Not exact matches
Travel with a portable safety kit, and don't be afraid to think D.I.Y. Throw in a few electrical outlet
covers (they're small and convenient)- non-marking masking tape can also be used to
cover outlets, pad sharp corners, tamp down wayward wires and keep
doors and
cupboards shut.
The only things that unit owners actually had contracted to purchase were the fee simple rights to occupy the cubic feet of defined air space, the cheap floor
coverings (not the floors themselves) the wall
coverings (cheap paint jobs), and not the walls themselves (often including the drywall panels themselves), some kitchen and bathroom
cupboards and fixtures, some appliances, some interior
doors and
door knobs on closet
doors etc, but not the windows, not the service wiring, plumbing and heating / cooling duct work etc., etc..
I sometimes use anaglyptic paper too, I intend to
cover a
door of a
cupboard with it... doubt I will get that job done though!
I chose to use the
cupboard doors because they were the only thing I could find that could
cover the entire hole without looking ridiculously too large and awkward.
Here is the post about
covering the fireplace niche with the
cupboard doors.
Don't think wallpaper is just for walls; it's easy to
cover wardrobe
doors, line a
cupboard or a tabletop and is the perfect way to use up paper from previous projects or any samples you might have saved.
Cover the back of open shelving to give books and ornaments a pretty backdrop, or hang in hidden spaces (such as your under - stair
cupboard) for an unexpected hit of pattern every time you open the
door.