is spending time with her family (her husband Justin, sons Andrew and Daniel, and her little "adorable" dog Mollie).

    For more information visit http://www.twigss.com

    Bedroom Makeover, Before

    Are you having a hard time falling asleep in your room? Maybe it's the clutter and colors. Lisa begins a makeover for one woman who wants to turn her bedroom into a cozy retreat. Check it out!

    Bedroom Makeover Ideas:

    • Pay attention to details and accessories, they can make a big difference.
    • Try removable decals for art work. They are easy to use and won't damage walls.
    • Use the same color theme in your room, but try it reversed.
    • Busy patterns can make a room feel smaller.
    Bedroom Makeover, After

    Transform your bedroom into a cozy retreat! Lisa turns a cluttered bedroom into a peaceful haven by reversing its color theme and paying attention to small details. You'll be amazed at the difference!

    Bedroom Makeover Ideas:

    • Pay attention to details and accessories, they can make a big difference.
    • Try removable decals for art work. They are easy to use and won't damage walls.
    • Use the same color theme in your room, but try it reversed.
    • Busy patterns can make a room feel smaller.
    Household Chores Made Easy

    Save yourself time and money by de-cluttering and simplifying your life. Check out these easy household tips for you and your family.

    Sandy's Household tips:

    1. Put a laundry marker in the kitchen and master bath to keep track of "aging" items. Use the laundry marker when you put cans, boxes, etc. away - mark on the top when it entered your "domain." Do this as well for makeup and toiletries. After a certain amount of time - could be 3 months, 6 months& you want to cycle this stuff back out of your life. Keep what's going into and onto your body fresh!

    2. Tea/spices/flour/sugar. No more purchasing bulk! The essential oils (and the gluten in flour, etc.) just "gets old" and ultimately all you're doing is adding "color" but really no flavor to your food. Ditch the spices/herbs/old tea, buy new, but buy small if you can when you need it. Store in the freezer - and date it.

    3. "Sheet packet." One of my best tips - take your sheets, fold them as usual and fold all the pillowcases that go in that "set" except one. Turn that inside out, "grab" the pack of sheets and pillowcases, and as you turn the pillowcase "right side in," you will have the sheets and other pillowcases in it. Tuck the top down, and you have a "sheet packet" that you can store in your closet - everything together! As a corollary, if you have quilt or duvet covers, store them folded but INSIDE OUT - when you take them out to change the duvet, put your hands in the top and reach down for the bottom corners, grab the duvet by the corners, and as you shrug the duvet cover down off your arms and turn it "right side in," the duvet will be inside - and centered, easy as pie.

    4. Dry cleaning: Always get your clothes out of dry cleaning bags - OUTSIDE. There are chemicals there that you don't want in your house. My dry cleaner actually uses green techniques - and takes the hangers and plastic bags back! Look for this. Similarly, to save YOU time (it's always you, right?) when you do laundry or dry cleaning, everyone in the house should be "stain spotters." Get your husband, kids, etc. in the mode of pre-treating any stains that they have on their laundry, zipping zippers, and putting them into the laundry bin. This will save you a LOT of time, and also save you clothes that you "miss" a spot on that then gets set in from the dryer. Also, get STAIN stickers from your dry cleaner, and as soon as a dry clean item comes off, if it has a spot, put the STAIN sticker right on it. That way, you don't have to remember. Make sure that everyone in the house is "trained" to do this - this will save you SO much time!

    5. Ugly towels. We all have ugly towels/linens/etc. but we're not sure what to do with them. Call your local veterinarian - they are almost always desperate for these, for animals coming out of surgery. Live a little - have nice matching ones. And WHY do you have so many linens/towels anyway? More than 2 pair for each bed/bath is really a little silly.

    6. Folding towels. Great trick and looks great in the closet: Fold towel in thirds (length-wise) so the "edges" are tucked in. Then fold it in half over your arm, and then in ½ again. When you put it on the towel rack, tuck the ends "down the back" - and then fold will be on the front, no edges. (Hard to explain in writing - though I mention this I think a bit better in the book)

    7. Clean to music: I just interviewed Eve Abbott, of ABrainNewWayToWork.com, and she stated that cleaning (or doing anything) to music can "engage" your left and right brains, and makes it easier to get rid of stuff that you're "emotionally tied to" but that doesn't "sing for you" anymore or doesn't have an immediate use.

    8. Time block to do your spring cleaning. Don't try to do it all at once, but also really say when you will do it - and do it.

    9. Touch everything in your house (in every drawer) and be sure it has a use right now, or you LOVE it. If not, it's dead energy - you're just cleaning it, moving it, dusting it. Time to get it to its "next best use."

    10. Small ideas - put magazines in your boots to make them stand up and not crease. "Cut through" magazines when they come in the door - cut out the interesting articles, and get the rest of it somewhere else (dentist? Gym? Friend? Etc.) Don't let them sit around gathering dust for months and months.

    11. Consignment Day - a local school has "consignment day" - every kid gets to bring in stuff to sell, and they do it all day (keeping the $ that they got) - then anything "left over" goes to a charity that they have all learned about.

    12. Soup in zip locks - if you make a lot of soup, pour it into a zip lock, and put it FLAT in your freezer. Then, once it's solid, you can stack it up and it takes barely any space. We all should be storing water jugs, etc. in our fridges (a) b/c it gives us water in case of an earthquake and (b) because the more you have in your fridge, the less energy it uses (b/c the water jugs helps it be cold). Be sure when you clean out, go through all the stuff on your door of your fridge - condiments, etc.

    13. Taking off your shoes when you come into the house. We make this a "ritual" (of taking off our "work armor" as it were) - but it also doesn't track any nasty stuff that we might have walked through all day into the house.

    For more information visit:
    www.GoodSolutions.com
    www.fempowerment.com

    You can purchase the book, "Empowement: A Guide To Unleashing Your Inner Bond Girl" at www.lulu.com and www.Amazon.com.

    About Sandy Shepard
    She is a Lawyer, Massage Therapist, Sexologist, Feng Shui Practitioner, Coach and Podcaster. She's an ordinary woman who came to the end of her rope, and made dramatic changes. She is aiming to Empower all the women out there to be the best they can.