View allAll Photos Tagged changingtable
Nursery bedding inspired by my little one's nusery set. This will become one of the bedrooms for my little Lati Belle ~ she fits in that tiny crib!
We installed new shelves above Max's changing table. I love installing shelves. Just cleans things up. Being proactive and getting things off the changing table. Max is grabbing things now and soon will be throwing.
Still working on wall decorations.... see note.
I have been meaning for ages to put some more pictures of Grayson's Nursery on Flickr since it was finished (or nearly) it took a while as he came early and the room was not finished.
This is my entry for the Complete The Room Challenge on Modulars by Kristel.
To finish off the room, I added:
- a white carpet (these are newbie parents...),
- a striped area rug,
- a white crib with mobile,
- wall art,
- a diaper pail (those parents should put a lid on that stink...),
- a dresser/changing table combo with a bottle of baby powder and lotion,
- a rocking chair,
- a plant in the window,
- a toy chest stocked with a space shuttle and UFO,
- a shelf showcasing a much too large for baby toy airplane (you know... overeager parents...),
- and finally a kitty wondering where is her baby.
KAZZA - LittleDwellingBabyCustomClosetSet - (HW) exclusive SL
- copy/mod - curtain 5li - partition (crib&bath) 3li - panel (changingtable&bunkingbed) 1li - woodfloor 6li - 66L$ each - ty♥
It's not a corner, but anyway. I like how this came together. We don't use it much right now because the baby doesn't sleep in this room yet, so it's easy to keep neat.
A few more of Isabelle Mae! I've been saving these to share today, cause what's more cliché than bare feet, right? Scavenger Hunt, #13, bare feet! Happy Cliche Saturday everyone!
© 2011 Holly E Clark, All Rights Reserved
This is my entry for the Complete The Room Challenge on Modulars by Kristel.
To finish off the room, I added:
- a white carpet (these are newbie parents...),
- a striped area rug,
- a white crib with mobile,
- wall art,
- a diaper pail (those parents should put a lid on that stink...),
- a dresser/changing table combo with a bottle of baby powder and lotion,
- a rocking chair,
- a plant in the window,
- a toy chest stocked with a space shuttle and UFO,
- a shelf showcasing a much too large for baby toy airplane (you know... overeager parents...),
- and finally a kitty wondering where is her baby.
This is a god send. No more running across the room from the changing table to the tub. Can do two babies at a time or have a helper. You can rez out a box of diapers and even pick the size you want. Baby Lucian is soaking in the tub and little Jamais is on the potty with his favorite book. This is a must have in every nursery. Come get it from The French Baby Closet. maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Montsoreau/90/62/1502.
synfullywycked.wixsite.com/dannidarkthron/post/the-french...
Look at the size of him! He is now 16lbs 8ozs and 24 &1/2 inches long..soon we will need a new car seat and probably a changing pad too (!)
time {for a change} for ODC
Found this abandoned changing table outside in Hackettstown. Either the kid no longer needs it, or they have a serious stinky issue.
Olympus Infinity Stylus Zoom 140 on Kodacolor 200.
www.1001pallets.com/2017/01/pallet-wood-double-changing-t...
I built this Pallet Wood Double Changing Table in March 2013, a few months before the birth of my daughter. The Challenge here was to build a maximum with hand tools.
Pallet Wood Double Changing Table:
I cut all the boards with a handsaw and installed by hand. Next, I mounted the various shelves and held them in place with small support pieces installed into the uprights. I used screws have been used for the final assembly. I did this so I could easily disassemble and reassemble the table when I wanted to move it. The table is 110cm long by 95cm high by 70cm wide. The size is great, except that it's not easily transportable or maneuverable in small spaces.
Pallet Wood Double Changing Table - the build:
At the construction level, it took six pallets in total. Each foot consists of two boards and three dice (one down, one in the middle, one at the top). I only placed the boards on top of them. Then I screwed reinforcements between each leg. The contour located above the top board is also screwed into the feet. The boards were sanded and then covered with stain. The work was done in about ten hours. So the table is in the bathroom for four years. The planks have but little movement, and it rather supports the moisture due to its place in a piece of water.
Cette table à langer a été construite en mars 2013, quelques mois avant la naissance de ma fille. Elle a depuis vécu d’innombrable aventures que ce soit grace à ma fille ou à mon fils né en 2015.
Le Challenge ici était de construire un maximum avec des outils a main. Donc toutes les planches ont été sciées à la main et clouées. Les différentes différents niveaux tiennent via des dés de palettes cloués dans les montants. Seuls des vis ont servies pour l’assemblage final (afin de pouvoir démonter et remonter la table à l’endroit voulu). La table faisant 110cm de long sur 95 cm de haut sur 70cm de large, elle n’est pas facilement transportable ni manoeuvrable dans de petits espaces.
Au niveau de la construction, il a fallu 6 palettes en tout. Chaque pied est constitué de deux planches et de 3 dés (un en bas, un au milieu, un au dessus). Les planches sont simplement déposées dessus. des renforts sont vissés entre chaque pieds. Le contour situé au dessus de la planche supérieure est également vissés dans les pieds.
Les planches ont été poncées puis ensuite recouvertes de lasure.
Le travail a été réalisé en une dizaine d’heure.
La table est donc dans la salle de bain depuis 4 ans. les planches n’ont que peu bouger et elle supporte plutôt bien l’humidité due à sa place dans une pièce d’eau.
Here's another great idea for a Changing Table!
So this is our changing table. A very special place both in my home and in my heart. I spend about a third of my day here. Baby likes to poop.
We lovingly put together Megan's nursery when I was pregnant with her (poor Eli doesn't even have a room yet) and it's one of the rooms I'll be saddest to leave behind. When she was a baby, the cot was where the changing table is now, the changing table was on the left (with the mirror letters next to it and shelf above it) and the chair was in the far corner. The three stripy canvases just visible on the right were painted by Nick and I using lots of masking tape. I'd taken the little cow from the 'bumble and moo' nursery range into B&Q and got paint to match it. The built in wardrobe doors (at the end of the bed) are also in co-ordinating stripes. It is a lovely light, cheerful bedroom.
Every day after lunch, Megan, Eli and I lie on the bed and read a couple of bedtime stories. Every day I pretend I'm going to leave Eli there for Megan's nap and say "goodnight Megan and Eli". Every day this makes them both giggle, and Megan tries to call my bluff but can't help herself calling out before I've got out of the room. Apparently Eli would be "too kicky" a bed partner.
This is my entry for the Complete The Room Challenge on Modulars by Kristel.
To finish off the room, I added:
- a white carpet (these are newbie parents...),
- a striped area rug,
- a white crib with mobile,
- wall art,
- a diaper pail (those parents should put a lid on that stink...),
- a dresser/changing table combo with a bottle of baby powder and lotion,
- a rocking chair,
- a plant in the window,
- a toy chest stocked with a space shuttle and UFO,
- a shelf showcasing a much too large for baby toy airplane (you know... overeager parents...),
- and finally a kitty wondering where is her baby.
I finally made curtains for my son's bedroom. I started redoing his bedroom last year
flickr.com/photos/azaleaw/1555089627/in/set-7215760231270...
I thought I might try to make something for Cuusoo! Girls like pretending to be young mothers, so if only there were baby Friends figures for next year...
The cot is realistic and there's stacks of diapers and a feeding bottle underneath the changing table!