Suzanne posted: " One of Carla's favorite pastimes is crafting. This is a blanket term that, for her, includes without being limited to: Drawing Painting Making things with yarn Using hot glue to make shapes/structures Using a 3-D pen to make shapes/struct" life of a doctor's wife
One of Carla's favorite pastimes is crafting. This is a blanket term that, for her, includes without being limited to:
Drawing
Painting
Making things with yarn
Using hot glue to make shapes/structures
Using a 3-D pen to make shapes/structures
Building things out of paper or foam
Cutting up paper into tiny confetti bits for unknown purposes
Diamond painting
Coloring
Gluing pieces of cardboard together
Transforming pens, paper towel rolls, dowels and other items with string, gems, glitter, foam, etc.
Making Barbie furniture
Making clothing for various stuffed animals
Cutting paper into snowflake shapes
Origami
Sculpting animals out of playdough or clay
Making things out of yarn
Sewing scraps of fabric together, to make clothing or purses or stuffed animals
She is extremely creative and derives a lot of joy from crafting. While I might prefer that she were to make things that had some utility, I certainly don't want to restrict her creative mind. The big problem is that her creations tend to take up a huge amount of space.
So our solution was to create a craft space just for her in the basement. (Slide the image below to see the before and after.)
Based on wonderful suggestions from you, my husband and I went to Home Depot and found a door to use as a craft table. Home Depot has a surprising (to me) variety of doors, and we went with one that was flat, unstained, unfinished, and unadorned in any way. It didn't even have a hole for a doorknob. Just a flat slab of wood. Best of all, it was fairly inexpensive – around $85. (We are comparing the cost of the door to the cost of an actual table.)
We allowed Carla to choose a paint color for the door, and then the three of us painted it.
We already owned a six-cube organizer shelving unit, so we bought a second one. Then we bought fabric bins to put inside some of the cubes. Once the paint was dry, we set the door horizontally across the shelving units.
The "table" is nice and tall, and big enough to hold A LOT of crafts. We set up Carla's Cricut machine on one side, put the spinning desktop organizer on the other side, and filled the shelving unit bins with construction paper and foam and painting supplies.
Over time, we have added additional shelving units and fabric bins, and lots of plastic bins and smaller shelving units.
It is a very well-used space.
Two things that I think we still need, but haven't yet figured out:
Some sort of plastic floor mat. I would love to protect the carpet. But we have only hit roadblocks when trying to find solutions. We originally thought we could get one of those stiff plastic mats that you can put under a desk so that your chair wheels don't get stuck in the carpet. But to find one that is large enough is prohibitively expensive. We considered finding some heavy plastic sheeting, like the kind you put down when you paint… but I'm not sure that would be sturdy enough for daily use, or how we would affix it well enough to the carpet. We then looked into buying a cheap rug that we could put under the desk… but my main concern about that is that it might create a tripping hazard in the basement. Plus, the cheapest rugs at Home Depot have raw edges, and I think they would fray and fall apart pretty quickly… but I have no idea how to resolve that. So for now, we deal with occasional paint and perpetual glitter on the carpet.
A chair. I think Carla would benefit from having a drafting stool of some sort. She says it's tiring for her to have to stand when she's drawing, and I get that. Sometimes, this means that she moves the crafting onto the floor, which I do not like. Maybe a stool of some sort would make using the actual table all the time more appealing. I don't think she would use a stool all the time… but that's fine. Then again, the need isn't so pressing that I've done more than idle googling.
The space is usable and Carla loves it and uses it regularly. Overall, it is a success.
My primary complaint about this space is that it is a craftastrophe 95% of the time. It is a horrific mess that encompasses the top of the table and the space underneath and bleeds into the surrounding areas. (Toggle for the mess if you dare.)
The problem is that no matter how many organizational bins and shelves and baskets you buy, they only work if you use them. And my kid doesn't use them. I have no idea how to help her with this. One of our family mantras is that everything should have a space, and when you are done with something, it needs to return to its space. But that… doesn't happen.
Either Carla is in the middle of a project and doesn't want to put it away…
Or she forgets to put it away…
Or she doesn't know where the item's "home" is (or, worse, it doesn't really HAVE a "home")…
Or she has used the storage bin for some alternate purpose… (This one really annoys me. For instance, we have this little case that has a bunch of separate spaces for small items, like pom poms or gems or paper clips or whatever, and she had removed everything that should be in it and replaced those things with individual small chunks of clay that had since dried out. This kind of "using a storage unit as a toy" is frequent and drives me NUTS.)
I am not sure how to reframe things for Carla so that she understands the how and the why of putting things away… or so that she sees the bins and shelves as Storage Only and not props in her elaborate imaginary scenarios.
If we ever buy another house, my dream is that we dedicate an entire room to Carla's crafting. A room with our makeshift table, and tons of built-in shelving units that are all labeled and stocked with everything she needs. A room that has a door behind which we can shut the mess.
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