Bathroom Wall Decals's posts

Easy Home Decor – Interior Renovations With Tile Stickers, Kitchen Wall Decals, and Bathroom Wall Decals!

Have boring white tile in your kitchen or bathroom — the solution lies in tile stickers, kitchen wall decals and bathroom wall decals! Try ordering your own custom tile stickers to add some flair to your kitchen.  This is a great fix to a dull kitchen, not to mention way cheaper than installing new tile!   Or of you are contemplating a new tile you can always order temporary stics to test out the design before you spend money on new tile!

upload any image and create your own kitchen wall decals!

upload any image and create your own kitchen wall decals!

Want to add some flair to your living room or home office? Try adding your own stics using our fabric stic.  These stics adhere to any surface and won’t damage the walls!  Decide the image would look better in your bedroom?  No problem, just remove it from your living room for a quick install in your bedroom!  These are a great solution when you live in a rented space and can’t paint the walls!

upload any image and create your own bathroom wall decals!

upload any image and create your own bathroom wall decals!

What about using stics to decorate your floor? Tired of using a rug and having to replace it?  You can use fabric stic to create a neat faux rug for your living space.  Add some pillows around it and could be a great sitting area!

upload any image and create your own tile stickers!

upload any image and create your own tile stickers!

Don’t forget about renovating your appliances! You can use stics to spice up your microwave or fridge too with appliance skins!

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Custom Decals: Sticviews 101 on Bathroom Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals

Okay…so you all know we’re a custom sticker printing company (things like Bathroom Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals).
But I wanted to fill you in on our verbage.

So what everyone else out there calls STICKERS…we call DECALS. Sticviews decals can be used on most anything from your guitar, wall, tile, car, etc.  You have a place you want to stic, then we say go for it! You can design your own custom decal on the sticviews website to make your own car decal, laptop skin, custom guitar decals, and more – the possibilities are endless!  See example below for decals to put on your guitar.

Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals

Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals

What most people call WRAPS…we call SKINS. Skins can be used to cover full surfaces.  Want to stic a cool, new design on your guitar?  Order a skin to hand cut to fit your guitar.  Tired of the boring silver or black of your laptop? Stic it with a customized laptop skin.  You can order your own design or one of ours from our gallery.  Below is a zebra skin that Landon put on his laptop.

Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals

Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals

Our stics come in four different mediums or materials. Check them out below!

Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals

Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals

White Vinyl – a.k.a. White stic : for flat, smooth surfaces, cannot see through on windows.

Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals

Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals

Clear Vinyl – a.k.a Clear stic : for glass and flat, smooth surfaces. white areas of the image will be crystal clear.

Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals

Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals

Fabric Stic - a.k.a Cloth stic : for rough walls, slightly textured, fabric, and smooth surfaces.

Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals

Wall Decals, Kids Wall Stickers And Kitchen Wall Decals

White Paper – a.k.a. Art Paper : this firm, 200 gram thick paper has a satin/glossy finish.

I hope this helps you understand more about our company and what sticviews has to offer you!  Check out our gallery for different images you can order, or add your own for a custom stic experience!

httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bPKE6FImgU0

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Creative Solution to Help Autistic Children – Custom Shower Sticker and Bathroom Wall Decals

Custom Shower Sticker & Bathroom Wall Decals

Custom Shower Sticker & Bathroom Wall Decals

Sticviews has been working with Carla Graham, an advocate for autistic children, by developing a custom shower decal that trains children in what she calls “self care”. Carla approached us with an idea to put our waterproof white stic material in her shower, and it would visually show the steps of taking a shower. The plan was to use the shower sticker to help keep her two autistic children on task as they maneuver through a complex set of steps for taking a bath. Carla took actual photos of the kids’ bathroom – pictures of the shower curtain, the drain, faucet, soap, and towel. We created a simple 7 step graphic that shows these steps in an easy to read format, and put it up in her shower.

Carla is delighted with the results. She says it helps her children because “they think in pictures, and they have trouble processing speech effectively. The step by step pictures help them see the steps visually.” When they get off track, Carla asks them what step they were on and asks them, “What is next?” Then the children know how to get back on track and complete the bath routine by following the instructions on the shower decal.

Here’s a video we made illustrating how Carla’s daughter, Ainsley, used the shower sticker.
(Thanks to Landon Austin for donating his music track for the video!)

httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2I5S2FVEuE

If you would like to purchase the shower decal visit Carla’s site Arts Helping Humanity, which is Carla’s art company that sells art to benefit a variety of causes. You can create your own sticker with educational steps and instructions for your kids or business using the easy 3 step process on Sticviews.com.

Step 1 – select your size, shape and material for your project. White stic is the best material for tiles, showers, and cars. It is your basic vinyl decal material, but the unique sticviews materials come off clean! That means they wont harm your home’s wall, windows, doors or tiles. They can be easily removed.

Step 2 – upload the graphic that you designed for your instructions.

Step 3 – customize it by editing your images, adding background colors, or putting on your own text or monograms. You can also work with multiple image layers. Add it to your cart when you’re done. It’s that easy!

Carla also helps autistic children with social skills by running a Lego playground out of Plano, Texas called, “Plano Lego Lovers.” You can find them on MeetUp.com. The group’s purpose is to get typical children and autistic children together via a common interest to work on social skills with one another. Follow Carla on Twitter at twitter.com/AutismAndArt and read her blog at http://asperwhat.blogspot.com.

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Sticviews To Assist Autistic Children With Bathroom Wall Decals

At Sticviews, we endeavor to enrich the lives of those around us through art & imagery through our products like bathroom wall decals. Never has this been as important than assisting with the daily tasks of an autistic child. Through our new outreach program, Sticviews is enabling families of autistic kids to become more self-sufficient by printing and applying visual representations of daily chores throughout the house.

At Sticviews we have worked with a leading autism advocate, Carla Graham, to design visual graphics to train autistic children on their bath time routine. We started with some basic pictures of the bathroom area. We then outlined the steps a child performs while preparing, taking, and finishing off a bath. Then we laid it out in a nice simple to read Sticview. We stuck it right in the bath tub using white stic material. The children could follow along the bath steps seeing pictures of each step and the easy to read instructions. The best part is that it works! Both the kids feel more comfortable having the steps right there in the shower to read and the parents are happy that the children are self sufficient and performing their bathing routine.

What follows is an excerpt from a leading expert in the Autism field on the importance of imagery to the Austic child.

By Dr. Temple Grandin

I THINK IN PICTURES. Words are like a second language to me. I translate both spoken and written words into full-color movies, complete with sound, which run like a VCR tape in my head. When somebody speaks to me, his words are instantly translated into pictures. Language-based thinkers often find this phenomenon difficult to understand, but in my job as an equipment designer for the livestock industry, visual thinking is a tremendous advantage.

Visual thinking has enabled me to build entire systems in my imagination. During my career I have designed all kinds of equipment, ranging from corrals for handling cattle on ranches to systems for handling cattle and hogs during veterinary procedures and slaughter. I have worked for many major livestock companies. In fact, one third of the cattle and hogs in the United States are handled in equipment I have designed. Some of the people I’ve worked for don’t even know that their systems were designed by someone with autism. I value my ability to think visually, and I would never want to lose it.

One of the most profound mysteries of autism has been the remarkable ability of most autistic people to excel at visual spatial skills while performing so poorly at verbal skills. When I was a child and a teenager, I thought everybody thought in pictures. I had no idea that my thought processes were different. In fact, I did not realize the full extent of the differences until very recently. At meetings and at work I started asking other people detailed questions about how they accessed information from their memories. From their answers I learned that my visualization skills far exceeded those of most other people.

I credit my visualization abilities with helping me understand the animals I work with. Early in my career I used a camera to help give me the animals’ perspective as they walked through a chute for their veterinary treatment. I would kneel down and take pictures through the chute from the cow’s eye level. Using the photos, I was able to figure out which things scared the cattle, such as shadows and bright spots of sunlight. Back then I used black-and-white film, because twenty years ago scientists believed that cattle lacked color vision. Today, research has shown that cattle can see colors, but the photos provided the unique advantage of seeing the world through a cow’s viewpoint. They helped me figure out why the animals refused to go in one chute but willingly walked through another.

httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2I5S2FVEuE

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