On the Shelf

Green Crafting, Home Decor, Trends 4 Comments

By Recycled Crafts Contributor, Anitra from the blog “Coffee Pot People”.

When it comes to patterns, brochures, magazines, and booklets, we crafters can be a bit compulsive. I try to sort through and weed out, but even so, I have dozens and dozens of slender “volumes” to keep track of. I’m sure many, if not most, crafters are similarly blessed.

How to keep them all straight and accessible? Stacking those slim items is inefficient and untidy. Since they don’t have readable spines, shelving them with your books doesn’t work either.

A filing cabinet might be the first, most logical, choice, but that’s not always an option. My solution is one I ran across years ago, in The Messies’ Manual. The authors were talking about children’s books, but I quickly saw a personal adaptation.

I use the big tins you can buy cookies in this time of year. They’re available new, full of cookies (my favorite!), or you can find them at yard sales and thrift stores, and they are just exactly the width you need for the average magazine.

Stand them in the tins with the front pages facing the front, and put the tin on your book shelf. Now, when you want to find a particular leaflet or magazine, you can slide the tin out, and riffle through until you spot it.

I’ve got four of those tins so far, and use each for a different crafting category–sewing, beading, crochet, and miscellaneous. Since they are all basically an elongated octogonal shape, the front and back are narrower, which is handy for the smaller booklets, and also makes a good place to stash my crochet hooks.

Oh, and it’s still a really great way to keep children’s books organized, too!

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Winner of Free Stuff Friday!

Contests, Free Stuff Friday!! No Comments

It’s Monday morning, and time to announce the winner of last week’s Free Stuff Friday! Our question last week was: What is your favorite Holiday decoration?

Readers answered our question to enter to win these authentic set of Scrabble Letter Stamps. These stamps contain all 26 letters of the alphabet as well as icons from the board game. Use these letter stamps on any stamping or paper crafts project. Ink these stamps with ink pads or ColorBrush markers. Use these stamps and create shadowing and lines by using the rubber edges. Simply apply ink to the edges and stamp for unique patterns and shapes. Use all four sides to create a box around your letters. Made my EK Success and retail value about $20.

 

The winning answer was:

Alison – So hard to decide… I really love the angel that sits on top of our tree. She’s timeless and lovely and was a gift from my stepsister when JP and I were first married. Then again, there’s nothing better than the decorations the kids have made and brought home through the years. So many have pictures that illustrate how much they’ve grown and others show how their artistic tastes and talents have changed. I love them all!

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