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Three small fixes and one improvement

Though I don’t particularly love the process, fixing things is one of my favorite ways to save money.   Repairing what you already own is almost always cheaper than buying something new, and it extends the life of something that might have otherwise been at the end of its useful life.

Win!

The other day, I took a load of laundry out and found that the binding around the edge of my black fleece had come loose from about half of the collar.

how to repair an old navy fleece

I snagged this on clearance at Old Navy years ago, so I think I only paid something like $2 for it.   But it still has plenty of life in it, so I used my sewing machine to fix the binding.

It was a little tricky due to the stretchy nature of the binding, so my mending job wouldn’t withstand super close inspection.   I really only wear this at home when I’m chilly, though, so it’s good enough for me.

IMG_5800

In the same load of laundry, I discovered that a pair of jeans was coming apart at the waistband.

ripped waistband

I got these jeans at Goodwill last year, so again, it’s not like I sunk a lot of money into them.   But I knew I could stitch ’em up pretty easily.

I didn’t have any orange-ish thread, so I just sewed right over the loose threads, using a dark thread.   This way, from a distance you can’t really see that I used non-matching thread.

how to fix jeans waistband

Plus, I always wear a belt with these, and I pretty much never tuck my shirt in, so it’s not like this is a visible area of the jeans anyway.

Know why I was especially pleased with myself about these two fixes?

I took care of them as soon as I found the issues, instead of leaving them in the to-be-mended pile for an embarrassingly long time.

Ahem.

Mending is such a cost-effective use of sewing skills!

The other thing I fixed was a fiber-optic Christmas tree, which the girls like to have in their room.   When we plugged it in this year, it seemed awfully dim, and if you shook the base, it sounded like something was rattling around.

Even though this is certainly not an heirloom quality tree, it did have screws on the bottom, so I took it apart.

fixing a fiber optic christmas tree

It turned out that a screw which holds the lightbulb upright had gone missing.   The lightbulb was all cockeyed, which meant it wasn’t shining in the right direction.

I didn’t have any teeny screws, so I borrowed on from the bottom of the base and secured the light bulb.

inside of fiber optic christmas tree

fixed fiber optic

And now the tree is shining brightly.

mini fiber optic Christmas tree

The last thing I have to share is really an improvement, not a fix-it job, and it’s been waiting for a ridiculously long time.

(9 years, actually.)

We bought this corner unit when I was pregnant with Zoe, and ever since the day we got it, something bugged me. Do you see it?

black cd rack

The underside of the top piece is not black.

top of black cd rack

And since this is a fairly tall item, the not-black-ness is visible almost all the time.

Apparently this didn’t bug me to an incredible degree because it has sat there in its not-black state for 9 years.

But when we got a warm day recently, it occurred to me that it was perfect weather for spray painting.

(I am sure that this is what you all think of on warm days as well.   “Hmm.   What could I spray paint??”)

So I took the top off, brought it to the back yard, and used the last of a can of black paint to fix it up.

IMG_5919

I feel much better about this now.

Unfortunately, I now realized that the bottoms of all the small shelves are also not black.

IMG_5916

However, this is mostly just visible when you’re viewing the shelf from a low angle.

Still, next time I have the black spray paint out, I might take care of at least the top few shelves.

And I will try not to wait another 9 years.   😉

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P.S.   I know some of you will be thinking, “What in the world do they have CDs and DVDs for??”

We’ve now pretty much switched over to MP3s for music and streaming for movies, but because we aren’t the youngest of spring chickens, we already had a pretty good stack of CDs by the time MP3s came along.

(Hey, at least we don’t have a huge cassette tape collection!)

We transferred the music from the CDs onto MP3 players or our iPhones, but I haven’t quite figured out what to do with the CDs.   It’s not really legal to give them away while still keeping the music on our digital devices and I sort of hate to just chuck them all in the trash.   So they’re just sitting in the corner for now.

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lisa

Friday 12th of December 2014

I've moved all our CDs to a very large binder style case. It wasn't cheap, but now they don't take up so much space. My soldier son did the same with his DVDs before he shipped to South Korea.

Tracy

Thursday 11th of December 2014

Everyone used to live like that- make do and mend- until advertising brain-washed people into believing life is all about shopping! I just bought obamacare, so there will be a lot more make-do-and-mend in my future. And I just pulled out the big fleece dressing gown I paid $2 for in a sale because it had a torn seam. Mended in 5 minutes by hand...

Lisa L

Wednesday 10th of December 2014

I love this post! Your humor, your desire to save money (and the planet!) and your honesty! Keep it up! I read your blog every day! Thank you!

Emily @ Simple Cheap Mom

Wednesday 10th of December 2014

I'm guilty of not mending my mending pile. I'm not a whiz with the sewing machine, so it usually takes as long for me to hem up a pant cuff as it did by hand, but I'm learning.

That bookshelf looks so much better now!

Freckles

Wednesday 10th of December 2014

For those wanting a trip down memory lane ...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tO0Vq4fj3ho

And boy, do I remember the sound of that telephone ring as my parents still used their phone like that up until about a decade ago ....

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