Hawaiian Duvet Covers

Sin in Linen Inc.

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Sin in Linen Hawaiian Tiki Duvet Cover, Full/Queen
(Misc.) Sin in Linen Inc.

Gang washable
88 by 92-inch
Fits full and cynosure beds


Price: $124.00 $124.00

Answers

Decorating Advice?

I fancy to redecorate my bedroom, but I am having trouble finding a comforter/duvet that I like. I taste the weight of my current comforter, so I would definitely be open to a duvet pretence. I was thinking mostly black, white, and grey with...


Ceramics Barn is usually a great place to go for duvets. Also there is a area that allows you to design your duvet. Search on google "creating a duvet" and it will give you several options. While this is a more up-market way to go, it turns

Hawaiian Quilt by designer Dean Miller


www.deanmillerprints.com Hawaiian Olla podrida Comforter DM422 - Hawaiian Patchwork Comforter- Great mix of colors, fabrics, and coordinating designs ...

Stitch 'n' quilt, making accessories for your home
Stitch 'n' quilt, making accessories for your home ... 18 Chapter 2: The Bedroom Amish Shoo Fly Quilts Blocks Duvet Cover, ... 81 Victorian Crazy Quilt Shade, 82 Hawaiian Quilt Accessories 82 Table Topper, ...

Combines the best of both sewing and quilting. You'll love the more than 30 projects that are fast, easy and imaginative. Create custom decorator touches for your home or as gifts.


Orange Coast Magazine
Orange Coast Magazine While this 3- year-old store specializes in merchandising Hawaiian print fabrics , ... selection of Hawaiian print pillowcases, draperies, and duvet covers. ...

Orange Coast Magazine is the oldest continuously published lifestyle magazine in the region, bringing together Orange County¹s most affluent coastal communities through smart, fun, and timely editorial content, as well as compelling photographs and design. Each issue features an award-winning blend of celebrity and newsmaker profiles, service journalism, and authoritative articles on dining, fashion, home design, and travel. As Orange County¹s only paid subscription lifestyle magazine with circulation figures guaranteed by the Audit Bureau of Circulation, Orange Coast is the definitive guidebook into the county¹s luxe lifestyle.


Designing Your Home on a Budget
Designing Your Home on a Budget A grass skirt from an import store becomes a bed ruffle and a surfer-print duvet cover continues the look. Old surfboards on brackets become shelves, ...

Emilie Barnes teams up with professionaldesigner Yoli Brogger inthis updated and larger trade version of the popular Decorating Dreams on a Budget (more than 70,000 copies sold).Revealing the secrets to decorating beautifully on a budget, Emilie and Yoli providebasic design principles and ways to implement or break them to create a uniquestyle. Readers will discover how to add little touches to liven up a room know when to refurbish and when to buy new find affordable new and used treasures make a childās room fun From artistic treatments for windows to choosing a beautifulbedspread, the suggestions and howātoāsteps Emilie and Yoli provide will help womenestablish a comfortable, inviting home.



A fix for everything that's in a fix

Perhaps a shred of your favorite area rug is threadbare. You know, the one that really ties the cubicle quarters together.</p><p>Or your sons, playing ball in the house <span type="italic">again</span>, smashed an heirloom coat into more than a dozen pieces.</p><p>Or a tornado battered the 300-confine bronze deer in your backyard, severing an antler.</p><p>Or your toaster, a intermingling present, is toast.</p><p>No, there aren&#x92;t apps to fix them. But there are <span sort="italic">people</span> who can. You moral need to know where to find them.</p><p>From a skilled artisan who can smooth chipped champagne coupes to a supplier of at a premium equipment for the hottest accessory in hipsterdom (psst, typewriters), Lodge + Home has your back and then some.</p><p>Fixing stuff, instead of chucking it in the landfill, is the finery thing we can do to honor Mother Earth and prevent the coming from looking like &#x93;WALL-E,&#x94; with mountains of enfeebled junk.</p><p>Consumer Reports&#x92; rule of thumb is to substitute only if the repair costs 50 percent or more of the piece&#x92;s value. That&#x92;s hands-on advice, but significance &#x97; like beauty &#x97; is in the eye of the beholder.</p><p>&#x93;One patron bought a glass for 25 cents in a sale and her old man questioned why she would pay $15 for me to repair it,&#x94; says Ray Williams, who for decades has mended crystal and china in his Shawnee people's home studio. </p><p>&#x93;But she drank from it each day. It was her favorite.&#x94;</p><p><span type="subhead">Saving silk, stuffed animals and spondulix</span></p><p>Downstairs in the Ranchmart shopping center in Leawood, across from the big theater, is a tiny shop called Plaza Weavers. Judging by appearances, it looks like a dry cleaner with a marker, hanging garments, bedspreads and tablecloths. But the back room is a contrasting story.</p><p>At a long work table sits P Belinda Milford and her sister Sandra Hermans. Both are wearing substantial magnifiers reminiscent of blackjack dealer visors. Their 10-year-old niece, Tara Truelove, and Hermans&#x92; German lead, Bruno, who are hanging out in the back, are instant clues that this is a family function.</p><p>The sisters learned weaving skills from &#x93;Aunt Mary,&#x94; who unquestionably is second cousin Mary Gill. She founded Plaza Weavers in 1950. Gill taught them weaving techniques, including close-hole, large-hole, knitting, upholstery, carpet, overweaving and more.</p><p>&#x93;It took years to learn,&#x94; says Hermans, who was repairing holes on a virginal hand-crocheted throw. This restoration job, because it took more than a day, will expense about $300.</p><p>&#x93;Mary could figure out anything,&#x94; Milford says. &#x93;She even found a way to professional repairing ultrasuede.&#x94;</p><p>Besides favorite sweaters and conform to jackets that moths have munched on, customers bring in torn courtyard rugs, tablecloths, stuffed toys and even furniture. A carpeted ottoman with a ripped side was one of the jobs waiting for them recently. </p><p>The sisters also imagine house calls to repair carpet damaged from wine spills, candle wax, fireplace embers and pet claws and urine. Another proletarian job is ripped duvet covers. Milford was working on a white eyelet comforter that a little one had cut with scissors.</p><p>&#x93;Customers decorate rooms around comforters,&#x94; Milford says. &#x93;They&#x92;d rather mend than redo their bedroom.&#x94;</p><p>The sisters can work wonders with most any constitution except chiffon and velvet. It&#x92;s usually hard to tell where the mending took slot, so it will be marked by a simple white thread stitch that the consumer can easily pull away.</p><p>The family receives m from around the country, even from Hawaii. They&#x92;re the third generation of the dying art of weaving, also acquiring skills from their retired matriarch, Connie Truelove, who also ran Plaza Weavers. Will 10-year-old Tara Truelove, their chum&#x92;s daughter, be the fourth generation?</p><p>&#x93;I want to carry on the institution,&#x94; says Tara, who helps at the counter for now.</p><p><link class="subhead">If it can&#x92;t be fixed, line of work</span></p><p>When it comes to small appliances, not much has stumped Phong Dang of Mr. Fix It and Appliance Hold in Overland Park. Not treadmills, KitchenAid mixers or coffeemakers. He&#x92;s even obstinate a classic monkey-with-the-cymbals toy.</p><p>Dang toils on young appliances while manager Tom Murrin interacts with customers in the keep, which includes new and used vacuums, from $19 to high-end Dysons.</p><p>&#x93;We&#x92;ve become a mislead-away society,&#x94; Murrin says. &#x93;People predominantly just replace toasters instead of fixing them. But the Sadness-era people still repair stuff, and now younger people are interested in that, too. They get the na part of the repair story.&#x94;</p><p>Customers can bring in their nonworking poppycock for a free diagnosis. If a waffle iron or what-have-you can&#x92;t be fixed put away, customers have the option of trading it in for a similar little appliance instead of throwing it away.</p><p>Murrin likes the on top of the world stories.</p><p>&#x93;We fixed a toaster that a couple got as a wedding accounted for right a long time ago,&#x94; he says. &#x93;The kind with the stuff the clergy (on the) cord.&#x94;</p><p><span class="subhead">Sad stories get to her</extend over></p><p>From her wood-clad cottage in the Waldo neighborhood, Joan Jehlen has made a calling of fixing things of value, mostly ceramics. An earthenware pitcher she recently rooted once was in pieces. Now, you can&#x92;t tell where it&#x92;s been mended.</p><p>&#x93;She&#x92;s an artist,&#x94; says Julia Hiles, proprietor of Hiles Precious Metal Plating & Silversmiths, who recommends the m of Jehlen and Ray Williams, the china and glass repair craftsman to customers. &#x93;It&#x92;s an art stamp.&#x94;</p><p>Jehlen shrugs off her own skills, even though she has a master&#x92;s bit by bit in sculpture from the Kansas City Art Institute.</p><p>&#x93;I&#x92;m good at fakery,&#x94; she says. That &#x93;fakery&#x94; includes painting &#x97; identical colors and working with shiny or flat surfaces are the biggest challenges. She&#x92;s done drudgery for museums, but the majority is for everyday people. She&#x92;s semi-retired, but takes on the &#x93;sad cases,&#x94; pieces that at bottom mean something to people, like children&#x92;s artwork that the cat flat.</p><p>Besides an art background, a discerning personality is required for the job, Jehlen says.</p><p>&#x93;I&#x92;m one of the pickiest people I differentiate,&#x94; she says. &#x93;I&#x92;m a Virgo, and I don&#x92;t usually believe in that ingredients, but I want things to look right.&#x94;</p><p><h3><course class="factbox_head">Keep from for do-it-yourselfers</h3></p><p></span>If you&#x92;d like to try to tackle the repair yourself, check b determine these sites:</p><p>&bull; <a href ="http://homerepair.about.com/" object="_blank">homerepair.about.com</a> (maintenance tips)</p><p>&bull; <a href ="http://www.howstuffworks.com/" aim="_blank">howstuffworks.com</a> (instructions and illustrations)</p><p>&bull; <a href ="http://www.manualsonline.com/%20" butt="_blank">manualsonline.com </a>(300,000 owners&#x92; manuals)</p><p>&bull; <a href ="http://www.repairclinic.com/" object="_blank">repairclinic.com</a>, <a href ="http://www.searspartsdirect.com/partsdirect/marker.action" target="_blank">searspartsdirect.com</a>, <a href ="http://www.partselect.com/" goal="_blank">partselect.com</a> or <a href ="http://www.govacuum.com/" quarry="_blank">govacuum.com</a> (for parts)</p><p><h3>Drinking-glass and china</h3></p><p></span> <span class="lion-hearted">The scene:</span> Ray Williams&#x92; studio is neatly arranged with tools on pegboard, step out and a grinding machine for glass. Shelves of objects await his mending effort, including broken wine goblets, a shattered teapot and a decanter missing a plug.</p><p> <span class="bold">Foresee to wait:</span> 7 business days for lorgnon; 4 to 6 weeks for china</p><p> <span class="stout">The cost:</span> $15 per stem for telescope; $55 on up for china</p><p> <span class="conspicuous">Greatest save:</span> Williams rescued a Kansas Conurbation customer&#x92;s damaged Chihuly art glass piece from becoming mosaic fodder by altering it slightly.</p><p><h3>Framework</h3></p><p></span> <span class="bold">The sphere: </span>Plaza Weavers looks like a dry cleaning partnership. A ripped comforter, a hand-crocheted throw with unraveled sections and torn carpeted ottoman awaited repairs recently.</p><p> <overpass class="bold">The wait:</go over> Two weeks at the most; rushes are available</p><p> <span class="clear">The cost:</span> $40 is the starting premium for household items. </p><p> <span class="rash">Greatest save: </span>A puppy damaged a purchaser&#x92;s room-sized heirloom area rug. &#x93;We matched the sample really, really well,&#x94; owner Belinda Milford says. </p><p><h3>Metal</h3></p><p></stretch> <span class="bold">The episode: </span>Shelves of broken teapots, damaged trophies and mangled silverware (the scraps disposal got them) at Hiles Plating await silversmith John Peel&#x92;s profession. Under a sheet, a 300-pound bronze deer needs a new antler. The Branson tornado damaged it. Beyond the studio, trays of supervision-regulated liquid metal and acid are used to replate disobeyed items. </p><p> <span class="bold">The stop: </span>Two to six weeks, depending on the item.</p><p> <span breeding="bold">The cost:</span> $50 on up for repairs. Replating a doorknob typically costs $23; polishing, $10. </p><p> <reach over class="bold">Greatest retrieve: </span>A truck ran over a customer&#x92;s 100-year-old true silver baby cup and flattened it. Since it was a pancake, it had to be reshaped, the dent marks had to be removed and the market reattached. &#x93;It looked amazing,&#x94; says possessor Julia Hiles, whose husband&#x92;s grandfather started the dealing in 1929. He was a jewelry designer. Hiles&#x92; repairs have included a dulcet service from the Missouri governor&#x92;s mansion, Kentucky Derby trophies, Yellowish Globe awards and silver from the White House.</p><p><h3>Who fixes what?</h3></p><p></period> <span class="bold">Cane and run furniture repair and furniture refinishing</span></p><p>&bull; Revelle Lee Cane and Scoot, Independence, 816-833-2900</p><p> <span class="undaunted">Clocks</span></p><p>&bull; Bryant Clock Restoration, 1031 E. 5th St., 816-842-3090</p><p> <term class="bold">Fabric, linens, rugs, carpets, upholstered trappings</span></p><p>&bull; Plaza Weavers, 3817 W 95th St., Ranchmart Shopping Center drop level, Leawood, 913-649-7552, <a href ="http://www.plazaweavers.com/" aim="_blank">plazaweavers.com</a></p><p> <span kind="bold">Glass, crystal, porcelain and china restoration</interval></p><p>&bull; Ray Williams Glass and China Repair, 913-314-8887; end-off site at Art Glass Productions, 5812 Johnson Journey, Mission, <a href ="http://kcglassandchinarepair.com/" quarry="_blank">kcglassandchinarepair.com</a></p><p>&bull; Joan Jehlen (ceramics only. She takes things on a proves-by-case basis), 816-333-5856</p><p> <span class="fearless">Metal repair and refinishing </span></p><p>&bull; Hiles Plating & Silversmiths, 2030 Broadway, 816-421-6450, Facebook; rusticate-off site at Hiles Two, 7445 Broadway, <a href ="http://hilesplating.com/" quarry="_blank">hilesplating.com</a></p><p> <span stock="bold">Leather</span></p><p>&bull; Arrow Fabricare, 3838 Troost Ave., 816-931-2452, <a href ="http://www.arrowfabricare.com/" quarry="_blank">arrowfabricare.com</a></p><p>&bull; Textile Misery Group, Leather Pro, Grandview, 816-966-9065, <a href ="http://textilecaregroup.com/services/leather-pro" goal="_blank">textilecaregroup.com</a></p><p> <span type="bold">Small appliances such as coffeemakers, toasters and vacuums</bridge></p><p>&bull; Mr. Fix It and Appliance Sales, 7531 Metcalf Ave., Overland Preserve, 913-232-9486, <a href ="http://mrfixitandappliancesales.com/junction-us/" target="_blank">mrfixitandappliancesales.com</a></p><p> <extent class="bold">Small electronics including microwaves, turntables and televisions </extend over></p><p>&bull; Fryer Electronic Repair, 5937 Merriam Ride, Merriam, 913-262-8787</p><p> <span class="venturesome">Typewriters and cash registers</span></p><p>&bull; Execuline Affair Systems, 3021 Merriam Lane, Kansas Bishopric, Kan., 913-384-4646, <a href ="http://www.execuline.com/" end="_blank">execuline.com</a></p><p> <span domain="bold">Wooden furniture service</span></p><p>&bull; Abbot&#x92;s, 5900 E. Red Bridge Route, 816-765-8838</p><p><h3>Reuse, recycle</h3></p><p></span>&bull; Getting rid of appliances &#x97; overwhelmingly and small &#x97; can be a hassle. Check with your city or county to see which items they brook for recycling and to find out about special recycling events. KC Appliance recycles appliances, 816-763-3352, <a href ="http://www.kcappliancerecycling.com/" butt="_blank">kcappliancerecycling.com</a></p><p>&bull; Most artistically Buy accepts many electronics items free for recycling, including TVs 32 inches or smaller, enrage fail mounts, car DVD players, MP3 players, stereo components, rumble boxes, cameras, computers, phones, CDs and DVDs, video games and accessories. For a liber veritatis, go to <a href ="http://www.bestbuy.com/site/Universal-Promotions/Recycling-Electronics/pcmcat149900050025.c?id=pcmcat149900050025" objective="_blank">bestbuy.com/recycling</a></p><p>&bull; Surplusage Exchange recycles microwaves, computers, phones and more for feel mortified fees, 518 Santa Fe, 816-472-0444, <a href ="http://surplusexchange.org/instal/information/recycle-events/" target="_helpless">http://surplusexchange.org</a>

Tropical Print White Black Floral Bedding Duvet Cover Set King

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