HiJack is the smart way to hide and make use of that unsightly wall jack. The patented bracket/decor design takes seconds to install. Frame, shelf and hook: all in one! Great for hanging pet leashes, keys and eyeglasses. Enjoy one of the 6 included artful inserts or drop in your favorite 4x6 photo.
With every design in our award-winning signature collection being unique, this vibrant rug of the iconic Union Jack Flag brings new life into your home to jazz up any room with style and character! Winner of best rugs Singapore!
Our most popular size of rug is 160cm x 230cm. Some of our best sellers are also stocked in 2m x3m. If a rug is available in stock, the standard delivery times apply. If a rug design in the standard stock size needs to be ordered in, the lead time is generally 12-14 weeks as the hides for each rug is sourced and each rug is then hand made to the highest standards.
Yes all our rugs can be customised to any size to suit your space perfectly. For bespoke orders, please contact us at
sa...@thecinnamonroom.com and we will be in touch to discuss your requirements. The lead time for all bespoke orders is 12-14 weeks.
Designer Rug made in France from French hides with a Union Jack print in Chocolate Brown colors.Outstanding finish for this whole skin rug that will create an amazing effect on modern and classic homes
Now you may be thinking why not just remove the phone jack from the wall instead of covering it? Believe me I have tried to take it off the wall. But each time I attempted to remove the phone jack it became obvious it wasn't going down without a fight.
So I've created a decorative wall box to totally disguise phone jack that cost less than $10. It's made from a recycled cigar box that has been decorated to match our kitchen decor. It's an easy DIY home decor project and there's even a little bit of hidden storage inside.
Why a cigar box? It's lightweight and will hang on the wall easily. The depth of the box will easily disguise the ugly phone jack. Plus we've got a several of cigar boxes just waiting to be transformed into something awesome.
First apply a light coat of white paint to the outside of the cigar box. The goal is to knock down some the strong colors on the box not to cover the entire box with white paint so just a few coats will be fine.
While the box is drying cut pieces of scrapbook paper to cover the outside and inside of the cigar box. This weathered wood chevron pattern was perfect for my kitchen. It's amazing that scrapbook paper can look so real!
After hunting through my favorite craft store I found myself on the jewelry supply aisle. There I discovered a little metal plaque. Combined with a small piece of cork it made a perfect knob for the little decorative box.
A little bit of hot glue to attach the plaque to the cork and a little more to attach the homemade knob to the box and the homemade knob was done. The last step was to use hot glue to add the painted monogram letter to the front.
We are still debating what can be stored inside the decorative wall box. Our boys think it's a great spot for the Monopoly money their sister loves to play store with while she wants to keep her favorite miniature dolls tucked inside.
We all have that one thing in our home that drives us crazy. I'm so happy that my one thing is disguised completely behind a piece of DIY home decor. It's so awesome to find a solution to hide a phone jack that didn't require sheetrock repair!
My friend Jack pulled the car into a grassy clearing. We donned rubber boots, fetched a metal detector and digging tools from the trunk, and headed off along a game trail. Our mission: To dig up and test fire a pistol Jack had buried years ago.
In response, Americans are rushing to buy firearms, particularly those that might be targets of the next ban. Without a doubt, many guns are going underground or into other hiding places. When Draconian restrictions take effect, millions more firearms will get tucked into walls, haylofts, hollow trees, and waterproof containers buried in the woods.
Whatever type of gun you choose, one of the most important steps is to prepare it well for long-term storage. You need to ensure that the firearm you eventually retrieve will be ready to use and not a rusted hulk.
My friend Jack favors the very simplest method of preparing a firearm for hiding. He leaves the gun fully assembled, wraps it in vapor-phase inhibitor paper (also known as volatile corrosion inhibitor or VCI paper), adds desiccants (see sidebar) to keep down humidity, then places gun and ammo into a tightly-sealed container. His SKS spent nearly 10 years underground in this condition and was perfectly fine and ready to shoot once he finally he unearthed it.
In addition to being buried, a tightly sealed PVC tube can also be submerged in murky water or in a slurry. Painted with appropriate camouflage, it can be hoisted into a tree or into the rafters of a barn or otherwise used to hide its contents in plain sight.
A pistol can be hidden in a tightly sealed metal ammo box again, well oiled and with desiccants added. This is how Jack hid the pistol we were searching for. Because it was going into damp ground, he placed the ammo can inside a larger ammo can, a plastic knockoff this time. He added desiccants to that, as well. Both ammo cans had their lids sealed with caulk. Then he wrapped the entire assembly in a plastic bag and duct-taped the heck out of it. As a final precaution, when he set everything into the ground, he upended a white plastic tub over the rest. This would turn out to be the one truly useless step.
Your chosen caching location might be in the woods. Or an old, disused junkyard. Could be the grounds of an abandoned factory. Or a high sandy ledge in a desert canyon. Could be property belonging to a law-abiding relative (less likely to come under scrutiny than you and your own property).
Take advantage of local features, too. For instance, if you live in an area that has stone walls, you may find that some of these have loose gravel centers perfect places to stash a gun. Lonely ponds and hollow stumps can be fine hiding places if your container is 100% waterproof. Use your imagination and your local geography.
I remember well the 8-inch PVC tubing, end caps glued in place, buried 13 feet northeast of a prominent rock placed in the middle of an old, private logging road. Also marked by a blaze slashed in an alder tree.
You could mark the spot with a standalone GPS unit which is not known to be owned by you and which itself is kept in a secure location. But even this is a flawed method if used by itself, since GPS units can get lost, stolen, broken, or simply wiped of data. A standalone GPS unit should be just one part of your site-marking strategy.
Finally, you should mark the location with your standalone GPS unit (and remember, never, ever with a cellphone). Then, when you get home, transfer those coordinates to a piece of paper or an encrypted computer file (along with your compass headings), and erase them from the GPS unit.
Exactly my thoughts, I was down the beach today working with a mate of my dads on his boats, He does alot of pigeon shooting and he showed me this in a catalogue he had, Asked me to find out some infomation about it.
i bought a cheap magnet for 60 years ago when the going rate was between 150-250 it has outlasted many of my mates more expensive models, all be it, it's a little heavier. i think we tend 2 make 2 much of the price of things now days, if it's cheap it's ****, if it's expensive i can get it cheaper or it's not worth the money
I have purchased a net very much like the one talked about, found it to be brilliant i agree your background needs to be good, but nothing new there whatever net i use i like to have a good background. Also very light that is an understatement it's unbelievably light & to cope with this i have attached car battery crocodile clips to the bottoms of my hide poles and to the tops of the two outside hide poles which hold the net taught with no problem at all. was out two days last weekend and the birds came in lovely. Kind reagrds Tis
They are absolute pants. the only way i can describe them is painted net curtain. slightest breeze and its all over the place, you have to have a very dark background very close behind you or you are very visible.
hi all i used one of these nets yesterday.. its very good but you really did need to have a thick back ground. and lots of strong clips. so you can clip it down. its very thin and the last thing you want is a hide blowing all over the place..
This is the netting i use and it seems to work fine. Plenty of birds come right in on it BUT i always set it was a thick line of conifers behind me so it has that thick back ground. I would recommend it but have never tried anything else a sa comparison. It is very very light but on a windy day does catch like a sail.
try looking through a net curtain sideways on, you cannot see through it, in fact try it with some net dyed to your own colours, dead grass or what ever, it will do the same job anyway.. And you cannot SNAG your barrels on it either, been down that road for years, willing to give it a try anyway, put some dark stuff at the back of doesn`t need to be PITCH BLACK... I Wear CAMO anyway, thats breaks your outline up and keep still.. it does appear to have a shiny surface though, if it glints at all, it will be masked by spraying to my colours, dead grass and greens and browns..
Had one for 2 yrs now, i have to use an army camo net over the top as used on its own you may as well be sitting in a green house(rubbish on its own)Plus if you use it on its own it has the decision on where you set it,up as it needs a good back drop.On the plus side its light & very compact. If you buy the jack pike clearview, like me you will only have to purchase another net.I personally would look elsewhere.
Lost And Found will never stop doing good for the world, and I plan on hiding more and more as I grow older. It would be great if other artists helped me and we could hide more together, across the globe, inspiring good deeds and bringing the community closer together.
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