Folding Leads to the Wildlife

Crafts 1 Comment

On a recent cruise I was greeted in my stateroom by a silly elephant. This elephant was actually 2 towels folded with care. Towel animals are very common on cruises and too often the workmanship of this craft is overlooked. I’m goofy and just love finding a new animal each night on a cruise.

Elephant

Elephant

This trip there was a towel folding class during our day at sea. I signed up and was at the head of the class to learn how to fold an elephant and a dog. I also watched as cabin stewards folded stingrays, monkeys, turtles, frogs, rabbits, and teddy bears. I even bought the book the cruise line offered. According to the cruise line the top three animals are elephant, dog, and monkey.

Crab

Crab

I love it and adapted the folds using rectangles of paper to make some greeting cards. You need 2 towels for most animals. A regular body towel and a face towel (not a wash cloth). There are three basic body shapes and there basic face shapes that you fold, it really is quite easy.  Surprise your next houseguest with a cute puppy or rabbit waiting for him or her!

Dog

Octopus

 Special Thanks to Tammy Zook for providing us with these photos!

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Shank Button Earrings – A Short Tutorial

Craft Professionals, Crafts, Guest Bloggers, Jewelry Making, Techniques and Mediums 2 Comments

Welcome Guest Blogger Anitra Cameron, from the Blog “Coffee Pot People”.

Do you ever get the urge to just make something? Maybe you don’t have a lot of time, but there’s that need. It was that sort of a day for me. When time is limited, earrings can feed the creative hunger I feel, and anyway, the beads and buttons were already out, because I’d finished a bracelet just before going to bed last night. Since I’d been working with green, I just dug around in the green button baggie until I found a pair of buttons I liked.

Then I turned my fifteen minute project into two that took considerably longer by deciding to do this tutorial. Well, a girl’s gotta do what a girl’s gotta do.

You’ll need the usual array of beading tools–round-nose pliers, flat-nose pliers, and wire nips. And also:

Pick out your beads

Fine gauge wire (I used 24 gauge)
2 matching shank buttons
4 matching flat, square beads (other shapes would also work–they just need to be flat)
2 seed beads

I’m going to assume you know basic wire wrapping technique (just enough to make a wrapped loop) to keep this brief, and also because I know others have already put tutorials for that up, and mine wouldn’t be as good.

So start by cutting a length of the wire roughly a foot long. You want to give yourself enough to work with. Make a wrapped loop on one end, and the thread on a flat bead, a button, and another flat bead.

Threading on

Threading on

I noticed when I was working with my beads that the hole ran at a bit of a slant. If yours are similarly drilled, put the off-center hole against the shank of the button. Also, check to see whether one side of each bead is prettier or more evenly colored, and be sure to put the nicest side facing out.

This is where it gets just a bit more complicated. At the top of the beads you’ve just strung, make another wrapped loop, but instead of cutting the wire, bring it down the front of the top flat bead, and under the button.
Twist

Twist

Now wind the wire once around the shank of the button, pulling it tight. Bring the wire down around the lower bead, crossing it diagonally, and loop it around the wire-wrapping at the bottom, then back up the front of the bead, and under the button. Pull the wire in against the button shank, cross the upper bead on the diagonal, and wind it around the top loop a time or two, and clip.

That’s a lot of words for something that really happens almost intuitively, so study the picture below and go with your instincts.

Almost Done

Almost Done

The last step is to wire wrap a seed bead, and hang it from the bottom loop.
I think they turned out rather well.

I think they turned out rather well!

To read more of Anitra’s blog, click here.

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The Joys of Hand Stitching

Craft Professionals, Crafts, Guest Bloggers, Needlearts, Sewing 1 Comment

Welcome Guest Blogger Ricë Freeman-Zachery, writer and fabric artist and from the Blog “Notes from the Voodoo Café”.

I have the best job in the world: I get to sit around in my pajamas all day and call up artists and ask them nosy questions and then write about them. And then, in my spare time, I get to make fabric art. Every now and then–about once a year or so–I get to write a book–my newest one is “Living the Creative Life: Ideas and Inspiration from Working Artists”, and you can read more about it here. Art, writing–all without having to leave the house! What more could anyone want?

The Joys of Hand Stitching

I don’t know about y’all, but I have a ton of stuff I don’t use. Like, just for instance, four sewing machines, including the olive green Elna my mother used to make all my clothes when I was a kid. I have my trusty all-metal Kenmore from 1977. I have a heavy-duty Singer. And I have my shiny new Janome. Oh, I’m not saying I never use them: I use the Kenmore for doing all those things I would never dream of doing by hand, like mending seams. But that’s not what I think of when I think of “sewing.”

When I think of sewing, I remember learning to sew under the ironing board in my mother’s sewing room, playing with the scraps she handed down to me from her sewing table. My efforts weren’t pretty, but I learned to love the act of joining two pieces of fabric with a needle and thread.

I have never had any discernible domestic talents. None. Ask my husband. Although I took Home Ec in 7th grade and made an apron and, at the end of the semester, a little dress, that was as far as garment construction went for me. I didn’t make any of my clothes in high school-my mother did that. What I did do, though, was to stitch on the clothes I had-lines of embroidery, stitched names, butterflies. Although I was too young to get the full benefit of growing up in the 60′s, I discovered Native Funk and Flash when it first came out in 1974, and, for me, that changed everything. The idea of altering your clothes to make them into personal talismanic garments seemed to be about the coolest thing anyone could do. I started then, with a bunch of work shirts and jeans, and I’ve never stopped.

What is it about hand stitching, about pulling thread through fabric? It’s not about fancy stitches-I know only three embroidery stitches:  I know the running stitch, which is like saying I know how to breathe; the split stitch, which is so sturdy it will still be holding on when the fabric around it has worn to threads; and the French knot, which I learned just to show off. For me, it’s not about doing rows of fancy little stitches. For me, it’s about altering something, making something new, with nothing but my hands and a rainbow of floss.

And here I’ll admit: it doesn’t even have to be embroidery floss. When I did make clothes from scratch, my favorite part was always the hem, and it was always a blind hem, done by hand. There’s something about creating a perfect, invisible hem that just made me happy. Yeah, I know that sounds pathetic, but what can I say? I love to stitch. I love to sew, and I love to mend, and I love to decorate-if I can do it by hand, I’m happy. One of my favorite things in all the world is to sit on the front porch and stitch. The only thing that keeps me from being my great-great grandmother is that I’m stitching words and appliquéing skulls rather than creating little daisies on the edge of a pinafore. It could be scary, but there’s something comforting about imagining myself flowing into old age with my needles and a bag of bright thread.

It’s calming. It’s meditative. It’s downright Zen.

And it’s the height of being hip: taking scraps of fabric, or clothes faded by years of wear, and keeping them alive  by working on them with your hands-that’s about as green as you’re going to get. Zen and hip? What more could you want?

Click here, for more posts from Ricë.

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Crafty Brides Drawing Craft Tips

Contests, Crafts, Holidays No Comments

Congratulations to Nancy T. from Menomonee Falls, WI, who was randomly chosen as the winner of our Crafty Brides Drawing and a $100 CreateForLess shopping spree! Her tip was…

“My son’s new bride loves black and pink. We couldn’t find something suitable for the table decorations, so I made 22 small quilts to fit the bill. The quilts are made using 4 strips (these are 2″, but they can be made in a variety of sizes) into a strip set, then cutting 60% triangles, alternating the placement of the ruler. Combine the six triangles from each strip set to make one small quilt (sew three together twice, then join the halves). Layer with batting on the bottom, right side of quilt up, with backing right sides together with quilt top. Sew around the outside edges, leaving enough of the edge open to turn. Trim corners, turn right side out, press. Using a decorative stitch from your machine, stitch around the outside edge, then along each “round” until you get to the center. Everyone wanted one!”

Some of our Favorites Craft Tips!

“These tags were made for Nikki Shrader’s red and white wedding. She and her groom recently lost family to cancer so in lieu of regular wedding favors they made a donation to the American Cancer Society. For a thank-you to her guests, Nikki and her mom made special cookies and bagged them for her guests. This was a tag she attached to the cookie bags. The tag was die-cut from a big shot die of textured white cardstock and I used my Cricut to make the flowers and leaves. There are adhesive rhinestones in the flower centers. I stamped Thank you on the tags and Nikki signed them with she and Ryan’s names”.

Theresa R. from Irvington, VA. 

“My card box was handmade using chipboard boxes covered in fabric. The boxes are stacked to resemble a cake. I used ribbons and pearls as embellishments“.

Colleen C. from Johnstown, NY. 

 

“I handmade my wedding invitations. I printed the info on a laser printer. The designs were hand stamped with black pigment ink and clear heat embossing. I glued Swarovski crystals into the designs”.

Gina C. from Sussex, NJ.

 

“I made champagne bottle decorations – brides and grooms! I took satin ribbon, (in white and black) and folded it in half and stitched up the open side. Then I put elastic in it and closed up the raw edges. To these tiny garters I attached tiny tulle wedding veils or tiny black satin bow ties. I have full patterns and directions. Adorable!”

Connie W. from Kilauea, HI

 

“This was my sister’s wedding invitation the first I created under my new company name deshiadesigns.com the “Toadally Handmade” creations line. She wanted different and colorful which is exactly what she has here in a center bi-fold textured turquouise cardstock with orange back drop and white printed in black. It was all clasp with a beautiful sticked button/brad and all tied up with ribbon. The envelopes each had a decorative stamp with the orange and turqouise coloring”.

Dicnicia M. from Plano, TX.

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Tweet Some Sales!

Craft Professionals, Crafts, Trends No Comments

Twitter has become a place where artists and crafters are promoting their wares. Twitter.com is a social media-networking site where you post messages in 140 characters/spaces or less. You sign up like most websites creating a screen name. For example on Twitter I’m MariaNerius and you’ll find other creative screen names like GardensAndCrafts (tips on gardening and using your garden elements to craft), BookGal (help with Twitter and books), and JavaCupCake (she sells her crafts on Esty.com)

I enjoy spending a few minutes each day reading the updates from those I follow (you find people to follow through the Tweeter search engine or other search directories like Twellow.com) And I post an update (usually sharing a great find on CreateForLess.com or to let others know I’ve posted something new on my blog) to those that follow me.

It’s a cheap tool to promote yourself, your crafts, your business, your blog, or anything else that meets your fancy. You’ll build a following over time and you’ll have a way to send a message out to potential customers. Come on and join the fun! Give me a tweet today!

I made this card to celebrate tweeting!

I made this card to celebrate tweeting!

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