A tired, old lampshade can bring down the entire room. But there's no need to replace the entire lamp when you can try sprucing up the shade with these easy tricks.
June 30, 2015
A tired, old lampshade can bring down the entire room. But there's no need to replace the entire lamp when you can try sprucing up the shade with these easy tricks.
Lamplight owes its beauty more to the lampshade than the bulb. To soften harsh light from a fabric or paper shade, try this gathered slipcover — especially easy for a round shade. Check your flame-retardent remnants and linen closet for a lightweight fabric in a pale-to-medium colour or pattern, and rustle up some narrow ribbon to make the fabric gather.
Caution: Halogen lights get very hot, so stick with heat-appropriate shades for those lamps.
Did you know you can spray paint a fabric shade for a snappier look? And you won't have to buy paint if you have some craft paint or leftover latex on hand.
Give extra interest to a plain paper or fabric lampshade with dark or black construction paper cutouts — also a fun way to decorate for special occasions. (Think leaf patterns for Thanksgiving, snowflake silhouettes for a winter holiday, hearts for Valentine's, jack-o-lanterns for Halloween, footballs for a Super Bowl party.) A medium-weight card stock works, too. Translucent white, cream, gold, beige and pastel shades give the best effect.
When cutting out the shapes, size them to the shade — not too large and not too small. Affix the shapes to the inside of the shade with double-sided tape, taking special care that paper doesn't touch, or lie too close to, the light bulb. Now turn on the lamp and see how the silhouettes appear almost "embedded" in the light. Paper cutouts will begin to curl over time, but they're easy to remove and replace.
These crafty DIY ideas to spruce up tired-looking lampshade are genius — and give you bragging rights as well!
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