Showing posts with label RV curtains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RV curtains. Show all posts

Friday, April 3, 2015

Loft Closet Curtains

Even before we put memory foam over top the mattress in the loft, getting things out of the closet up there was difficult.  Try learning across a bed crammed into a space with about 4 feet of height, while standing on a wobbly metal ladder (or better yet, leaning across the bed with your legs suspended in midair) and digging things from a small closet. Then add a couple inches of memory foam on top of the nasty little RV-stock mattress, which lifted the height of the mattress to the point of making the closet doors difficult to open.

So I had my husband pull the doors off.  He stowed them on their sides inside the closet.

This is after the closet doors were pulled off and stowed inside.
And I made little curtains for each opening, each on a tiny curtain, with the hardware mounted inside each opening.
Ta Da!  Curtains!
With the curtains, it is easier to access items in the closet.  I can just push my hand through and grab things.  I no longer have to muscle the mattress downwards while trying to pull the door outwards to me. I don't have to be laying on the bed facing the closet to get to the items inside. I can learn across the bed from the ladder to the loft for most things, without my legs suspended outwards in midair.

The denim rag quilt in the picture was recently finished. It lies on top of the loft mattress and memory foam.

I love the "nesting" I am doing,  of taking this RV, Magnus Agnes, as we call her, and changing all these little things to make her more livable for us.

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

RV Closet Door Curtains

We live in an RV, a 5th Wheel toy hauler, Keystone Raptor. We moved in in March 2014.

One of the first things I discovered is that the mirrored sliding doors to the closet in the "bow" of the RV, the part that hangs over and hooks up to the truck, were heavy and noisy to slide open. They were large and inflexible and made the closet dark. There is about a foot of space between the queen bed and the closet, so with those mirrored, sliding closet doors, I was constantly having to muscle them around just to get to the side of the bed to make it, and that was done on tippy toes. Searching for clothes in that dark closet was difficult too, since I'd stand squeezed in between the side of the bed and the opening to the closet. We installed battery-powered lights but we still had the problem of the noise and the lack of flexibility with the heavy mirrored doors.

So we removed them because I had a better idea. The plan was going to repurpose denim and make curtain panels. So here is the series I went through, discovering how to do it.

First off, this is what our bed looks like. On it is a quilt I found in a thrift shop that I just loved and used in our old slide-in camper that we called Bertha. The interior of that camper was blue, so that quilt worked great on the bed in the loft over the cab. Since this Raptor has a queen size bed also, and I loved that quilt, (it came to represent the fun of going out on adventures) I kept it. At the foot of the bed is another quilt, a beautiful gift from a good friend. She got the colors spot on, right? I love it. She had never seen the other quilt. She was going simply off what she thought I would like.  How cool is that? I love BOTH quilts.


So when I made the patchwork curtain panel, it didn't look right with the quilts which surprised me and I couldn't have that. The panel was nice and heavy, and wouldn't wrinkle (well, OK, it was wrinkly in a Bohemian way) but it was just too busy-looking, too junky.


So I took it apart and made several large throw pillows for my grandchildren and some for grandnephews.


They all loved them because they can go on the floor and are meant to take a beating. The best part is that they have pockets and zippers in them which means all kinds of cool little hiding places for stuff, hopefully not bubble gum. But hey, have fun!

So I knew that repurposing old jeans was going to look too busy, and I was already sold on doing a denim look throughout the RV. I went to Walmart (the local area not having any fabric stores within 30 miles) and bought several yards of  a midweight denim and a heavy duty tension rod. I also bought several yards of a yellowish/orange cotton print to use as a trim on the denim. I liked how this looked. And it sure was flexible and serviceable. You could just pull it to the sides to look for things in the closet, and it makes it so easy to make the bed or to get in and out of bed on my side.

However, the midweight denim, lost some of it's stiffness and didn't fall straight (like in this picture) after a while. The moisture, which you are bound to have in an RV with the varying temps, made the denim more wrinkly and less like a panel.


So I added another panel.  Wa la!


T-Shirt quilt - University of Maryland Theme

 T-Shirt quilt I made for my daughter with her University of Maryland era T-shirts. I loved doing machine quilting on this and had fun going...