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Taylor Maed

Custom made from my hands to yours

The Projects

DIY: Mountain Yarn Wall Art

October 18, 2020

DIY Mountain dyed Wall Art with Macrame Yarn

While I was furloughed, I had plenty of time on my hands and multiple projects I wanted to do. At the beginning of quarantine, my husband and I painted our study and there was this big wall that needed something special. It was the first thing you would see when you came into my house and I wanted it to be a stand out piece.

The wall needing art

*Disclosure: I only recommend products I would use myself and for my business. All opinions expressed here are my own. This post may contain affiliate links that at no additional cost to you, I may earn a small commission.


Pinterest had given me plenty of ideas and I wanted to incorporate the mountains into the piece. Living in South Texas, we are as far from mountains as possible and so they are my favorite landscape.

What you’ll need

  • dowel pole 2″ thick
  • stain (optional)
  • 2 spools of macrame yarn (I purchased this one)
  • fabric dye (I bought this and this)
  • masking tape
  • scissors
  • table saw (optional)

Cutting and Staining the Dowel pole

The down pole we bough was 8′ long and the artwork I was planning on making was going to 6′ so I cut the extra 2′ off with the table saw.

cutting the dowel pole

If you don’t have a table saw, or don’t want to do any cutting, then you can purchase a dowel pole closer to the length you want. Or you can have the people at Lowes or Home Depot cut it to length for you.

Then I stained the pole with 2 coats of a dark walnut satin stain and sealer.

Staining the Dowel Pole

Tying the Yarn to the Pole

You are going to start with a Lark’s Head Knot

https://taylormaed.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/IMG_7768.MOV.mp4

I cut yarn the length of my couch as a measurement to knot to the dowel pole. I wanted the yarn to be 4′ long once knotted, so the cut pieces needed to be about 8′ long.

yarn
yarn
yarn

It took about 2 days to get this done (I took a lot of break and we needed to use the couch for other things).

Mapping out the Mountains

Once the yarn was attached to the pole, I trimmed it so it was relatively even at the bottom.

Hanging Yarn

Then I used masking tape to map out the mountain shapes and levels I wanted on the piece. I wasn’t completely sure this was going to work, but it ended up being way better than I thought.

tape mapping mountains

I laid out trash bags under the area where I was going to be working to not dye the carpet blue.

Dying the Yarn

This is definitely what took the longest. In my head, I thought I would be able to make a large batch of dye and drop all of the yarn into it at the specific heights to match the mountains. It turns out, yarn is relatively large. I had to make way more dye that I had planned and I had to dye much smaller sections.

Test Batching the Dye

So it took a section of the lower mountain range and placed it into the prepared dye (prepare the dye as per the packaging). I set a timer for 30 minutes and moved on to the next section. The lower level of mountains took about 4 sections of dye.

Gradient Dye

After the timer went off, I took the section out and put it in clean water for 15 minutes to rinse it out. After the 15 minutes was up, I drained the water and put the yarn back in the container to keep it from getting water everywhere.

Final First Layer of Mountains

Then for the 2nd layer of mountains, I followed the same process, but when making the dye I doubled the amount of water. I wanted to create the gradient look so watering down the dye achieved that look for me.

Final 2nd Layer of Mountains

For the last layer, I had painted the final mountains. I did this for two reasons:

  1. There was too much yarn to gradient dye in containers, it would have been a waste of water and dye
  2. I was afraid that dying it would make the final layer too dark and I wanted to control the color

So I took a sponge brush and dye with nearly triple the amount of water and began painting at the top right below the tape. I wanted to create a crisp line at the top of the mountains. Then I filled in the dye down to the 2nd level of mountains. I did this on top of a cut up cardboard box to prevent dye from getting on the floor and I could fully saturate the yarn.

Third Layer of Mountains

Let it dry & hang

I hung the final piece to air dry for a few days before doing any touch ups.

After it was dry, I planned out where I wanted it on the wall with a stud finder and tape measure. Then I used large curtain rod hooks to hang the dowel on the wall. And here is the final product!

Final Wall Art

Check this out on my saved instagram stories!

Freebies

Wedding Save the Date/Change the Date Stickers – Free!

October 18, 2020

Freebie Sticker Sheet Download Wedding

Check out these simple sticker printables for your wedding save the dates. Or, if you unfortunately had your wedding scheduled this year and COVID made it move, we have change the date stickers too!

You can print these out on sticker paper and then cut them out using scissors or a cutting machine, like a Cricut.

Or you can purchase Avery sticker paper with the circles precut. I recommend these 2: Avery 1.5″ Stickers and Avery Sticker Paper 

Then, attach the stickers on the back of your envelopes, or put them straight on your Save the Date Card or Wedding Invitation.

The stickers are 1.5″ in diameter.

Click here for Change the Date Stickers Download

Click here for Save the Date Stickers Download 

Check out my how to guide for uploading .pdfs, .pngs, or .jpegs into the Cricut for print then cut!

Be sure to subscribe to get more freebies and DIY projects.

 

The Shop

Deciding What to Sell on Etsy

October 18, 2020

deciding what to sell on Etsy

Deciding what to sell on Etsy was not entirely my choice, I kind of threw everything in my wheelhouse at the wall and waited till one stuck. I know there are a lot of blogs out there telling you the dos and don’ts of selling on Etsy and deciding your niche is probably the first thing on the list, but do you?

When I reopened my shop in April, I was selling bachelor party koozies, save the date stickers, acrylic wedding signs, and the cake stands (as well as quite a few other items) under the “Party Decor” category. I thought that I was selling a diverse assortment within my “niche” but what I had was a mess.

Inventory & Production Planning

I couldn’t order supplies in bulk because I wasn’t getting enough orders yet and so I was using Amazon to get fill-in supplies which was costing me more money over time. 

Each item also took a different amount of time to produce and required different shipping materials to ship. Cake stands are in various box sizes, stickers are in envelopes, and koozies are in padded envelopes. 

shipping materials

Removing Inefficiencies

With each item I decided to remove, I found inefficiencies that made it unprofitable or too time consuming to fulfill orders in a timely manner. For example, with the stickers, design and customization was easy to accomplish, but where I found issues was cutting them with my Cricut, I would waste pages of stickers paper and ink because the alignment of the machine would be off by 1/16 of an inch ruining an entire page of stickers. 

The koozies were very good for the profit margin, but they were the most time consuming item on my listings. If I were to get an order of 9 bachelor party koozies (which was the average #), I would be weeding vinyl for 5+ hours. This would take up time that I could be doing other things for other items. The time spend did not equal the amount of money being made per koozie.

What Next?

Don’t get me wrong, I don’t only want to sell cake stands, but finding the next step that feels natural has been a process. I want to tell a cohesive story in my shop but we don’t have the manpower to make and sell multiple different items. 

Shop at TaylorMaed Designs

New items to come. I promise.

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About Me

Wife, corgi mom, and dedicated DIYer.  In addition to my full time job in Sourcing, I plan and design party decor. I want to use this site to share my knowledge and projects (and sometimes a freebie or two) with my fellow party people.

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Recent Posts

  • Bachelorette DIY: Streamer Photo Backdrop September 29, 2021
  • Bachelorette Party Amazon Necessities September 23, 2021
  • Bachelorette Party DIYs: The Party! September 12, 2021

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