It's WISE to DIY: Thrify Ideas for the Do-It-Yourselfer

She Is Literally Painting Cornstarch On Her Window But The Result Is Gorgeous!

This DIY is quick, easy, fun and cheap.  What could be better!?

If you have any windows in your home or apartment where you want the natural light but need a little privacy, this is a truly lovely solution.

Granted, it is a bit feminine but I am wondering how we can use this idea and make it masculine, as well…

Maybe you can think of some ideas as you scroll down the next page…

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1,475 Comments

  1. Kate Herman says:

    Wendy Handeland this is so cool!

  2. donna bauer says:

    does this remove easily with soap and water ….especially if live in an apartment

  3. What keeps it on when you clean the windows?

    • Lucinda Johsnon says:

      I would think that you would need to remove it and re-apply but it probably would not need to be cleaned as frequently either.

  4. Creative – and you’re able to change it when you want something different.

  5. Barb says:

    I have seen this done with bubble wrap too…but you only use water on the window, then adhere the bubble wrap to the window, and it comes off easily by just peeling it off. That could work for a boys room.

  6. Wow… that was pretty…

  7. Really smart looking!

  8. sans evans says:

    how about black netting lace…I know the men in my life would go for it or get the white netting and dye it in camo colors

  9. Page Bridges says:

    Beautiful! Gonna do it in my bedroom!

  10. Ruth Freeman says:

    WHAT A GREAT IDEA…

  11. Kathy says:

    I used opaque contact paper. Works the same way

  12. Patti String says:

    great idea, but how do you wash the window

  13. Can also use it as a replacement for wallpaper.

  14. Good idea, but how do you take it off ??….I live in an apt. & eventually I might move out, so how would I remove this?…Please let me know, thank you for sharing.

  15. If you do this with liquid starch fabric starch, cut the lace slightly large, then when it dries, you can cut it to the pane size with an x-acto knife. (The cornstarch may have the same effect — not sure — the fabric starch dries the lace stiff like paper so it cuts — have starched fabric to a wall before, like wallpaper.)

  16. I was just wondering how long it lasts. If the window needs cleaning will it come off? Just thinking ahead.

  17. Mike Platt says:

    Maybe she just wants ‘thicker’ windows!

  18. Nikki Marie, this is what I was going to do it the bathroom! You should do it!

  19. Wondering if anyone outside at night can see in if the light are on inside.

  20. Donna Smith says:

    I wonder if this would work on a bathroom window, if the steam would affect it.

    • Brenda says:

      I don’t think it would work with steam. I have a window in the bathroom, however, and it is half into the bathtub/shower (bad placement/design!) Since I own the house, I had more flexibility, but if you have a landlord you can always ask.. I’m sure the privacy issue is always an issue for tenants. Anyway, I drew a lovely design and paid to have the glass etched.. it’s beautiful and provides complete privacy while still letting in the natural light.

    • Abby says:

      Affect was correct. 🙂

  21. D says:

    You can also use liquid starch & fabric

  22. LA LaVanchard says:

    Love this idea. I do wonder how easily it comes off though. Maybe you could use the mesh shelf liner in different colors for a more masculine look. But I think you could see through that. ?? The lace is very nice. Good question about the steam in the bathroom too.

  23. Emily Lynn says:

    This would be cool on one of moms old windows with pictures hanging in it

  24. Your right. Send this to her. are you free for lunch sometime this week/

  25. love this, then you wouldn’t need curtains on the bottom.

  26. Tiffany Wood says:

    um, how are you supposed to clean the window? what about steam from the shower?

  27. Brenda says:

    Obviously you can’t wash the windows with lace on them. You’d probably need to “replace” the lace when you wanted to wash the window.. but you’d do that likely as often as you wash your curtains. How dirty these things get depend on where you live. I don’t wash curtains often (less than once yearly)… so factor that in..

  28. I have done the same thing using regular tissue paper instead of lace. Light came through but you couldn’t see through it from the outside (according to my neighbor). Easily cleaned up when I moved out of the rental.

  29. Linda Schillinger: check this out! I thought this looked pretty.

  30. Too cool Carol. Think I’m going to try this.

  31. Mary says:

    BE CAREFULL:

    I wanted to do this to my bathroom when we bought our new home.
    Because it is a high efficiency home, one of the warnings we got on
    closing, was to never put anything on our windows. WHY? I don’t
    know, but they told us it will forfeit our warranty.

  32. Pretty…but how in the heck do you keep it clean…window are a pain in the rear as it is.

  33. i cant wait to do this

  34. For some reason my mixture didn’t work so well. It stayed on for a couple of days but then started coming off. On a good note, it did clean up quiet easily. I am sure I didn’t do something right. It was pretty though.

  35. In the past I have used egg white mixed with a little water, painted the lower part of my bathroom window and then used ripped pieces of colored tissue paper to make a stained glass effect. I did the same idea with the side light windows next to my front door and cut out a few colored leaves that I pasted on in the fall and replaced them with snow flakes in the winter.

  36. here it is, Carolyn.

  37. How beautiful, and so easy to do!

  38. Does anyone know how easy it is to take it off when living in an apartment?

  39. sherri pridgen says:

    i buy a burlap cover for hunting at wallmart that would work real well for this its cammo !!

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