How to Make Everyone Insane….

Answer: Start a bunch of home improvement and don’t finish any of them….. In the midst of the insanity I can see life getting a little better bit by bit, so I keep doing it.

I reached a point where I couldn’t take it any more….the disorganization, dirt and 45 year old carpet with disintegrating pad.  I dove into a bunch of projects pretty much simultaneously. We don’t have much of a budget for each space so we’re doing some unorthodoxed things…like thumbtacking placemats over windows, painting sub floors, and cutting curtains in half so we can have 2.  In the past few weeks:

1.  Caleb’s room: Removed carpet and wallpaper. Painted walls and subfloor. New rug, new bedding, new curtains, new desk, lego organizational area. Still need: Lego desk, dust ruffle….and doors.  Doors would be really nice.

Calebs room before and after

2. Painted the Family Room French Doors white and started to white wash the fireplace. Bought supplies for a giant chalkboard.

family room 2015

family room fireplace

Plus that cabinet on the ground, to the right, with all the stuff on it belongs on top of the fridge.  We now have the screws in hand to take care of that. Happy Dance. The chalkboard will cover the end of the fireplace that the cabinet is leaning against. It has an unsightly seam on it that use to be hidden under a wall.  We discovered it when we opened up the floor plan and it’s been visible from the front door for 2+years.

3. Master Bedroom: Removed Carpet.  Painted subfloor. Deconstructed bed. “new” rug, sofa, curtains, light, lamps, mirrors, side table, plants…..Still needs pillows and artwork….later

Master Bedroom before and after

4.  Girl’s Bathroom: Removed wallpaper and popcorn ceiling.  Still needs Skimcoat, paint on walls and trim.  New faucet, new toilet. Tile around sink area.  Refinish tub and sink top so they will be white.  Shower curtain, window shade and bamboo blind. Towel hooks…..don’t make me go on.

Girl's bathroom mood board

5.  Entry: Took carpet off stairs (I did this before Christmas actually.) Still needs a coat of stain on treads and bannister and white paint on trim. Still need to paint walls…but parts of the room will need scaffolding…

12481_10206462857233179_6967099384590296891_n

All of these jobs are on a gentle pause while I figure out how in the world to do the next steps.  When I get stuck in one space, I start on the next one.  It’s a bad habit.

In the meantime, I’m getting ready for our Spring Concert, taking the choir to World’s of Fun for a play day, and preparing graduation music.

Totally Unrelated News: I’m 1 contact away from earning a trip to ATLANTIS BAHAMAS with MomCeo.  If you are at all mildly curious about how I earn money with MomCeo, put in your info and let me give you a call.  I would be super sad to be this close and not qualify for the trip, plus I think it would really bless your family too.  Atlantis is the place Dave Ramsey took us when we were finalists with his Total Money Makeover Contest.  I can’t express how awesome it would be to go back as a successful small business owner.

Tips for a Low-Work/High-Profit Garage Sale

Garage Sale Tips

Having a garage sale can be a lot of work, but it can also raise a lot of money.  Here’s how we do it to minimize our time spent and maximize our money earned.

1.  Have a staging area in your house, out of the way of daily life.  I have a small area in the unfinished portion of our basement where I can stack tubs to hold our stuff we are purging.  When someone outgrows a piece of clothing, or I find a toy we no longer play with, I put it in the tub to wait for garage sale day.  When I fill a tub, I put a fresh one on top and keep filling.  After each sale I return the empty tubs to the staging area and start again.  This has an extra benefit of time delay.  I can be ruthless with filling the tub and if I figure out I really did need that item after all, it’s still there.

Bonus tip: Keep a pen and price tags on top of the tubs and price things as you put them in the tub.  Then on garage sale day the hardest part is already done.

2.  Price Tags:  Have everyone label their price tag with 2 unique initials.  Then it’s easy to keep track of who earned what.  It’s better to price your items individually then to just expect people to ask what each item is.

3.  I like to print my tags on address label sheets.  3 tags fit on one lable, so it’s cheap and easy:

garage sale tags

I have pages with $1.00; $.50; $.25; $.10 and then a mixed sheet with $10, $5, $2, and $3 tags. For seldom used prices I use masking tape and a marker.

4.  Keeping Track:  Use a spiral notebook and make tabs with masking tape, giving each person their own set of pages–One page for each day the sale is open.  Label the tab with their 2 initial code so that you can turn right to that page easily.  In addition have a legal pad for adding up totals for your customers.

Example: A customer is buying several items all from different people.  On the scratch pad, write down the prices and the initials it belongs to, all in a list together.  Add up their total, take payment and give their change.  Then the customer can leave while you transfer the amounts to the individual pages according to the initials.  As you transfer an amount, cross it off your legal pad.  If there’s a long line of people, you can keep a tally on the legal pad and transfer the amounts to the individual pages during a lull.  As long as you cross of things as you go, you won’t lose track.

5. Signs: Make high Quality signs that you can use year after year.  The most important information is the word “Yard Sale or Garage Sale, or just SALE” and an arrow with the direction.  Addresses, dates, and times just clutter up the sign and are hard for drivers to read anyway.  You can make your sign waterproof with packing tape or contact paper.  Take down your sign after you close each evening.  This prevents vandalism and stops people from wasting their time driving to a sale that isn’t there.  It’s just better manners to take your signs down when you aren’t open.

Good sign: garage-sale-signs-new-bench-008

Bad Sign:

garage-sale-signs-new-bench-001

Bonus tip:  The metal framework from an expired political sign is a good starting piece for garage sale signs.

6.  Invite lots of friends to join you for your sale.  The more items you have, the more people will stop and shop.  But insist they price their items in advance and assign them their unique 2 initial code to put on their tags.

7.  How bad is your garage?  Start cleaning it a week in advance if it’s been awhile.  If you garage sale several times a year and just need a basic sweep out, you can do that 2 days before.

8.  The day before your sale, set up tables and hanging racks inside your garage.  Designate areas for clothing, toys, housewares, etc… and label them so other people bringing items know where to put them.

9.  Have a sign up sheet for helping to watch the sale.  That way 2 people are around at any one time, but no  one is stuck there all 4 days.

10.  I used to be strict about opening a sale on Wednesday, but April showers forced us to open Monday this time and it was wildly successful.  There’s no bad day of the week to have a garage sale if the weather is good ;).

11.  Post your sale everywhere with pictures: Craigslist, facebook, instagram.  Cross-post your high price items like strollers and furniture with their own ads.  Just be sure to delete the ads as things sell.  Kindly let people know that you won’t be holding items.  I didn’t do that and still have items for friends who requested them but didn’t come get them.  When the sale is over, I like to be cleaned out.  That’s the point of the process after all.

12.  Have a half price day.  A few years ago we started making our last day half price.  Guys!  It’s like mad dogs that day.  We make more money on our half price day than we do any other day of the sale.  It’s all going to be donated at the end of they day, so don’t get hung up on prices and what things are really worth. For things that are $.25 we just sell them 2 for $25 so we don’t have to worry about pennies.

13.  Have a counterfeit pen.  I’m sad I have to write this, but it’s just a fact of life these days. We got a counterfeit $20 at our last sale and didn’t catch it until later.  The paper didn’t feel right, but it was close enough to throw us at the time.  A counterfeiter can buy something small at a sale with a fake bill and then get good money back in change.  Likewise, be suspicious of someone paying a small amount with $100 bill. Counterfeiters are getting good enough that their bills might have the strip in them or be undetectable by a pen. The one we received wasn’t that great. I think seeing that pen come out will discourage a lot of the funny business.

14.  When it’s over have a plan for where the leftovers will go.  Some places have a truck and will come pick up the things.  We found some places had restrictions on home improvement items or size of furniture, so it’s good to ask.  And we also found it best to schedule the pickup in advance or you might be holding onto stuff for awhile.

P.S. 5 years ago I wrote a post on garage sales.  There’s still good stuff there.

P.P.S. This is an excellent value, but only available for a short time.

Garage Sale Season is Here!

Why I have Garage Sales

We had a garage sale last week.  That on top of a public speaking gig and choir contest kept me offline most of the time.  I didn’t get rid of any big ticket items at our sale but still made $450 on bric-brac.

I talk to a lot of people who would rather just donate their stuff instead of going through the hassle a garage sale.  I don’t have a problem with that at all.  The thrift stores do a good work for charity and need good quality donations, and if you itemize for taxes you get a monetary benefit without all the work.  Here’s why I choose to do a garage sale anyway:

1.  It’s immediate cash.  We are gathering an envelope fund for our family vacation this summer, camping in Colorado.  We won’t see the tax benefit from a donation until next January which won’t help us take that trip.  We rarely take a vacation, so most of my garage sale proceeds go for home repairs/remodeling projects or to cover clothing needs for our big brood of kids that our regular budget can’t handle.

2.  I can sell things for a cheaper price at my garage sale than the thrift stores can.  I like giving families who need it a chance to get it cheap.  It saves their pride to be able to pay for things themselves verses taking a donation from a charity facility.

3.  I still donate to thrift stores.  When our yard sale is over, I take everything that’s left to a donation site so I get both the cash in hand and a tax benefit.

4.  I love talking to the people who come to shop.  I’ve met my neighbors in the new neighborhood this way, and even connected with some blog reading fans :).

5.  My garage gets clean twice a year.  We have a sale in April before it gets hot and in October after things have cooled down a bit.  I am motivated to organize and tidy my garage before each sale :).

My mom comes and helps me with all my sales, she’s the garage sale Diva! Plus I invited several friends to bring stuff which gave us a super huge sale that wasn’t all my stuff.  All combined our sale brought in nearly $2,000. Tomorrow, I’ll give you my tips for a low-work/high-profit garage sales.

P.S.  I recommend this.

Read These This Weekend

Hi Friends, there are 3 blogs I want you to read.  These ladies are among my favorites and they all have a similar message:  We are perfect because Jesus completes us, but that doesn’t mean we’re flawless.  Those flaws can be beautiful, because they are real.

Don’t get me wrong this is not an “I’m ok, You’re ok” message.  It’s the “YOU have value, because God made YOU” message.  I’m all for improving ourselves and stomping out sin.  I’m against hiding or not trying something new because we don’t think we can do it good enough.  It’s good to remember that we’re all a lot alike: beautifully flawed.

1.  Home Decor:  Nesting Place Her motto is “It doesn’t have to be perfect to be beautiful” Nuff said.  Her imperfect is definitely beautiful. She’s the reason I took a risk in my master bedroom the last two weeks.

To turn this:

Master bedroom before

Into this:

Master Bedroom After

Even unfinished, it has gone from my yucky place to my favorite place.

2.  Makeup: Maskcara  This girl is the queen of highlighting and contouring.  If you have fat cheeks, she’ll tell you they’re beautifully youthful.  If you have hooded eyes, she’ll show you a picture of every super model with hooded eyes just to prove how gorgeous you are.  You can’t get past her without feeling like the most beautiful creature.  She can teach you how to do this:

lucy

And this:

10e98a58a2eef038d147545be5969ee8

All while almost convincing you that you’re too beautiful to wear makeup at all.

If you can’t see beauty in your naked face, you won’t feel beautiful with makeup on either.

3.  And Mothering:  Finding Joy  This girl will not make you feel inadequate for eating box macaroni, or buying your Valentines ready made at Dollar Tree.  She will love you where you are and remind you that you are the best Mother for your kids. They don’t want any other. No tutorials, no recipes, just encouragement.

love,

Angela

New Project: Girl’s Bathroom

I’ve started on a new project in our house, and I haven’t finsihed Caleb’s room, my room, or the entry.  This makes my husband crazy.  He works differently than I do (slow and careful), and I need him to do a couple of things before I can move on in the other areas.  It could take him awhile to get to it, and by a while I mean months to years. While I wait for him to get a “round tuit” I get busy somewhere I have the skills to tackle. PLUS I’m learning new skills so I don’t have to rely on him for as much.  For this project I need to learn how to wire a GFCI outlet and change a faucet….I’m so thankful for YouTube.

DSC_0003

We have two bathrooms upstairs to service all the kid bedrooms. One we’ve named the “boy bathroom” and this one is for the girls.

DSC_0002

It is green, green, green. Green shower/tub, green toilet, green walls, green wallpaper, green towel bars and hooks, and green floor. Combine that with the dark wood, and it’s a bit dreary.

DSC_0007

It’s narrow and crowded without any linen storage, too.

Floor

I’m keeping the floor, it’s made of thick vinyl tiles that look like glass cubes.  The previous owners chose to accent the olive color in the pallet, but I’m hoping to bring out the emerald and pale blue instead. DSC_0009 DSC_0008
We’ve already started removing the wall paper and found some mold issues behind it.  There is also some serious drywall trouble around the shower and window areas caused by there not being a working exhaust fan for years.  We fixed the ventilation, so it’s safe to make some repairs.

Girl's bathroom mood board

Here’s a mood board to show you what I have in mind.

I’m going to finish scraping down the popcorn ceilings, and removing wallpaper backing, but for now we’re headed to the zoo :).

P.S.  I really love that wallpaper, but it’s $150 a roll.  1 roll could make a nice impact in the space, or I could try to fake it with a bird stamp.  What would you do?