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Hanging Plant Basket Makeover

Indoor plants don’t do well in my care, but I like the pop of green that a hanging fake plant adds to my bathroom…I just didn’t like staring up at the black plastic basket hanging over my tub. This week, I finally got around to giving the basket a makeover, and it looks way better now.

This little project was basically macrame for a lazy person who didn’t want to actually follow a pattern, and since I didn’t want to see the basket/pot at all, my full wrap job did the trick without actually needing to know what I was doing. Plus, if you’ve already got a hanging basket and hot glue gun, this only costs like $5 for the string.


Supplies:

(As an advertising affiliate and Amazon Associate, I earn a small commission from qualifying purchases. But it doesn’t cost you anything extra and helps me keep up my site!)

Tools:

BEFORE: Supplies.

Step 1: Prep the basket. As an optional part of your prep, you might want to paint your basket if it’s a dark color and you don’t want to see any of it through the wrapped string. I thought of this after I was done wrapping the basket, and I do like the contrast of seeing the black through the white string to give it a little dimension and depth. But if you want it to look more like a solid wrap job, paint the basket first so your base is the same color as the string.

Before you start, you’ll want to remove the connected fasteners and hook part that hangs the basket. I think most hanging baskets usually have 3 of these ends that go up to the hook, and I cut off the fasteners to use for my new part that would hang the basket. More on those in a minute.

Save these.

Step 2: Wrap the whole basket. With my string ready, I added a spot of hot glue to the very center of the basket’s underside, and I stuck the end of the string there. Then, going around and around from this center, I added dabs of glue to hold the string tightly in place as I circled around the bottom to cover it.

NOT cutting the string, I moved up the basket from the bottom/underside and continued to wrap the string around and around the basket’s sides. I added more glue then I’d planned, so this took a bit of time, but I wanted the string to stay as tight as possible to hide the black basket decently. This was a lot of going around and around. When I reached the top of the basket’s main section, I cut the string and glued the end down tight.

Starting to wrap from the bottom.

If it doesn’t look covered to your satisfaction, you could always go around a second or even third time, if you have enough string. I was satisfied with one layer. You also could make one long braid and wrap that around and around, but that seemed like more braiding than I wanted to do – but it would look nice.

Step 3: Braid 3 equally long braids for hanging the basket. These will be used to hang the basket from the 3 fasteners, and they run down the sides to tie under the basket and make it look like they hold the basket too. I measured…sort of…by stretching my arms wide and cutting each strand of string to that length. You’ll need 9 equal strands, 3 for each of the 3 braids.

After tying 3 strands together at one end, I braided them together and then tied the other end. I did this to make 3 braids of the same size.

Making hanging braids.

Step 4: Wrap and connect the fasteners for the hanging braids, then tie the braids. Using my string again, I tied on an end to a fastener and wrapped it around until all the plastic was pretty well covered, then tied it off again and added a spot of glue to help. I did this for all 3 fasteners.

Then I took my finished braids and found the middle of each, and that was where I stuck on my fastener before snapping the fastener back in place onto the basket. I then tied a knot over the top of the fastener where it stuck up a bit, just to cover the plastic end. Again, I did this for all 3.

Wrapped fasteners and finding middle of each hanger braid.

Once they were on, I took one end of each braid and tied these together, making sure they were equally long so the basket would hang straight.

For the other end of the braid (the other half that wasn’t tied above), I made sure all 3 strands hung evenly to the underside of the basket and then tied them together in a knot right at the center of the basket’s underside. Once this knot was tied and secure, I undid each braid’s tied end and unbraided them so the strings hung more like tassels from the bottom of the basket.

(Forgot to take a picture of the bottom until I was done)

That gives you the look of the basket hanging from a little braided holder.

Step 5: Add thicker braids along the top and bottom of the basket. Once the fasteners and braided hangers were on, I wanted a thicker braid around the top edge. This again took 9 arm-length strands of string, but this time I tied them all together and braided using groups of 3 strands for each section. This made a thicker braid and was actually easier on my fingers. 😆

Taking one tied end of this bigger braid, I glued it just over the inside of the basket, then glued it around the basket’s top to cover the edge AND cover the fasteners. I ended up doing 2 laps around the top to completely cover the top of the basket.

Top thick braid on.

For the bottom, I again cut 9 strands, but these only needed to be about half as long because the bottom of my basket was narrower and I didn’t need to do 2 laps around. Rather than securing a knotted end, I took the end of my thick braid and squeezed hot glue into the strands to secure them together. Then I ran it OVER the three hanger braids and glued it all the way around the bottom of the pot. When I got back to my starting point, I cut the end and again squeezed glue right into the braid’s end to hold it together without a knot, then glued it in place.

Step 6: Add decorative braids. With the base wrapped, hanger braids on, top braid on, bottom braid on – all that was left was adding some decorative braids around the pot. I did a few thick and a few thin, and I glued them all over in loops around the pot, making sure to run them under the 3 hanger braids where they ran down the sides. (I just thought that looked better.)

Glueing decorative braids on.

When my hands were sick of braiding, I was done! Putting my fake plant back in the basket, I hung it over my tub again, and it looks so much nicer now.

AFTER: New hanging plant basket.


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Eucalyptus Wall Hanger

It’s now the…what? 14th week of January? 🤪 We’ve been slammed with snow and ice, gone crazy from school snow days, and got very lucky when a falling tree narrowly missed our garage. Playing outside lets us breathe in some fresh air, but the freezing winds off Lake Michigan also mean we live in one of those places where the air hurts your face.

Inside, where 4 humans, 2 dogs, and 1 cat live, I wish very much for open windows with summery fresh air. Until then, however, I’m doing what I can to add some nice, fresh smells around here.

I found some dried eucalyptus online and decided to use that in our master bathroom. I have fake eucalyptus in a vase by my sink, but I knew I couldn’t put the real thing there because our cat eats everything. Also, we’re low on counter space and I didn’t want to add another vase. So, I decided to hang this dried eucalyptus. The bunch I purchased came with a nice bit of twine for hanging, but I wanted something a little fancier than just a hanging bunch.

What I came up with ended up looking pretty and was SO easy to do! You could make these out of any size embroidery hoop, with as many wooden beads as you can fit. You could even paint the beads different colors if you wanted. Or you could hang the hoop with twine for a more rustic look. There are many things you could add to the steps below, but here’s the quick and easy way I did mine!

Supplies:

(As an advertising affiliate and Amazon Associate, I earn a small commission from qualifying purchases. But it doesn’t cost you anything extra and helps me keep up my site!)

BEFORE: Supplies ready.

Step 1: Prep the eucalyptus and test the beads. I used the largest size beads from the pack I purchased – the 3/4 inch beads, I think. The hole size in these beads was perfect for inserting the eucalyptus stems so that they stuck tight but could still be removed if needed. I first plucked off the leaves from the bottom 2-3 inches of the eucalyptus stems. I also scraped down the places where the leaves connected to make sure the stems would fit through the bead holes. I ended up prepping all but 2 of my eucalyptus stems, because you want some extra for the last step.

Prepping the stems.

Step 2: Glue wooden beads together. Taking my embroidery hoop, I tested with beads until I figured out about how many I would need. Be sure that the beads at either end sit on top of the hoop, not on the inside, so that the eucalyptus will stay straight rather than bending around the hoop. If your end beads don’t sit exactly on the hoop, all you have to do is move the beads a little up or down on the hoop, depending on your placement preference, until everything lines up right. I ended up needing 8 beads.

Keep in mind that your holes will go up and down. To be sure I glued them all together straight, I did 2 at a time. I only had to use one small dot of hot glue to stick 2 beads together, and I pressed them tight until the glue dried. Once I had all my beads paired up, I set them on my counter to make sure they’d be straight. Then I pressed more small dots of hot glue between each pair to connect them all together.

Glueing beads together.

Step 3: Connect bead ends to the hoop. Next I held the strand of beads in place over my hoop and glued one end bead to the front of the hoop. Then I did the other end. Again, make sure the holes aim up and down (according to how it will hang) when attaching to the hoop. To be really sure the beads stayed on, I went all around the backsides of the end beads with glue to really secure them in place.

Glueing beads to the hoop.

Step 4: Insert the eucalyptus. With my eucalyptus already prepped, it was easy to push each stem down through the bead holes. I cut a few shorter to add some depth to the look of things, now that I was arranging the eucalyptus in place.

Stems inserted.

Step 5: Glue eucalyptus to the bottom stems. Remember how I didn’t prep a few eucalyptus stems? I cut these into lengths long enough to cover the exposed, naked stems that stuck through the bottoms of the beads. It took one whole eucalyptus branch plus a little bit of the last one. These short bits I glued onto the empty stems, gently pressing to make sure they stuck. The last long bit of eucalyptus I just tucked behind the beads to fill out the the finished look.

Adding to empty stems.

That was it! I took the finished piece up to my bathroom, tapped in a nail where I wanted to hang it, and hung it by the hoop at the top.

AFTER: Eucalyptus wall hanger!

I really like how this fills in an empty space on my walls (which honestly are pretty cool on their own, and you can find that tutorial here). The eucalyptus hanger looks pretty, adds an organic touch to the room, and smells lovely!


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DIY Adjustable Shelves for a Corner or Nook

I’ll be honest: I’m running out of energy for the final projects in my basement bathroom remodel. But it’s so close, if I can muster the will to finish!

This project turned out way cooler than I anticipated, although I had it pictured in my head for weeks and weeks (like everything else). Remember this early picture from my bathroom nightmare?

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DIY Shower Wall Slab

It’s been over a week, and I’m still recovering from this one. 😆 After demo-ing and rebuilding and waterproofing and tiling/grouting and finishing a shower for my aunt, I’m pretty happy with the end result. (And she claims to be pleased too, so that’s all that matters 😉) The WHOLE process of a shower remodel can be done in different ways – and people on the internet will give plenty of advice and opinions on how best to do it – so I’m only going to share how I do the most fun part. This is not my original idea, but it’s a really cool and relatively cheap way to add a “wow factor” to a remodeled shower.

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DIY “Tiled” Textured Walls (aka, How to Hide Hideous Drywall)

If you saw my recent Instagram post about our bathroom remodel, you might’ve noticed how I fixed the ENORMOUS chunk of drywall I had to take out. As aggravating as that demo was, I’d thankfully already planned to make my own tile-looking textured walls. So, this plan kept me from freaking out too much when I tore that wall out and then had to patch in drywall and cover seams. (What lay behind this wall was such a mess… I did what I could. 🤦‍♀️)

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