Every kitchen or dining room needs one of these, don’t you think? The beauty of this project, is you can use whatever patterned paper that like to match your decor.
Jen over at Frame Fanatic gives you the how to.
Ideas For DIY
Every kitchen or dining room needs one of these, don’t you think? The beauty of this project, is you can use whatever patterned paper that like to match your decor.
Jen over at Frame Fanatic gives you the how to.
[…] This post was mentioned on Twitter by CraftGossip, Kristen Blaisdell. Kristen Blaisdell said: Make an EAT Sign: Every kitchen or dining room needs one of these, don’t you think? The beauty of this project, is… http://bit.ly/bOPGQj […]
[…] might also like this EAT sign I featured last […]
Okay, let’s be real—nothing ruins a zen garden vibe faster than a neon-green hose sprawled across your patio like a drunk caterpillar. I learned this the hard way when my mother-in-law visited and politely asked, “Is your hose… part of the decor?” Cue my frantic Googling of “how to hide garden hose without looking like a weirdo.”
After testing a ridiculous number of solutions (including a failed attempt to disguise one as a “rustic clothesline”), here are the best tricks that actually work—no landscaping degree required.
Perfect if: You want something cute that takes 2 minutes to set up.
I grabbed this simple hose pot from Amazon last summer, and it’s been a game-changer. It looks like a giant planter but secretly swallows 100 feet of hose. Pro tip: Skip the cheap plastic ones—they crack faster than my resolve to “water the plants daily.”
Perfect if: You want your hose to pull a Mission: Impossible disappearing act.
I was skeptical, but this hollow fake rock from Amazon actually works. Just plop it over your coiled hose, and boom—instant “rock garden.” Warning: It’s lightweight, so toss a brick inside if you live somewhere windy (learned that after mine rolled into the neighbor’s yard).
Perfect if: You’re tired of tripping over hose loops.
I splurged on a wall-mounted reel, and now my hose lives neatly coiled off the ground like a civilized garden tool. Key hack: Mount it at elbow height—unless you enjoy awkwardly squatting to reel it in.
Perfect if: You’re cheap and patient (my spirit animal).
I trained creeping thyme to sprawl over my hose along the garden edge. Other great options:
Avoid roses—hoses + thorns = a bad time.
Perfect if: You need seating and storage.
I repurposed an old wooden storage bench by drilling a hole near the spigot. Now my hose lives inside, and I have a place to sit while pretending to weed.
Burying a regular hose (it’ll kink and die a slow death).
Using PVC pipes (they crack faster than my patience with squirrels).
Letting it bake in the sun (UV rays turn hoses into brittle spaghetti).
Solution | Cost | Effort | Best For |
Hose Pot | $ | 2/10 | Renters, small spaces |
Fake Rock | $$ | 4/10 | Ninja-level hiding |
Wall Reel | $$ | 6/10 | Frequent hose-users |
Plant Cover | $ | 8/10 | Eco-warriors |
DIY Bench | $$ | 5/10 | Overachievers |
Your Turn!
Which hack are you trying? (Or do you have a better one? Spill your secrets—my hose is still judging me.)
Need more inspo? Check out:
P.S. If you spot my runaway fake rock in Ohio, let me know. 🌱
Oh, wow! This is SO CUTE!!!
Thanks Anne!
WOW! Thank you so much for posting about my “Eat” sign! You just made my day! :0)
You’re welcome Jen, love the colors!