Friday, October 9, 2009

Mirror Mirror on the wall






Using mirrors can be tricky, because what they reflect is not always what you want hanging on your wall.  I like to use mirrors across the room from windows because they reflect the outdoors and bounce light all around the room.  I knew I wanted to put mirror up in the dining area of our combination living and dining room.  Across from the "dining wall" is a large sliding glass door.

I was planning on using this mirror that I had made for a previous house:






All I did to make this mirror was to mount 8 12 inch mirrors onto a piece of plywood, and then frame it with some window casing.  Originally I was going to have black dowels separating the mirrors, but I did my math wrong, cut one of the casings too short - did not have the budget to buy another piece of casing so I had to make do with what I had.  It still turned out fine but it always bothered me.

When we moved in to this house that mirror wound up looking like this:



Whoops!!  At first I was upset, but then I realized I had an opportunity to right what I had wronged.

Back to the drawing board (or back to Hobby lobby for mirrors).  All they had were 8 inch mirrors, so I wound up making 2 sets of four mirrors.

This is a super easy project, and is pretty inexpensive - although moulding does add up - and it's best if you can catch the mirrors on sale.

For each one you'll need:
- a 24X24 piece of MDF (mine was 1/4 inch thick) $2.25
- 4 eight inch beveled mirros (you can usually find these in the wedding decoration aisle) $1.99 each
- 4 feet of lattice (I used 1 and 1/8 inches wide) - $1.20
- 8 feet of moulding (I used window casing and bought a little extra so there would be some room for error)
3.5 inches wide - $1.29 per linear foot
-Gorilla Glue
Total cost for each mirror= around $20!!

First I cut all my pieces, (Well, I had Jarrod do it this time so there would be no mistakes :-)), then doused them with some satin finish black spray paint.  I worked from the inside out, gluing down the lattice in the middle.  Once those were exactly where I wanted them, I put glued the mirrors down.  After the mirrors were in place, I glued the casings as well.  (I didn't want to nail the casings #1 because of holes to fill and #2 because I didn't want to budge the mirros out of place by nailing - or BREAK anything again)
This is what I wound up with:





Not bad for $20!

I'm linking this up to the Gorilla Glue party over at Shanty2Chic.  Thanks girls, for all of your inspiring ideas!!






Shanty 2 Chic


P.S.  I'm sorry, I did read the rules and I'm disqualified from the contest because I don't have pictures of when I made these.

18 comments:

  1. This is such a great idea! It turned out terrific.

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  2. I love it! They look beautiful above your dining room table. Great idea, and very thrifty!

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  3. Way to turn that frown upside down! What a great idea!

    www.thekeltonscozycottage.blogspot.com

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  4. You're still a winner...these turned out great!!!

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  5. Those look great! Love it! I came from Shanty2Chic

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  6. Very pretty! I love them :)
    You did a great job!

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  7. Very nice on your dining room wall! I love the window look.

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  8. This is gorgeous...love mirrors on the wall! In fact, that was my gorilla glue project too :o)

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  9. I love this idea!! It really classes up the room.

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  10. I really love the windows...they turned out great!

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  11. I really like the mirrored window frames. It's a good idea hanging them across from a window so they reflect the outdoors.

    I like using window frames for framing art. Also finding old window frames that make a great art piece on their own.

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  12. You did a great job. I have a party Its SO Very Creative and I hope you will post it. I love this.

    AND I followed you.

    cheri

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  13. I love these mirrors also, I was wondering how you hung them on the wall.

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  14. Awesome stuff on this site! Hopefully you still recieve comments from this one.(2 years later.) I wanted to say that couldn't you cut a dowl in half and glue it across the top of the mirrors, to seperate them?

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  15. How did you secure to the wall? Nails, glue?

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  16. How did you secure to the wall? Nails, glue?

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