A Little of This & That… Renovating, Decorating, DIY Projects & Family
A Little of This & That… Renovating, Decorating, DIY Projects & Family

Winter-to-Spring Wardrobe Staples

Finding a new favorite closet staple is the best feeling. I think that most of us strive to find that balance between cozy, effortless and modern (despite how much we might overthink it). I haven’t grasped it (what’s the magic secret?) – but I have to admit that there’s nothing like not having to overthink your clothing for the day by reaching in, grabbing your comfiest sweater (or shirt or blouse or cami) and jeans and knowing that they’re your go-to. I’m totally a creature of comfort and habit! And maybe just a little bit boring because of that.

A few of the staples that I rediscover on a daily basis as we move from winter to spring (welcome, spring) include light weight button up shirts, skinny jeans, sandals and at night, a thin cardigan. These are all favorites in my closet. When summer approaches I’ll swap the jeans for shorts and next winter the sandals for leather boots.

Winter to Spring Wardrobe Staples | PepperDesignBlog.com

I’ve just recently realized that this is my uniform. I might add trendy scarves or statement jewelry, but at the base of it all are my go-tos. Of all of these, there are certain brands that I adore and continue to revisit when my old favorites are finally worn out or worn down. And the purpose for this post today? I love sharing a good clothing find just like I love to share a good book.

J Crew Factory Merino Long Cardigans
Light weight, soft and perfect for layering. For some reason a good cardigan is actually kind of a difficult item for me to fall in love with, but something I wear everyday.

Madewell Button Up Shirts
I have button ups from Charlotte Russe to Nordstrom, but Madewell (especially their stand collar-style chambrays) are some of my favorites.

Target Camis
Not pictured but very much my daily go-to. I love to wear a cami under everything and love the little extra length it adds to a top.

Caslon Sweaters
Such an excellent sweater brand! When I find one I love, I usually wait until they’re on sale and then buy that style in a few colors. They last me all of fall, winter and into spring, plus summer nights.

Seychelles Sandals
I don’t have this exact pair but Seychelles somehow usually fit me just right. I have a few oldies but goodies from seasons past and I check with Seychelles and Dolce Vita first when shopping for a new sandal. I wish that I felt more comfortable in animal prints, but where I will wear them is on my shoes :). My most frequently worn sandals though? These guys. That’s a side effect from growing up by the beach.

James Skinny Jeans
I keep my eye out for the ‘Twiggy’ variety of James Jeans. Sometimes I find them through a daily deals site (has to be ‘Twiggy’) and sometimes over at Twice (love that darn site). My other favorite jeans to look out for at consignment shops include J Brand and Madewell.

J Crew Chino Shorts
My rolled jean shorts are a random off brand and I replace them as necessary. My other favorite shorts are the 3″ chinos (I’m short) that J Crew has kept around for ages. I keep them around for ages, too.

Delicate Gold Jewelry
My everyday jewelry consists of very simple gold. I’m a huge fan of a basic gold cuff with a big watch on my wrist. I wear the above thin gold necklace everyday and only take it off for a good hot yoga class. (I spotted a very simple gold and bezel-set diamond necklace in a store window display by Dior while on vacation five years ago, I brought that picture to my little neighborhood jeweler with a diamond stud Kevin had gifted me while we were dating. The jeweler was able to replicate the necklace for maybe $70 plus the chain and it’s my most prized piece of jewelry next to my wedding bands). I also wear a thin gold ring on my right hand and think that something like these would be cool eventually for each of my kiddos.

Big Watch
I’m still looking for that perfect big watch that will last a life time. Right now I dig a good Timex (and literally send it in every six months and pay $10 for a new band because they’re not real leather but they do have excellent customer service). For the price you can’t beat it.

I believe in a great relationship with your local tailor (mine is a dry cleaning shop), replacing shoe soles and inserts professionally to give them new life, air drying anything special, and dying clothes that fit right but in colors I don’t love (for consignment store finds, for example). Awesome clothes are worth taking care of.

There you have it. Most of my closet secrets. Still searching for? The perfect t-shirt, the fits-just-right-I-could-live-in-it long skirt and a new set of pumps to replace my Charles David brown heels I wear whenever I’m in the office (but that are totally scuffed and too grubby to wear much longer).

PS This post is kind of inline with my post on closet spring cleaning efforts and necklines – and you can check out all of the style boards posted on the site right here in this gallery.

PPS I read this post just after putting together the above and it totally hit the nail on the mark of what that whole ‘effortless beauty’ thing means. I adore Courtney Adamo’s style.

Tech Tip: WordPress Coding Help

I know many blog readers are also bloggers, so I thought that this next little tech tip (series is growing over here) might be helpful to anyone running their personal blog on WordPress.

I dig WordPress. It is by far the most user-friendly, totally adaptable, completely customizable blog solution out there (in my humble opinion…). I even build non-blog related websites on WordPress because the dashboard is that good.

But WP is kind of a bear if you’re not a teensy bit comfortable rolling up your sleeves and digging around in the ‘Editor’ (aka raw html) section of the site should you get stuck. Have you ever installed a plugin or left out a ‘/’ when adding a sidebar widget link only to watch your entire blog convert to jibberish or your theme come up whacky and skewed? (raising hand over here.) That’s usually followed by hours scanning your backed up code (you have a database backup plugin, right?) wishing you could hit ‘undo’, ‘command+v’, ‘undo’ – until you’ve troubleshooted said problem. Darn div tags.

Tech Tip: Using Codeable for Easy WordPress Fixes | PepperDesignBlog.com

Oh there have been many a night when I first started this blog (I had hand coded the site based off a rough theme for months before bringing it live) where I either wanted to weep in frustration at a silly error that I had made (and subsequently seriously messed something up) or throw the computer out the window. Or both at the same time.

Tech Tip: Using Codeable for Easy WordPress Fixes | PepperDesignBlog.com

I’ve discovered Codeable just this year and it’s amazing. It’s sort of a hire-by-project site where you can jump on, list your WordPress idea as a ‘task’ and watch as expert coders (already vetted and identified by Codeable as those who seriously know their stuff) help to create a bid on how much your project will be to complete. If you accept the rate they determine, you choose from one of the coders that has volunteered for the job and move over to a workroom just like this one:

Tech Tip: Using Codeable for Easy WordPress Fixes | PepperDesignBlog.com

From here you can exchange ideas, upload images, reference existing sites, share login information to your WP blog… and in a short amount of time your developer has resolved said issue or coded your new idea.

For my website business, I used to hire WordPress developers off of Craigslist. But that became frustrating fast! I had always imagined a solution just like this one. These days I keep this little tool in my back pocket not so much for building entire websites, but for making quick fixes or for adding cool features to the blog that I’ve thought up or have seen out there.

Right now I’d really like to bring some sort of sorting feature to the Style Boards section of this site – or even perhaps build a new DIY project panel? The possibilities are endless if you happen to know a coder who can make it happen…

PS More tech tips!

Girls’ Room: Designing the Wallpaper in Spoonflower

I’m really smitten with the wallpaper in the girls’ room.

Girls' Room Update: March 2014 | PepperDesignBlog.com

I went through a lot of ideas for creating a feature-something in this space, and in the end designed and printed my own wallpaper through Spoonflower, though I’m not sure I’ve ever really walked through the process here before.

Designing Wallpaper for the Girls' Room in Spoonflower | PepperDesignBlog.com

Spoonflower is just awesome. We have curtains I designed a few years back in the office, and a canvas ‘art’ piece hanging and framed in our living room that I found by another Spoonflower artist.

Designing your own fabric, wallpaper or gift wrapping paper is a small part of the Spoonflower universe. One of my favorite resources for new creative patterns for the home (thousands and thousands!) is to browse Spoonflower using their color sorter (that was my strategy for finding that above semi-diy canvas print).

Designing Wallpaper for the Girls' Room in Spoonflower | PepperDesignBlog.com

Simply type in a keyword such as ‘chevron’ and then use the color swatch to narrow down until you find exactly what you’re looking for. So. much. amazingness.

If you find a wallpaper pattern that you love, they’ll even show you a mockup of the scaling of that pattern in a room.

Designing Wallpaper for the Girls' Room in Spoonflower | PepperDesignBlog.com

When I imagined adding an accent wall in the nursery, I imagined something subtle, something simple, something that would play well with other patterns in the rest of the space. I actually ordered a mix of Spoonflower samples to try out initially, six pretty found patterns already uploaded by others to Spoonflower and two slight color variations of my own starry night pattern.

Nursery Wallpaper Samples : PepperDesignBlog.com

I loved them all! But being keen on plenty of pattern in this room, I ended up choosing the most subtle of the samples (those two panels in the lower center) because they would allow for more pattern layering.

I came up with that simple starry design after being inspired by a bathroom in black Osborne & Little Coronata wallpaper.

Designing Wallpaper for the Girls' Room in Spoonflower | PepperDesignBlog.com

I changed the colors, the style of star (to something more abstract with rounded edges) and the pattern so that it wasn’t a direct replication.

That process was a process though! It’s nice to imagine that uploading and printing a design is as simple as just that, but it actually took me close to three months to get the wallpaper just right, including the amount of time between each iteration that Spoonflower needs to get your pattern through the printer and shipped out to you.

Designing Wallpaper for the Girls' Room in Spoonflower | PepperDesignBlog.com

I use photoshop and illustrator to create most of my designs. Photoshop is really for adjusting and manipulating photos which are created from small dots of color (pixels), while illustrator is ideal for shapes and designs because you are working with vector paths that can be stretched and resized without damaging your content (opposite of photos). There is much out there regarding that topic that you can find with a quick google search…

Designing Wallpaper for the Girls' Room in Spoonflower | PepperDesignBlog.com

Designing Wallpaper for the Girls' Room in Spoonflower | PepperDesignBlog.com

To create a repeating pattern, I prefer to cut the pattern into a perfect square with two edges butting up against an obvious design/shape in the pattern, and the other two edges cutting just before that same design/shape. When I repeat this out in Illustrator to test it, it creates a perfectly repeating pattern.

Working with colors in Spoonflower is the most challenging part of the job. It’s helpful to have the Spoonflower color chart for reference (they’ll ship you a square for $1, request also the fabric swatches booklet if you’re printing on fabric) and I use both their older format (on the right) and newer version (on the left) to get the colors just right.

Designing Wallpaper for the Girls' Room in Spoonflower | PepperDesignBlog.com

The above is for color reference, the eyedropper tool in photoshop then helps me to reference the correct hex color (each color has a formula, that’s the formula). I’m always shocked at what the color looks like on the screen vs. printed out.

Designing Wallpaper for the Girls' Room in Spoonflower | PepperDesignBlog.com

I went through eight different scaling and color options before settling on the correct size and shade of pink/coral for the nursery. I find it best to have several swatches printed at the same time with a variety of shading and scaling in each batch so that you’re not waiting on Spoonflower printing for long chunks of time…

Designing Wallpaper for the Girls' Room in Spoonflower | PepperDesignBlog.com

I even went back and forth between a pointed and rounded star design – sometimes the devil’s in the details.

Designing Wallpaper for the Girls' Room in Spoonflower | PepperDesignBlog.com

Here’s how that crazy mess looked in my design library within Spoonflower (you can actually purchase my final design right here, you can also make designs private but I thought I’d share the love if anyone else is interested in a similar look).

Designing Wallpaper for the Girls' Room in Spoonflower | PepperDesignBlog.com

Whew!

The best day is when your rolls of wallpaper arrive! I was eight months pregnant when my brother and I installed the panels.

Tips for Hanging Wallpaper | PepperDesignBlog.com

But so worth it.

There are just two things that I hope will change over at Spoonflower as the popularity increases: time to print and ship (production time) and that the wallpaper will be printed without the need to overlap panels at the seams.

Girls' Room Update: March 2014 | PepperDesignBlog.com

Happy St. Patty’s Day! More of a pink rather than green post today, but hopefully you’ll find it useful! Or that you’ll checkout the great designers over at Spoonflower sometime soon (it’s like Joann’s on steroids).

PS if you’re looking for a paint color that is awfully close to this wallpaper, try Rose Radiance by Olympic.

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