Blog Description

A French-Inspired Garden and Home by Judith Stringham
Showing posts with label tutorial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tutorial. Show all posts

Bulletin Board Inspiration No. 6 | Navy and White Rabbits

Sunday, April 17, 2022

A Paper Series Post 

The latest bulletin board inspiration features a gorgeous, fluffy white rabbit in navy and white. Rabbits are symbols of spring, and a clipping of a white rabbit on a navy bulletin board is a beautiful reminder of Easter.   

Bulletin boards often include a collection of clippings without a planned layout, but in my series of bulletin boards, I share suggestions and design principles for creating boards with a theme. Part of each post in the bulletin board inspiration series is how-to information for my boards to help you create your own boards. 


Bulletin Board Inspiration for Spring and Easter
Bulletin boards are an easy, economical way to decorate for each season and/or holiday in the year. As I was creating this latest bulletin board inspiration for Spring and Easter, I began to wonder how rabbits came to be symbols of Easter and why Easter bunnies deliver eggs for Easter egg hunts. 

Bulletin Board Inspiration No. 5 | French Country Bedroom

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

A Paper Series Post 

Worn out sheets and quilts inspired the Bulletin Board Inspiration No. 5 with its collage of French Country bedrooms, furniture, and linens. Once again the bulletin board is a functional board for organizing thoughts for a new household project: adding French style with new bed linens.  



French Country Bedroom Bulletin Board Inspiration
New sheets and pillowcases for the master bedroom are high on the to-buy list this fall. Repeated washings created holes in the embroidered top sheet, and a coordinating missing pillowcase has not turned up after weeks of searching. 

Bulletin Board Inspiration No. 3 | French Country Lavender

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

A Paper Series Post


Bulletin board inspiration can come from anywhere, including French Country lavender plants from Trader Joe's. 


French Country Lavender Bulletin Board Inspiration
While a lavender post was planned for this year's new series of Bulletin Board Inspiration posts, the plan was for July when lavender fields are in full bloom in France. But, finding beautiful lavender plants this past week inspired the May bulletin board and offers a bit of a tutorial on how to create bulletin boards for viewing, not just for personal inspiration. 

With each new bulletin board are a few suggestions, or tutorial, on how to elevate a collection of bulletin board clippings from unplanned haphazard pinnings to layouts designed for inspiration to house guests as well as to the bulletin board's creator.  

Bulletin Board Inspiration No. 1 | Baskets, Eggs, Wreaths

Thursday, March 25, 2021


A Paper Series Post

Creating a bulletin board filled with photographs of spring baskets, bird eggs, and wreaths is an inexpensive way to enjoy photographs from magazines, brochures, catalogs, flyers, maps . . .  Plus, seeing collected clippings on a board gives ideas for creating similar arrangements around the house. Take a look at the latest bulletin board arrangement in my house for March, and read my suggestions for creating your own bulletin board arrangements. 



Photos of baskets, bird's eggs, and wreaths on a bulletin board offers inspiration
Last fall I rejuvenated an old ordinary bulletin board by painting the cork board ink blue and by applying a gold gel stain to the narrow wooden frame. When I shared the finished look in a post, I promised readers a new series of Bulletin Board Inspiration. Today is the first of several bulletin board inspiration posts, with tutorials included for how I lay out my bulletin boards. The board I created and photographed last November will debut this November. 

DIY Polar Bear White Mohair Ornament

Monday, October 30, 2017

A Paper Series Post

Shh ... hhh ! 
Look away if you are not a do-it-yourself person, 

but DIY Christmas ornaments should be in progress NOW. 

At least gathering your ideas and your materials. 

Like for an adorable white mohair DIY polar bear ornament. 




adorable-white-polar-bear-mohair-diy-christmas-ornament

Tips to Get Hydrangeas to Bloom

Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Hydrangea season has arrived in the South, and with the arrival of hydrangea blooms each year comes the questions about why doesn't my hydrangea bloom. If you love hydrangeas as much as I do, you are probably very interested in TIPS for getting hydrangeas to bloom... 

and to bloom in your favorite color. 




my-favorite-color-of-hydrangeas-is-pale-blue

A Budget Friendly Moss Topiary

Thursday, May 11, 2017


Ivy and moss topiary shapes catch my attention. I love them, but they can be very expensive. Let me show you how I created a Spring bunny topiary for a fraction of the cost of buying one from Pottery Barn. This was so easy I know you can do it, too.  




low-cost-ivy-moss-bunny-topiary

Snowflake Winter Tablescape

Tuesday, January 24, 2017


Snowflake Winter Tablescape 
a french-inspired setting 

snowflake-winter-tablescape-how-why

Beautiful table settings are a common sight in magazines, books, catalogs, and blogs. Frequently the photos will be accompanied with tips on HOW to recreate the same table setting in your own home, and sometimes the articles will include sources to "get the look." A designer or stylist may give detailed behind-the-scenes explanations of choosing dishes, making place cards, placing accessories, creating take-home favors, or arranging a floral centerpiece. 

Not much is said, if anything, about WHY to create beautiful table settings in our homes. 

Well, not much is said by most of us. Chefs and food enthusiasts, including food stylists, have written volumes about presentation, presentation, presentation and why presentation is important. 

Quick, EASY Caramel Apple Gift Bag

Thursday, November 3, 2016


Quick, EASY Caramel Apple Gift Bag 


With November comes celebrating holidays with friends and families. Are you having guests for Thanksgiving or Christmas? Many of us are, and one thing that always is a nice surprise for a guest is a welcome-to-our-home gift. 

How To Style a Rustic Blue Box

Tuesday, October 25, 2016

You may have a natural talent for knowing exactly how to style a large box with flowers, pine cones, pumpkins, and wild wispy vines. Or, you may have taken floral courses or weekend workshops to develop your talent. 

I confess I did not have a natural talent and did not take a course to develop a talent for styling a rustic blue box. No, I developed my skills by reading gracious fellow bloggers who shared their tips and secrets for styling arrangements on their blogs, and some even have shown step-by-step instructions. Plus, I have a very talented sister who is a professional florist who gives me pointers periodically. She did take floral courses to become a florist. 

Rustic Wild Heart With Dried Roses

Sunday, February 7, 2016


February always brings out the urge in me to create hearts.  Some years, making strawberry cakes in heart-shaped individual cupcake pans satisfies the urge for hearts.  Other years, elaborate homemade Valentine cards with roses, glitter, embossing using rubber stamps, and attached heart-shaped buttons to send to friends fills that annual desire to create hearts.  My sister has the same annual desires to create hearts.  We both inherited some gene that drives us to make hearts in February, and sometimes we work together to create custom Valentine cards.  



However, my sister has a special talent for working with flowers and her latest heart creation was this wild floral heart. Rustic wild vines create the heart shape with dried roses, grapevines, mossy twig vines, green reindeer moss, blue paper, and a tiny paper heart from scrap wrapping paper all layered on a thick wooden tree ring.  



The heart shape is more suggested than rigidly defined which makes the rustic heart all the more beautiful to me.  The hardest part in making this beauty is the vision for putting all the pieces together for the first time.  Now that you have seen it, you probably can make a similar one to fill any February creative urge of your own to make hearts. 



A surprise gift to me, the rustic heart hangs in my made-over mud room, but would be a wonderful February door hanging on a sheltered front door.  Take a look at how it is constructed, beginning with a 3-4 inch thick circular tree slice as the foundation.  No need to cut the wood base in the shape of a heart. The heart shape is created using vines. 



From this close-up view, you can see how the vines are layered and are not flattened against the circular base.  Rather, they swirl out with unkempt tendrils. 



Rustic Wild Heart Layers in order of creation
  1.  Circular 3-4" thick wood base about 7-8" in diameter
  2.  Attach a picture hanging hook to the back of the wood base. Do this before creating the vine hearts to keep from smashing the hearts. 
  3.  Paper (color of your choice) glued onto the wood base 
  4.  Small paper heart folded with only one side glued to the wood, leaving one side standing up 
  5.  Large grapevines, twisted into large heart that extends beyond the wood base edges. Glue or nail to the wood base at 2-3 places leaving most of the heart form free 
  6.  Small vines clustered together to form the most recognizable heart shape. Glue to the large grapevines. 
  7.  Glue dried roses randomly to the small vine heart. 
  8.  Glue small clumps of green reindeer moss as shown 



The rustic wild heart looks right at home hanging on a white-washed pine beadboard wall in my mud room. 



French Country is the over-all look I love, but the rustic heart also goes very well with country, cottage, and shabby chic decorating styles.  Can you see this rustic heart in your house? 


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MONDAY

TUESDAY

Creating Joyeux Printed Pages

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

A Paper Series Post 


Paper projects are among my favorite ways to while away the time.  A Christmas paper project is the best time of all.  Add a little French to the project, and I'm ecstatic, filled with joie (joy).



Copyright - Is My Work Protected?

Tuesday, April 14, 2015


"Once a teacher, always a teacher" seems to be one of the quotes that defines my life.  Now that I have been blogging for about two and a half years, I felt a desire, a need, to share what I have learned with others.  Blogging is a passion to be shared.

Am I an expert after only 2.5 years? Absolutely not.  Do I know HTML coding? Just the barest of all few lines.  Is my blog widely popular, read by tens of thousands, followed by thousands, sought out by magazine editors?  No, but writing it gives me great self-fulfillment which is the only thing required.


copyright-information-protect-your-work


Keep reading; Copyright is coming.


tcu-spring-extended-education-catalog-cover
TCU Extended Education Catalog Spring 2015

Texas Christian University, TCU, in Fort Worth, Texas offers Extended Education classes for nominal fees, open to the public.  In TCU's Extended Education catalog last fall there was a call for instructors to teach new courses in the upcoming Spring semester (2015).  Do you see what's coming? Yes, I submitted a proposal for a Blog Writing Guide class.  That four-session, once-a-week class is now finished. There are now four new blogs out there!

That brings me to Copyright - Is My Work Protected?  When I shared copyright information with my handful of fledgling new bloggers, my suspicions were confirmed that copyright knowledge is fuzzy, vague, misunderstood, and sometimes, downright faulty, even to people who have some experience in the higher education world with writing that requires citation.

Here is the most important fact that blog writers may need to know about copyright. 

Citing is not permission.

You see a photo of THE PERFECT kitchen on the Internet, and 
you include it in your blog post about French Country Kitchens. 
All you have to do is to link back to the original source - right? 
Wrong. 

Several factors are involved in copyright regarding using copyrighted work.
Citing a source does not give permission to use the work. 
Permission must be granted for the photo to be used. 
Now, the photo may be free for use, but check the source.
Depending upon how the photo is used also is a factor;
check the US Copyright Law website for details.
Link to US Copyright provided below. 


The second most important fact that blog writers may need to know about copyright. 

An author's work is protected 
whether or not a copyright notice 
or © symbol is included in the work.

That photo of THE PERFECT kitchen does not have a watermark, 
or a copyright notice, or the name of the blog. 
Does that mean the photo is free to use without permission?
Nope. 


So, here is a summary about copyright that I shared with my fledgling new authors. The information is written specifically for Google Blogger authors, but most of it applies to all platforms.


Copyright 

All information is offered as general information, not as legal advice. Consult a lawyer for legal advice. 

There are two sides to copyright ©: 1] fair use of other's work and 2] protecting your own work.  Copyright is governed by the United States Copyright Law and is outlined in a one-page government flyer.  Authors' rights are protected whether or not a copyright notice or symbol is included in the work.  However, using the word Copyright and/or the symbol © reminds the reader that the work is copyrighted. 

TIPThe copyright symbol © is accessed by pressing

  • MAC - the OPTION key and the 'G' key at the same time
  • PC - ALT and 0169 while holding down the ALT key

Read Copyright | Fair Use  http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html 


In 1998, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) was signed into law to address both world wide ownership and ever-changing technology. The United States Copyright Office summary of DMCA is about 18 pages long. Below is a link to the summary in case you want to read it. 

Read DMCA: US Copyright Office Summary

A good resource for copyright information is found at Copyright & Fair Use by Stanford University Libraries.   http://fairuse.stanford.edu/overview/faqs/copyright-basics/
All works published in the United States before 1923 are in the public domain. Works published after 1922, but before 1978 are protected for 95 years from the date of publication. 
- See more at: http://fairuse.stanford.edu/overview/faqs/copyright-basics/#sthash.Ztfhiwby.dpuf

  • TIPThe lengthy quote above is indented.  To create an indented quote on your Blogger blog, use the  tool on the Composition toolbar.




Thoughts Regarding Fair Use of Others' Work 
  1. Citing a source does NOT constitute permission. 
  2. Citing a source when granted permission most always must be included, but sometimes not, like with Pexels' free photos
  3. Linking to a source is not copying another person's work; linking is giving the ADDRESS of another person's work so a reader can read/see the original work. 
  4. Only use photos for which you have permission: given, purchased, or your own.  
    • Use free photos from the internet. 
    • Ask to use another blogger's photos. 
    • Link back to sources that have granted permission. 
    • Use of Pinterest photos outside Pinterest is tricky. Check before use. 
  5. Music is copyrighted. Using background music on a post requires permission or copyright free music to use the music. Search the Internet for sites that offer copyright free music. 
  6. Quoted material requires diligence in determining permission to use. When in doubt, ask permission.  To use another blogger's commentary in a post, you must check with the blogger. See the US Copyright Law link for guidelines in using quotes from books, plays, poems, speeches, etc... 
  7. Fonts are also copyright protected. Read the fine print for any font you want to use. Some fonts, including purchased fonts, restrict use to personal use and/or to 'static' use. 
    • TIP: Static use means the font is used to create a document or image that remains fixed in place. Web use means the font is used to write statements live on a website (such as, in creating a blog post).  
Example
The fleur-de-lis is embedded into the .png file below.  This is a static use of the fleur-de-lis.   







Google Blogger and Copyright

Google states in the Blogger Terms of Service ...
Some of our Services allow you to upload, submit, store, send or receive content. You retain ownership of any intellectual property rights that you hold in that content. In short, what belongs to you stays yours.

Google Blogger adheres to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) and will remove content that violates copyright law. There is a form for people to submit copyright infringement.  Repeated infringements result in Blogger accounts being terminated. 

Read Blogger Copyright Tips 
https://support.google.com/blogger/answer/157170




Protect Your Work

Your work is automatically protected under copyright law, but a couple of actions on your part helps protect it.  In addition to including a copyright statement on your blog, include a watermark on photos you take. While neither of these actions prevent others from using your work without permission, they do alert readers that you own what they are seeing. 

Regardless of how little exposure you think your blog will receive, it is just a matter of time until someone uses your work without your permission. (Yes, it has happened even to my little blog.) Many people do not know copyright law and do not understand that work, especially photos, is/are still protected even if the work does not have a © notice. 

Copyright Statement
In Blogger, a Gadget titled 'Attribution' contains Google's copyright information that shows up at the bottom of every post.  Do not remove Google's copyright notice. 

Add a copyright statement to your blog site. Include four items.
  • Copyright or the symbol ©
  • Year - update each year to include a range of years (2012-2015) 
  • Author/Owner - your name or your blog's name 
  • Rights statement
    • All Rights Reserved - requires users to request permission
    • Some Rights Reserved - should seek additional information about how to write this
    • No Rights Reserved - places your work in the public domain
Example 
Copyright 2015 | botanic bleu | All Rights Reserved | 


Directions for Google Blogger 
  • Sign In to your blog.  Should take you to the Dashboard/Home page of your blog.
  • Click on your Blog Name. Should take you to the Overview page. 
  • Click on Layout in the left column. Takes you to the diagram with the boxes. 














    At the bottom of the Layout screen, find the Attribution gadget.  This is where you 'attribute' or acknowledge who owns the copyright.  Attribute used in a sentence, "To whom do you attribute his good manners."



    Click on Edit to open a pop-up box to Configure Attribution.


    • Write a copyright statement for your blog, such as:  Copyright 2015 | Your Blog Name | All Rights Reserved
    • Save. 
    • View Blog to see how it looks


    Watermark Photos
    Place a watermark (or simply just text) on copies of photos you take to help protect your work from being used without your permission. Do not add text to your one and only original photo.  Copy the photo and add the text to the copy.  Another preventative measure against unauthorized use of your photos is to use low resolution photos on the Internet. Keep your high resolution originals in one folder; keep low resolution copies with watermarks/text in another folder. 

    A thought:  Place the watermark/text so that it adds to the photo design or is unobtrusive. You want people to enjoy the photo... that's why you share it. 

    Example of a photo with text that shows ownership 

    The blog name/watermark is in the lower right corner. 






  • PicMonkey is a free photo editor program that can be downloaded from the Internet and can be used to add text to photos. 
  • MAC computers come with built-in Preview software that can be used to add text to a photo. 

  • One of the reasons to add a blog's name to a photo is so readers will know where to go to read about the photo or to read about similar topics. 

    UPDATE: Julie Blanner has an excellent tutorial for How To Properly Credit sources on Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, and a Blog Post. Clear, succinct, and spot-on advice. 


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    Thank you for reading botanic bleu, especially a L - O - N - G post 
    with only one pretty picture of flowers. 

    Is there anything else that we bloggers should think about copyright?

    Leave a comment giving us suggestions or insights.


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    If you enjoyed this post and would like to share 
    a LINK to it with friends, family, or your readers, 
    you have PERMISSION to use one photo 
    on your blog, on Facebook, and on Instagram.
    (one photo per social media) 
    Pin/Save any or all photos to Pinterest.
    Linking it to your Pinterest page 
    makes it easy to find for re-reading in the future. 

    Remember to credit the source 
    and to link back to this blog post. 

    There, you just successfully followed copyright rules! 
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    Evolving Easter Vignette - When Is It Finished?

    Friday, April 3, 2015

    When creating a table top vignette, 
    where do you begin, and where do you stop? 
    When is the vignette the final version? 
    Finishing a centerpiece is often the hardest part. 



    What recently began in my mind as a white vignette 
    turned into a purple one as seen in The Color of Easter
    Yet, I still had a white centerpiece forming in my mind 
    because white has been enticing me, calling to me as a siren.   



    However, blue, beloved bleu, continues also to call to me.  
    Since I've been collecting blue for many years, 
    many beautiful blue things have found a home with me. 


    B L U E 
    symbolizes 
    trust, 
    loyalty, 
    and
    confidence. 

    When I survey my mind trying to recognize 
    what are the things I value, hold dear, and seek, 
    trust and loyalty are at the top of the list. 
    My deepest sorrows have been caused by people 
    who broke their trust with me 
    and who were not loyal. 

    Yes, I love bleu for how beautiful it looks to me, 
    but I also love bleu for its symbolism. 


    So, as I rearranged the kitchen counter, 
    a blue and white grouping took the place of the purple setting on the island. 
    Not a hard thing to do, just move pretty blue things together like... 
    the kitchen towel with the blue bunnies, 
    a clear vase with blue speckled eggs, 
    and a tiny little frosty blue bunny. 



    The dear little bunny came from Goodwill 
    and sits someplace visible all year, 
    moving from spot to spot. 



    As much as I enjoyed the blue and white, 
    an all-white grouping kept nagging at me. 
    The only way to quiet a nagging is 
    to do something about the reason for the nagging. 



    Out came the white pitcher, the white creamer, and 
    a smiling white iron doorstop bunny holding a basket. 



    The basket holds flowers, not eggs. 



    Four-inch bedding plants surrounded by preserved moss 
    add height and a touch of nature. 



    A little touch of bleu speckled eggs just had to fill the creamer. 
    A white cotton hand towel with embroidery rounds out the white grouping. 
    Five items inside the white wicker basket. 

    So, is it finished now? 


    Not exactly. 
    The redbud branches still have a few days of beauty left in them. 



    The white vignette will truly become all white 
    (almost white except blue eggs
    when the redbud blooms die. 

    Then, it will be finished. 

    How did I know when to stop adding items to the grouping? 
    The question is answered by what went into the grouping. 

    1. Texture - White wicker basket, preserved moss, hand towel  
    2. Movement - Tall flowers, medium height bunny, low creamer 
    3. Theme - bunny, eggs for the season 
    4. Color - shades of white, monochromatic scheme  
    5. Number of items - an odd number 
    6. Focal point - bunny: focus created by central place, 
    pitchers pointing toward bunny, oblong flower vase 
    angled behind bunny, towel leads to bunny  

    Once I had all six of these elements, 
    I knew the grouping was completed. 

    See Vignette Designs Series #1 for the first 
    in a series of five posts with detailed analyses 
    of how to create vignettes. 

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