Sunday, August 21, 2011

Shabby Christmas Tree Tutorial -- Easy and inexpensive!

Search Amazon.com for christmas decorationsHere's a wonderful and quick way to decorate your home for Christmas.  You could probably whip up a few of these in no time and set them up on a hallway table to make a festive entrance to your home.  I found this tutorial on Creations by Kara and wanted to share it here with you.  Please visit the original site and let them know how your trees turn out.  There are many other wonderful tutorials just waiting for you there.

If you do make these, please send pictures so I can see you handywork.  I would love to hear any comments you may have, too.


1-Start with one of these styrofoam trees. They’re everywhere right now; you can even find them at the Dollar Store.


2-Decide what fabric you would like to use. I used canvas, but you can use anything you like. Burlap is all the rage right now, and I’m sure it would work perfectly. :) Tear strips of your fabric about 1″ wide.
3-To cut your strips, stack a set of three or four strips on top of each other. That way you can cut four at a time instead of having to cut each strip one at a time.
4-Cut the strips about 4 inches long.

5-Take each strip of fabric and glue it together at the top. It only takes a tiny bit of glue. I used hot glue because it is the fastest. Now you will have a little loop of fabric:







6-Attach the first loop to the bottom of the tree form. You want a little bit of fabric to hang below the styrofoam.

7-Keep adding on loops of fabric, overlapping them slightly. It doesn’t matter if the tops are even, you just want to make sure the bottoms of the loops are even with each other.

8-Keep adding loops till you get all the way around the tree. See how the tops are totally uneven? Doesn’t matter.

9-Now you are ready to start the next layer. Attach the first fabric loop so that it lays in between two of the loops on the bottom layer. You want them to be staggered (like bricks), and not just glued on in straight vertical rows. Now keep adding loops just like you did for the first layer.

10-Repeat this process till you get to the top of your tree. (If you run out of loops like I did, just tear more fabric and make more.) Make sure the top layer of fabric pokes up above the styrofoam. You don’t want any of that ugly stuff to show. Just take that extra fabric, fold it down, and glue it to the top of the styrofoam. You can trim off some of the fabric if it is too bulky.
11- Now your tree should look something like this:

12-All you have left to do is fluff up the loops to even out your tree. Then add embellishments. I tore tiny strips of red and green fabric and tied them into bows. I used a piece of gold ribbon for the bow at the top. You could use buttons, ribbon, berries, bells, stars, whatever you like!!

Here is the version of the tree with green fabric:


Thanks to Kara for such a wonderful tutorial on making these Christmas trees. 


Search Amazon.com for christmas decorations

Monday, August 1, 2011

Make Hanging Christmas Stars -- Tutorial from The Magic Onions

Here is a wonderful tutorial I found on The Magic Onions that I think you will love.  These are so beautiful and easy to make.  I hope this year to make many of them to hang in the house as Christmas decorations. 
Please visit the original blog to see not only this tutorial, but also many other wonderful ideas.  Let me know if you make these and send me pictures.  My fingers are just itching to get started......

These are just so creative!  I can imagine having these stars everywhere, can't you?
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What you'll need;
Square paper or card (any size will do... if your paper is not square, cut it into a square before you start.)
Scissors
Glue (I find glue dots work the best as there's no drying time)
Ribbon

Start by folding your square paper in half, making a rectangle...
Fold this rectangle in half again, making a square...
Open your folded square up...
Now fold you big square diagonally (corner to corner), making a triangle...
Fold your big triangle in half again, along the middle, making a smaller triangle...
When you open your paper, this is what your folds look like...
Use your scissors to cut along the 4 folds on the straight sides of your paper. Cut a little less than half way up the fold...
Lie your paper flat, upside down. Fold cut paper back, along the diagonals folds (as in photo) making points at the corners of the paper.
These points will be the points of your star.
Fold all cuts into points.
Now for the gluing... put a dab of glue (or a glue dot) onto one side of each point of the star...
Pull the other side of the point over the side with the glue and stick... this makes your 3D star point.
Repeat for each point...
One side of your star is ready.
Repeat all folding, cutting and sticking steps with your second piece of square paper... you will now have the two sides of your square.
Position them, one on top of the other, with the middle points facing outwards and stick them together using a few dabs of glue or glue dots and...

Voila!
Glue your hanging ribbon onto your star.
Your star is ready for hanging!
They really do look lovely anywhere... so bright and colorful!We have some in our window, some hanging from our beams and even more decorating our cabinets.
And they really are easy to make, I promise! Once you make one and get the hang of the folding and cutting, you will be able to churn these pretty stars out in a matter of minutes. They make very sweet holiday gifts for friends and neighbors too... go on, have a go, make some stars!

Blessings and magic!
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Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Here's a tutorial to make aluminum cans into Christmas cards!

I found this on AllFreeHolidayCrafts.com and felt this was really a fun idea that I just had to share.  I know that I have lots of empty aluminum cans here, so I will be looking into this card making project.
Let me know if you, too, try this; maybe even post a picture in the comments.  I'd love to see any cards made this way.
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Green Christmas



I love recycling things. My card started by carefully cutting up an aluminum can and running through an embossing folder. I then sanded the sheet to take some of the blue color off the flowers for the silver of the aluminum to show. I trimmed it down to adhere to white cardstock. I trimmed a recycled gift card, rounded the edges and used a silver Sharpie marker to "soften" the edges. The button started as a plain white one that I colored with the silver Sharpie after it dried I used a Sakura White Gelly Roll pen to make the snowflake. Added some ribbon and a bow. Ta da!
Check out Papercraft Star Challenge 24 Green Holidays here.... http://papercraftstar.blogspot.com/2010/12/challenge-24-green-holidays.html
and check out The Cuttlebug Spot for another challenge here...
http://thecuttlebugspot.blogspot.com/2010/12/christmas-at-spot.html

I am thrilled to be featured at All Free Holiday Crafts!!! Check out there site.
http://www.allfreeholidaycrafts.com/Handcrafted-Christmas-Card-Ideas/Aluminum-Can-Xmas-Card

Friday, July 1, 2011

Santa Christmas Ornament with Photo Frame Tutorial from The Magic Bean

 Here's a great tutorial for making a wonderful Christmas ornament.  If you sew at all, you will want to try this little gentleman.  Can't you picture this ornament hanging on your tree this year?  Whose picture will you want to showcase with this jolly elf?

This is from The Magic Bean, which is a wonderful site full of tutorials of all sorts.  Please check it out and tell them I sent you.

Now, I'm off to sew!!

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The people down at my local hardware store think I'm weird.  They think I'm weird because normal people look at curtain rings and think of, well, curtain rings, but I look at curtain rings and I see this:
Cloth Doll Santa Photo Christmas Ornament
How I get from curtain rings to a cloth doll santa with a photo frame Christmas ornament is murky, but somehow my mind makes the quantum jump.
Transforming a curtain ring to a very personalised Christmas ornament will not be a quantum jump for you however; you just have to follow the step by step instructions.
What you need:
Note:  My supply lists tend to be pretty long and scary looking, but I tend to put every little thing on them.  Chances are you will have many of these things around the house.
  • Small scrap skin coloured high quality quilting cotton (look for a high thread count, so that the seams don't come apart when the head is stuffed).  I love using a Hoffman watercolour batik fabric in Latte.  You can buy it here in the UK from Cassie Rafferty's website
  • Small scrap white cotton fabric for the beard and moustache
  • Small scrap red cotton fabric for body and hat
  • Small scrap green fabric for hat lining
  • 1” (2.5cm) wide strip green fabric (ripped) for wrapping curtain ring
  • Curtain ring - mine is 2¼" (5.7cm) at the outside diameter, you can use plastic, but you may want to use wood as it is easier to glue the fabric to it.
  • Tacky glue
  • Small scrap green felt for hearts on gloves and for backing the photo frame
  • 2 x size 11 or 12 seed beads in black for the eyes
  • Small scrap red felt for the gloves
  • Standard sewing equipment: sewing machine, pins, sewing shears, hand sewing needles (a John James Long Darner #7 needle is especially helpful) etc.
  • Mechanical pencil
  • High quality polyester thread (such as Gutermann) to match fabrics
  • High quality stuffing (I prefer Fairfields)
  • 1 x ⅛" (3mm) pom-pom for top of hat
  • 6" (15.2cm) ⅛" (3mm) wide ribbon for loop to hang ornament
  • Powdered blush make-up (matt variety, not shiny or metallic)
  • 2 x miniature picks of holly (each holly leaf in the picks I used are ¾" or 19mm long x ½" or 13mm wide)
  • Small piece of cardboard, the weight should be like that found on the back of notebooks
  • Photograph with an image that will fit inside the ring
  • Paper scissors
  • Strong thread such as Gutermann upholstery thread
  • Optional but helpful:  haemostats (American spelling is hemostats) for stuffing
  • Hot glue or other strong glue such as UHU Power
You also need to download the pattern page here: Download Santa Christmas Ornament with Photo Frame Pattern Page
General Directions:
Read the instructions through before beginning.
Pattern pieces should be copied onto card stock and cut out exactly on the line.  Trace the pattern using a mechanical pencil especially for the head pieces.   If you prefer, you may use a purple fade-away marker.  When the fabric is particularly dark, a gel pen can be used to trace lines, but the lines will not be removable, so be sure the lines cannot be seen if you choose this option!
Note that a solid line on the pattern pieces indicates that you trace and sew directly on this line.  Then you cut out around the pattern leaving a 1/8” seam allowance.  A solid line with a dotted line indicates that a seam allowance has been included meaning that you cut out the pattern piece directly on the outer solid line. All seam allowances are ⅛” unless otherwise stated.Open toe foot for sewing machine
Change your sewing machine needle before sewing.
I also use an open toe foot on my sewing machine (pictured right).
Your stitch length should be set to 1.5 which is 15 stitches per inch.  Remember to back-stitch at the beginning and end of every seam so that your seams don’t come apart.
How to Make it:
1. Using a mechanical pencil, trace the head-back & head-front pattern pieces onto the wrong side of the doubled skin coloured fabric, folded with right sides together.  Make sure that the arrows on the patterns are aligned with the straight grain of the fabric, so that both head pieces are cut on the bias.
Santa ornament 001
2.  Sew the curve of the head-back, leaving the tab open.  Sew down the front of the face from the forehead to the chin.  Cut out both pieces, leaving a ⅛” (3mm) seam allowance along the seams and cutting right on the remaining traced line.
Santa ornament 004
4.  Turn the head-front right side out.   Slide it into the head-back with right sides together.  Match the seams at the top and bottom of the head and pin.  Baste stitch around the head by hand before machine sewing all the way around the head.  Don't be tempted to skip the hand basting.  With a head this small, the basting will save you time and frustration.  I now hand baste all my heads together before machine sewing and I never have to re-sew a doll head.
Santa ornament 006
5.  Turn right side out and fill head firmly with stuffing.  Beginner doll makers will be astounded by the amount of stuffing I use to stuff a head.  I used the entire piece of stuffing pictured below in this one tiny head.
Santa ornament 008
When I stuff , I grab one bit of a large piece of stuffing with my haemostats and push the stuffing through the opening, feeding the stuffing into the head in one continuous piece until the head feels like a ripe kiwi in terms of its firmness.  I do not use individual, small pieces of stuffing as that makes the head lumpy.
Santa ornament 010
6.  When the head is firm enough, use the tip of a John James Long Darner #7 needle to gently scoop stuffing into the nose and chin areas.  Just stick the tip of the needle into the fabric near the tip of the nose and dig gently into the stuffing to pull it into the nose area.
 Santa ornament 011
 7.  Trace the torso pattern onto the wrong side of a piece of doubled red cotton fabric, folded with right sides together.  Sew the torso from one side of the opening at the neck, around the shape, stopping at the other side of the neck opening.  Cut out the torso, clipping the corners.
Santa ornament 013
8.  Turn the torso right side out.  Stuff the torso firmly through the neck.  The neck itself must be firmly stuffed.  With a hand sewing needle and strong thread, sew a gathering stitch around the neck opening.  Pull the gathering stitch tightly to close the neck opening and anchor off the thread.
Santa ornament 016
9.  Squeeze the neck with your haemostats and stuff into the head opening.  Pin in place.
Santa ornament 018
10.  Ladder stitch the head in place with strong thread.
Fig. 6 ladder stitch diagram
If you don’t know how to do the ladder stitch, have a look at the diagram above. 
I’ve used red thread so you can see the stitch better.  The blue lines indicate where the thread is travelling through the folded edge of the fabric.  When you pull the thread taut, the two bits of fabric butt together.  You should pull the thread taut as you go, but I have left it loose at the end here so you can see the stitch better.
11.  Trace the beard and moustache patterns onto the wrong side of a piece of doubled white cotton fabric, folded with right sides together.  Sew the beard and then the moustache leaving the marked opening open on both pieces.  Cut out the beard and moustache.  There is no need to clip  into the curves. Turn both pieces right side out through the openings.  Stuff each piece so that the shape is filled, but do NOT stuff them as firmly as you did the head.  With a hand sewing needle and regular thread, ladder stitch the openings closed in both pieces.
Santa ornament 021
12.  Make a division between the two halves of the moustache with a hand sewing needle and regular thread.  First, anchor the thread in the middle of the moustache piece at the seam and then wrap the thread around the moustache on the outside of the fabric. Pull the thread tightly so that the thread gathers the moustache and appears to divide it in half  When you get back to the point where you first anchored your thread, take one small stitch approx. ⅛” (3mm) long and loop the thread around the moustache again, pulling the thread to define the division of the moustache.  Repeat the thread loop one more time and anchor off the thread.
Santa ornament 022
13.  To finish the face, first prepare some fabric from which to cut the eyelids.  Apply a scant amount of tacky glue to the wrong side of a very small scrap of fabric.  Fold the fabric in half with the tacky glue sandwiched between the layers with wrong sides together.  Place something heavy on top of the glued layers of fabric and leave to dry.
14.  While the glue is drying on the eyelid fabric, mark two dots with your mechanical pencil on the head where you will be placing the eyes.  The eyes should sit at or just above the halfway point of the head, that is halfway between the crown of the head and the chin.  Imagine a horizontal line running across the face at this halfway point.  Along the halfway line mark two points, one ½" (1.3cm) to either side of the seam dividing the face in half.
Santa ornament 028
 With hand sewing needle (a beading needle or other needle that fits through the bead) sew a size 11 or 12 seed bead to each marked dot.
15.  Once the glue on the eyelid fabric is dry, use a mechanical pencil to lightly trace the eyelid template pattern twice onto the fabric with the straight edge of the template resting on the fold.  Cut out.
Santa ornament 026
16.  Run a thin line of tacky glue along the curved top edge of the eyelid making sure to place the glue right to the corners of the eyelid and leaving the lash-line (the fold) glue-free.  Place the eyelid so that it partially covers the top of the bead.  Press the top curved edge of the eyelid down and hold it in place until the glue dries.  Warning:  do not pin the eyelids in place or you will get little holes in the fabric of the eyelid that won’t disappear due to the glue used to bond the fabric.  Repeat for the second eyelid.
Santa ornament 030
17.  With a small paintbrush, make-up brush or cotton-bud (Q-tip in North America), apply a small amount of powdered blush make-up to the cheeks.
18. Pin the beard to the face leaving a small gap below the nose (to leave room for the moustache) and ladder stitch the beard to the face, along the top curve where it touches the face.
Santa ornament step by step 012
19.  By hand, tack the moustache to the face, just below the nose.
Santa ornament step by step 015
20. To make the hat, place a piece of red cotton fabric on top of the fabric for the hat lining with right sides together and trace the hat pattern onto the wrong side of the fabric.  Sew along the front of the hat (the solid line on the pattern).  Cut out the hat leaving a ⅛” (3mm) seam allowance along the seams and cutting right on the remaining traced line.  Turn right sides out.
Santa ornament step by step 003
21.  Fold the hat in half (so that the ear flaps are together) with right sides together.  Fold a piece of  ⅛" (3mm) wide ribbon in half to form a loop. Position the ribbon loop so it sits at the pointed top of the hat near the fold with the loop on the right side of the fabric, facing down and with the ends of the ribbon sticking out above the seam allowance.  Sew along the back seam of the hat using a ⅛” (3mm) seam allowance.  Make sure that the ribbon loop has been sewn into the seam.
Santa ornament step by step 009
Turn right side out. Place a small amount of stuffing into the pointed end of the hat and pull the hat onto the doll’s head and pin in place.  Fold the flap at the front of the face up.  By hand, tack the hat firmly to the head.  By hand, tack a ⅛” (3mm) pom-pom to the top of the hat.
Santa ornament step by step 016
22.  Trace the mitten pattern twice onto a doubled piece of felt.  Sew around the shape of each mitten leaving the wrist open.  Cut out leaving a very scant ⅛” (3mm) seam allowance along the seams and cutting right on the remaining traced line.  Clip as close to the stitching between the thumb and the finger part of the mitten as you can.  Turn the mittens right side out.
Santa ornament 031
23.  Stuff the mittens with a small amount of stuffing.  Do NOT stuff them too much, they must be flexible enough to wrap around the curtain ring.  By hand, whip-stitch the mittens closed.
24. Rip a strip of cotton 1” (2.5cm) wide, making sure that there are raw, ripped edges on both sides of the fabric strips. Begin to wrap the curtain ring with the strip by gluing one end to the ring and then continuing to wrap the curtain ring overlapping the fabrics strips so the curtain ring doesn't show beneath.  When the ring is completely covered, apply a small amount of tacky glue to the end of the fabric strip and hold it in place until it is dry.
Place the curtain ring on a piece of cardboard and trace around the circle to create a backing for the photograph.  Cut out.  Trace the cardboard circle onto a piece of felt and cut out the felt circle.  Glue the felt circle to one side of the cardboard circle.  Once the glue is dry, use the felt covered cardboard circle to trace around the image in your chosen photo and cut the photo out.  Glue the photo to the cardboard side of the circle or use double-sided tape to adhere it.  Set the photo aside for now.
Santa ornament 033
25.  Wrap the mittens around the top of the curtain ring so that the bottoms of the mittens can't be seen from the front.  By hand, firmly tack the mittens to the fabric covering the curtain ring, making sure to tack at points all around the mittens.
Santa ornament step by step 019
26.  Wrap a miniature pick of holly around the curtain ring at the bottom, gluing the holly pick in place (hot glue might be best for this task).
27.  Glue the felt-backed photo circle to the back of the curtain ring along the edges of the photo preferably with hot glue or another strong glue.
Then apply some glue to the top of the felt backing on the circle.  Press the glue to the chest of the Santa.  By hand, tack the mittens to the Santa's chest with strong thread for added security.
Santa ornament step by step 023
28. Add the finishing touches by tracing the heart template twice onto a piece of contrasting coloured felt and cut out.  Glue a heart to the front of each mitten with tacky glue.  Then bore a hole into the hat just above the hat flap with a sharp pair of small scissors or with an awl, if you have one.  Apply a small amount of tacky glue to the stem of a miniature holly pick and slip it into the hole in the hat.  By hand, tack the hat flap in place.
Cloth Doll Santa Photo Christmas Ornament
Jolly well done with this jolly old fellow.
If you want to see the rest of my free tutorials, click the link.  And to make sure that you don't miss out on any further free tutorials subscribe to my blog, the Magic Bean here.
If you love Christmas and you love cloth dolls (ooh, pick me!) then you might be interested in two of my patterns which bring together all things festive in the form of a cloth doll.  Check out the Christmasy Give us a Kiss Pattern and the wintry Snowflake Sprite.
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