Custom Quilted Floors
#1
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Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Tucson AZ
Posts: 383
craftybear's thread on using floor designs to make quilts reminded me of something my stepmother told me about years ago. She said you can make an interesting flooring with paper grocery bags. You would take all your collected bags and scrunch each of them into a ball. Then open them back up and iron them flat. Now you lay them on your floor(a sub floor made of plywood or? whatever) Next you put many layers of clear sealant finish to seal them into the floor. She said it looks like suede. As I looked at craftybear's thread I thought: Why not make a floor out of fabric instead of paperbags? Can you imagine?
#2
It would be awesome, especially in a sewing room :D:D:D
Better not drop any fabric on the floor though, it might be hard to spot LOL
I have seen them do the same thing with the bags for walls too :D
Better not drop any fabric on the floor though, it might be hard to spot LOL
I have seen them do the same thing with the bags for walls too :D
#4
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Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Anchorage, AK
Posts: 1,398
Originally Posted by amma
It would be awesome, especially in a sewing room :D:D:D
Better not drop any fabric on the floor though, it might be hard to spot LOL
I have seen them do the same thing with the bags for walls too :D
Better not drop any fabric on the floor though, it might be hard to spot LOL
I have seen them do the same thing with the bags for walls too :D
#5
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Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Between the dashes of a tombstone
Posts: 12,716
Originally Posted by ktbb
Originally Posted by amma
It would be awesome, especially in a sewing room :D:D:D
Better not drop any fabric on the floor though, it might be hard to spot LOL
I have seen them do the same thing with the bags for walls too :D
Better not drop any fabric on the floor though, it might be hard to spot LOL
I have seen them do the same thing with the bags for walls too :D
#6
Google Goddess
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Central Indiana (USA)
Posts: 30,181
that sounds like a cool idea, why not do it on a piece of plywood and make it as a picture for the wall???
Originally Posted by QUILT4JOY
craftybear's thread on using floor designs to make quilts reminded me of something my stepmother told me about years ago. She said you can make an interesting flooring with paper grocery bags. You would take all your collected bags and scrunch each of them into a ball. Then open them back up and iron them flat. Now you lay them on your floor(a sub floor made of plywood or? whatever) Next you put many layers of clear sealant finish to seal them into the floor. She said it looks like suede. As I looked at craftybear's thread I thought: Why not make a floor out of fabric instead of paperbags? Can you imagine?
#7
Originally Posted by craftybear
that sounds like a cool idea, why not do it on a piece of plywood and make it as a picture for the wall???
Originally Posted by QUILT4JOY
craftybear's thread on using floor designs to make quilts reminded me of something my stepmother told me about years ago. She said you can make an interesting flooring with paper grocery bags. You would take all your collected bags and scrunch each of them into a ball. Then open them back up and iron them flat. Now you lay them on your floor(a sub floor made of plywood or? whatever) Next you put many layers of clear sealant finish to seal them into the floor. She said it looks like suede. As I looked at craftybear's thread I thought: Why not make a floor out of fabric instead of paperbags? Can you imagine?
#8
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Anchorage, AK
Posts: 1,398
But how easy is it to replace. A neat idea, but I have a new home and don't want to do something permanent like this.[/quote]
For walls, it only goes up with wallpaper paste so it's as easy to take down as any other paper. there is no need to apply urethane over the top since, probably, no one will be walking on it! To apply the paper, you simply put wallpaper paste on the back side of the paper you are applying then smooth it on the wall, overlapping pieces slightly so no sections of the wall show thru. I just use my hands to smooth the paper on the wall, no need to use fancy wallpaper tools unless you really want to. It's messy, but fun! Kids would probably love doing it.
You can use either paper bags or even craft paper you buy on the roll. Another option is to purchase what I think is called "plumber paper" at a hardware store. This is heavy duty construction paper used to protect floors in areas where work is to be done. This comes on large rolls, is relatively cheap and can cover a lot of area plus it usually comes in a brown with a slightly reddish cast, so has a little color to it.
Rip the paper into medium to large size pieces..the bigger the pieces, the fewer you need to use to cover the wall. I normally use craft paper on the roll and use pieces with the cut edge to line the perimeter of the wall I'm going to cover...don't have to trim any that way, just line one straight edge up with the last one! Once the perimeter is completed, then start building the interior by slightly overlapping the previous piece with the edge of the new piece.
Based on experience, if you're doing a large area, let part of your work dry completely before proceeding with the next section. When the wallpaper is applied, it can slightly stretch the paper which, when dry again, can shrink back to regular size..if you do a large space and don't let sections dry first, you can have parts of the paper peel up as the shrinking pulls it off the wall. But even then, it's not a disaster, simply tear off the part that has peeled up and apply new paper over the old to cover the hole.
For walls, it only goes up with wallpaper paste so it's as easy to take down as any other paper. there is no need to apply urethane over the top since, probably, no one will be walking on it! To apply the paper, you simply put wallpaper paste on the back side of the paper you are applying then smooth it on the wall, overlapping pieces slightly so no sections of the wall show thru. I just use my hands to smooth the paper on the wall, no need to use fancy wallpaper tools unless you really want to. It's messy, but fun! Kids would probably love doing it.
You can use either paper bags or even craft paper you buy on the roll. Another option is to purchase what I think is called "plumber paper" at a hardware store. This is heavy duty construction paper used to protect floors in areas where work is to be done. This comes on large rolls, is relatively cheap and can cover a lot of area plus it usually comes in a brown with a slightly reddish cast, so has a little color to it.
Rip the paper into medium to large size pieces..the bigger the pieces, the fewer you need to use to cover the wall. I normally use craft paper on the roll and use pieces with the cut edge to line the perimeter of the wall I'm going to cover...don't have to trim any that way, just line one straight edge up with the last one! Once the perimeter is completed, then start building the interior by slightly overlapping the previous piece with the edge of the new piece.
Based on experience, if you're doing a large area, let part of your work dry completely before proceeding with the next section. When the wallpaper is applied, it can slightly stretch the paper which, when dry again, can shrink back to regular size..if you do a large space and don't let sections dry first, you can have parts of the paper peel up as the shrinking pulls it off the wall. But even then, it's not a disaster, simply tear off the part that has peeled up and apply new paper over the old to cover the hole.
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