Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Quit Slackin' and Make Shit Happen

Last week I packed up my ish, woke up at 11:30pm California time and headed out for an early flight back home. It was weird going back home because I am so used to North Carolina, that I forgot what it was like to live in California. I haven't been home for 8 months, which I cannot believe. My husband would literally go years without seeing his family, and I always thought that if I ever had the chance to hoof it cross country, I'd probably come home every 3-4 months at least. Well, now that I have a job, and I'm in school full time, and I have two pupperonis that need loving, I realize how hard that realistically is. Not to mention the $650 price tag that comes with flying from our teeny New Bern airport into Los Angeles.

Anyways, I had a grand old time. I miss my family, I miss my nephews, I miss the weather. Running every morning and not being covered in a fine layer of sweat was bizarre. I was actually cold a few mornings, and I haven't felt that for months.

My sister has had a chalkboard on her wall for a while, and she was patiently waiting for me to return home so I could decorate it for her. I've never decorated a chalkboard before ever, and I was surprised how easy it was.

I have to say, the hardest part about creating this chalkboard was finding the perfect quote. We googled and were on Pinterest for some time. We didn't want a seasonal one (which is what the majority of them were) because I don't know when I'll be going back, so I finally found a tutorial, and a free printable, and we were set! Here is the website I used to get the printable, and here is the website that I used the tutorial from.





If I had to do this all over again, I'd...

1. Do no use the chalkboard markers to create your grid. Trust me on this. Or you'll spend hours erasing the little tiny lines with a magic eraser. Use a piece of chalk to create the grid.
2. Screw the math that girl tries to explain. Take the width of your chalkboard, say it's 48", and divide is by 8 - the answer isssss SIX! So your boxes across should be 6 inches apart in the width. Then take the length, say 96" divide by 8 and you have 12. So each box should be 12 inches apart lengthwise. This makes WAY more sense to me than the math equation in that tutorial.
3. Stick to the grids! I went a little cray cray and did some free handing, and I think that the spacing is off.

And that's it! I currently have 8 windows in my garage that are screaming for me to paint them and write seasonal things on them. So I must be off. : )