2011 Christmas Cards

2011 Christmas Cards
I finally, finally, in the longest time I’ve ever taken, got my traditional Christmas cards finished. And I’m afraid to say it just might be the last year I do this. My Christmas card list has gotten too big, and online printing options have gotten too good. I’m not sure I can justify the weeks of work to myself anymore.

But anyhoo, here in March I’ve finally finished my work from January.

I got this gorgeous flocked paper from SEI, the two stamps came from Inkadinkado and the ribbon was left over from another project.

2011 Christmas Cards Step 1
Start by making all your different elements.

Cut a piece of 12 x 12 cardstock down the middle so you have a piece measuring 6″ x 12″. Use a scoring blade or bone folder to score one side 4″ from the end, and the other side 3 1/2″ from the end.

Out of a coordinating color of cardstock, cut a frame large enough for your image. I traced a chipboard frame I bought at a scrapbook store, but you can also find good stuff online.

Cut a white piece of cardstock large enough to fit behind the frame and stamp your image. I colored mine with markers so I could get the two different colors.

For the tab, get another piece of coordinating cardstock and cut it to 3″ x 2 1/2″. Score it down the middle, and stamp your greeting on one side.

2011 Christmas Cards Step 2
Fold your tab piece down the middle, and staple it to the front flap of the card.

2011 Christmas Cards Step 3
Cut a piece of ribbon 5″ long, and cut the end to make a pretty swallow tail. Glue it with liquid glue, lined up with one edge and down the center of the card.

2011 Christmas Cards Step 4
While that’s drying, I added a little sparkle to my main image with some glitter glue. I also used an iridescent glitter glue to embellish the frame.

2011 Christmas Cards Step 5
When all the pieces are embellished and dry, adhere them to the front of the card. After a little experimentation, I used a white liquid glue. I normally wouldn’t do that because you do risk the paper warping, but between the flock on the paper and the ribbon, tape was just not getting the job done. I just did my best to work really neat, and then stacked them up and put a heavy book on top as they dried.

I don’t know, I’m probably just grumpy because my lack of crafting mojo made this project a little less joyful than usual. I love sending out a little piece of handmade love so much, I’m not sure I can ever really give it up.

2011 Year of Pleasures #2

Christmas Card Supplies

I just got a great big box of craft supplies delivered to my door!

Long term readers may remember that this time every year I make the Christmas cards I’ll be sending out in December. It may be the smartest thing I ever came up with. All the supplies are on sale, I’ve got a little more time on my hands, and then it’s one less thing to do in the madness of Christmastime. I just pack them away, pull them out with the Christmas decorations, stick in a picture, and pop them in the mail.

The only trick is that I have to estimate how many cards I’ll need in December and how many new people will come into my life between now and then. Last time I estimated low, so this year I’ll be making 130 cards.

Finding that much paper in one place is a bit ridiculous, but I’ve found some great deals by going directly to the paper manufacturers website. My favorite, and the site this paper came from, is SEI. I got this paper, gorgeous flocked paper, for 75% off. And plenty of it.

Now I just have to decide how to use it. My favorite kind of dilemma.

Merry Christmas and Happy Vacation

closeup

My little family have been such a couple of troopers as I’ve spun off in my Christmas frenzy. Atti has gotten used to too much Sesame Street, Bear has gotten used to handling most of the cooking and cleaning, and both of them would like me to take my head out of the projects long enough to actually spend some family time together.

After years of going along with extended family traditions, I’ve put my foot down since Atti was born. Now I want to establish our own traditions, which include Santa coming to our house and Atti waking up in his own bed Christmas morning. So we’ll have a big dinner tonight, wake up and open presents, have a nice breakfast, and then hit the road to drive down to Grandma’s house. We’ll be staying with them for nearly a week, and I’ve promised that there will be no working while on vacation.

So I’ll be taking some time away from these pages until I get back to town at the end of next week, and I hope to have nothing to show from my time away besides lots of games and snuggles and quality time.

I hope all of you have a joyous Christmas surrounded by the people you love. Thanks for spending this time with me.

On the 12th day of Christmas

My true love gave to me….

12 lords a leaping
Twelve lords a leapin’

11 ladies dancing
Eleven ladies dancing

10 pipers piping
Ten pipers piping

9 drummers drumming
Nine drummers drumming

8 maids a milking
Eight maids a milkin’

7 swans a swimming
Seven swans a swimmin’

6 geese a laying
Six geese a layin’

5 golden rings
Five golden rings

4 calling birds
Four calling birds

3 French hens
Three french hens

2 turtle doves
Two turtle doves

A Partridge in a pear tree
and a partridge in a pear tree

It took me nearly three years, but they’re finally done. I love them so much I’m toying with the idea of starting them all over again.

Homemade Pirate Chest for your little landlubbers

Pirate Chest

My newly 4 year old nephew Kai is obsessed with pirates right now, and also has a December birthday. Having a December birthday myself, I know how often you get shuttled to the side with promises to make it up that never materialize. So when we go down to see family on Christmas day I wanted to have two presents for him. One for Christmas, and a special one for his special birthday.

But it also had to be cheap because Christmas is expensive.

Pirate Chest Step 1
This trunk started life as one of those cheap styrofoam coolers you can find at the grocery store or in a well stocked dollar store. We got some spray paint and painted it brown, but there’s a bit of a trick to it. Spray paints will melt styrofoam, so you need to do thin coats from far away and be patient with it. Unless there’s a section you actually want to melt, like the part of this cooler that had the manufacturer’s name on it. I gave that area a good hard blast with the spray paint and now it’s no longer legible.

Pirate Chest Step 2
The chest needed a hinge, but the cooler wasn’t made to accommodate one. I took three pieces of thick grosgrain ribbon and hot glued them in place to make a hinge that was flexible enough to account for the oddly shaped lid, then covered all my mess up with a fun fabric lining.

Pirate Chest Step 3
The clasps are what make this look like a pirate chest instead of a painted hunk of styrofoam. To attach them I took the screws included in the kit, covered the ends with hot glue, and shoved them through the clasp and into the styrofoam. The heat of the glue will melt the styrofoam enough as you go to act as a screwdriver at the same time.

Pirate Chest Step 4
Gold ribbon mimics the leather straps found on old luggage, and once again hides the evidence that this is a cheap piece of junk. Make sure you wrap the ends neatly so the lid can still come on and off easily.

Pirate Chest Step 5
I looked and looked for those metal corner pieces that come on old luggage but couldn’t find anything even close. So I just painted them on. You could keep going with this idea and paint on a lock or other metal embellishments.

Pirate Chest Booty
I have to give credit where it is due, this was totally Bear’s idea, nearly from beginning to end. We had the styrofoam cooler kicking around in the garage and he was the one who brought it to me and said, “With a little paint, this could look like a pirate chest!” He is living proof of what I always say – Creativity is a muscle. He just proved he’s a weightlifting champ.

Tree skirts for the Christmas forest

12 Days of Christmas tree skirt
Tree skirts always stump me. I’m not great *ahem* understatement *ahem* at sewing curves, and there’s a whole lot of curve to fill up with some kind of decoration. Plus, my first attempt at a tree skirt has been rather troublesome, so I’ve put off tackling more for years. This year, I was determined to cross them off my to do list once and for all.

12 Days of Christmas tree skirt
I pulled out my trusty machine applique technique and went to town. I really like how I can give this tree a title, because this is the hardest one to put together at a first glance.

12 Days of Christmas tree amd kitties
The kitties came over and gave their approval.

Woodland tree skirt
Then I still had last year’s Woodland tree to finish, so while the sewing machine was still warm I kept the applique trend going, this time with a blanket stitch around wool animal shapes. I had intended to use these animal shapes as ornaments for a project idea that didn’t pan out, so now they have new life as the animals celebrating their forest Christmas.

Woodland tree and kitties
The kitties seem to be keeping some distance from this one. They must recognize that they’re not forest creatures and aren’t invited to the party.

I may not love sewing them, but I sure love having them done. Each tree looks finished now, and all the unsightly plastic tree stands are hidden from view. I may need to invent a tree skirt skirt, though, because I anticipate each of these to be covered in cat hair by the time I get back downstairs.

The Unveiling…

It’s been a mad sprint to the end and I just finished sewing the tree skirt about 2 minutes ago, but it’s done.

Christmas Sweets Tree

Christmas Sweets Tree

Christmas Sweets Tree

Christmas Sweets Tree

Christmas Sweets Tree
When you use as many trees as I do, and you’re not independently wealthy, you can’t go for the super fancy fake trees that look better than the real thing. This white beauty came from Wal-Mart, and if you saw it before it was decorated you would be able to tell. My big secret for decorating a tree is to just pack it stiff with ornaments. I’ve written about it before, but I decorate a tree in layers. This tree was so thin that I really needed something to cover up the pole and the wire branches, so I took plain red and silver ornaments and hung then all the way inside. This has the added benefit of reflecting the lights from the inside out so the whole tree looks like it’s glowing.

Sweets Tree Skirt
I always put the tree skirts off for ages, but I wanted to do better this time. This tree has so much color and so much contrast that I wanted to keep it as simple as possible to not steal all the attention, so I figured out how to make this peppermint strip bias binding. I took the white fabric on the top and the red fabric I used for the underneath and cut 3″ strips on the grain. I sewed the strips altogether and then cut that sewn together cloth on the bias. That gives it that cute slant that makes it look like peppermint instead of gingham.

Thanks for following along, I hope you all found something to inspire you. Now that the tree is done I can turn my attention to some other last minute projects I’ve been putting off, including a last minute gift for an adorable 4 year old nephew. No rest for the weary!

Wire Candy Canes

Wire Candy Canes
In my brainstorming about candy canes, I of course came across the traditional idea of the pipe cleaner ornament. A staple of Christmas tree for years, I wanted to come up with something a little bit different, perhaps even a little less…fuzzy.

Wire Candy Cane, Step 1
So I wandered through the craft store and waited for creativity to hit me over the head. In the floral aisle I came across this raffia covered wire and thought it could be just the thing to evoke the simplicity and tradition of a pipe cleaner candy cane but done in a slightly more grown up version.

Wire Candy Cane, Step 2
I painted half of the wires white and half of them red. Make sure you get a really thorough coat because when you twist the wires together some of the raffia will unravel and reveal the underlying layers of brown.

Wire Candy Cane, Step 3
Twist a white and a red wire together. After a few trials and errors, I found the easiest way to do this to be to match up the middles and twist toward the ends.

Wire Candy Cane
The wires that I bought were long enough to make two candy canes, so I used wire cutters to cut them in half, and then bent one end to make the crook.

Wire Candy Cane
On my white tree they blend in enough to just give a pop of color in those few little bare spots. I think these are also easy enough, and cheap enough to be a really cute package decoration, or tied in the middle of a bow on a gift basket.

Iced Gingerbread Cookies

Iced Gingerbread Cookie

I spent way too much time over the last couple of months thinking about gingerbread. After the houses I naturally thought about making some gingerbread men, but I couldn’t crack a new or interesting way to make them since tutorials exist all over the internet, including this one which might just be untoppable.

I was also still deeply in love with that puffing fabric paint and looking for another excuse to use it. So here’s what I came up with.

Iced Gingerbread Cookie, Step 1

I drew up a pattern for an iced gingerbread cookie and cut the shape out of fun foam, which is fast becoming one of my favorite craft mediums. Make sure you punch a hole for the hanger to go through.

Iced Gingerbread Cookie, Step 2
Draw on your “icing” with the puffy paint. I’ll include my pattern of course, but you could go wild and do anything your heart desires. Or let the kids do what they desire. Just as you would during a cookie decorating marathon.

Iced Gingerbread Cookie, Step 3
Hit the paint with a heat gun. My happy little discovery in this process is that the fun foam melted a bit too. You have to be a little careful – you can end up burning your cookie – but it turned the color from an anemic tan to a beautiful toasted color, and took off some of the smoothness of the foam to look far more like an actual cookie.

Iced Gingerbread Cookie, Step 4
I did a line of icing around the outside too, just to hide those square edges that make it look too fake.

Iced Gingerbread Cookie Pattern
This project ended up being really cheap – I’d guess each ornament ended up costing about 12 cents – so it could be a great thing to put your kids in front of while you’re frantically making Christmas preparations. Christmas multitasking at its finest.

One more ornament tomorrow and then it’s time for reveals!!

Glittered Candy

Glittered Candy
This is really a reprisal of an ornament that I originally made for last year’s whimsical halloween tree. It’s so simple, but effective, and you should all know by know that I’m never going to miss a chance to glitter something.

Glittered Candy, Step 1
This time I used a variety of different sized styrofoam balls, and I started by painting them all in colors that would match the glitter I planned on using. This might seem like an unnecessary step at first blush, but it will make it so that you don’t need to do more than one coat of glitter. That was a lesson I learned the hard way.

Glittered Candy, Step 2
Cover the ball with a layer of white glue, then roll in glitter. Let dry.

Glittered Candy, Step 3
This time I used plain clear cellophane because I found it more effective in showing off the glitter inside. For the large balls I used a rectangle of cellophane measuring 10″ x 11″. For the smaller balls use a rectangle measuring 8″ x 9″. Wrap the rectangle around the glittered ball and twist the ends closed. Tie fishing line around one end, then tie the other end of fishing line around the other end and leave enough slack to create a hanger.

These look best nestled right up next to a light. The light not only reflects off the glitter, but also off of the cellophane. It’s a little sparkle bomb among all the rest of the paper and fabric ornaments.