Tombstone Softie

You should have seen the face of my friend from the quilt store when I told her why I was buying gray fabric. For some strange reason she seemed to think it was rather morbid to make a stuffed tombstone. I can’t imagine why.

Tombstone softie Ornaments

The pattern for this is available here in a package with yesterday’s candy corn pattern.

My sophisticated, gothic tree was skewing heavily ivory and black, so I wanted to bring in a little more silver sparkle. But I couldn’t find a fabric that was silvery and sparkly without veering off into astronaut uniform territory, so I had to make it.

Tombstone - silver embossed
I’d never seen the results of trying to heat emboss fabric, but it actually worked swimmingly. I rubbed the fabric piece with a clear inkpad, pored the powder over the top and shook off the excess. It actually worked a little better than I expected because the powder clung to every fiber on the fabric, so I had to scrape some off with my fingers. I was going for a mottled, stony look, not a glossy silver tombstone.

Tombstone - embossed title
Then I stamped the letters in black and embossed them with black powder.

When the powder is heated, it melts into little beads that look like mercury. If you stop here they’ll eventually flake off, but if you keep heating they’ll eventually start to get absorbed by the fabric and then they just become a part of it.

I’m pleased with these, and the construction is really simple. I just don’t think anything can be very morbid when they’re made into a softie.

Candy Corn Softie

My second pattern collection is for a couple cute Halloween softies.
Halloween Softies

For $2.50 you get the patterns for the candy corn and the tombstone, as well as instructions on how to make them. For today I wanted to point out the candy corn project.

Candy Corn Halloween Softie

I sewed mine up out of cotton, but my original plan was to handstitch it out of felted wool. I think it would be really cute, and you could do it with this pattern as is, you’d just have a slightly bigger finished project.

The idea for this came when I started thinking about how I wanted to decorate for Halloween. I love how the adults have reclaimed the holiday, so I didn’t want everything to be totally juvenile, but I also didn’t want to scare the crap out of my kids. The stuff in the stores seems to be exclusively one or the other – either it’s got googly eyes or it’s a human body part dripping with fake blood. I wanted to make a bunch of decorations that were festive, and cool, and somewhere in the middle.

I’ve already given a few of these away as hostess gifts, they’re just a nice little trinket to have around and really work with whatever else is already going on. I also had a teacher friend of mine beg me for a whole bunch to decorate her classroom with. Apparently it’s not just me who struggles with the appropriateness factor in Halloween decorating.

I think I might have to enlarge the pattern and make a couple pillow sized candy corn to toss on the couches. Maybe I’ll even do those out of velvet or something to really bring in that grown up sophistication.

Monster Embroidery Patterns

This was a major learning experience for me, but through hours of hunting and pecking, I managed to update my personal website for the first time in mumblemumble years, and even put together a few pdf’s for you to download.

Now if you click here you can see the first two downloads I have up for sale, but hopefully there will be more soon. I just found myself rapidly running out of time and wanted to make sure I got something up. I tried to keep the prices as low as possible and still cover the paypal fees, so for only $2.50 you’ll get multiple patterns.

Anyway, here’s the one I wanted to share for today.
Monster Embroidery Ornaments

My local quilt shop had that great fabric I used in the border, and I just had to do something with them all together. And I’ve been working on embroidery patterns, so this is what popped out of the ol noggin. I stitched each design in a backstitch, and then colored them in with crayons.

Monster Embroidery

The pdf download includes an embroidery pattern for a cute little vampire, werewolf, and Frankenstein monster, and also instructions on how to make this ornament. I hope you guys like it!

Glittered Candy Ornaments

Halloween Candy Bowl

I initially had this idea for a Christmas tree, but it was an easy swap out for Halloween. This one will be a perfect fit for my kid friendly, colorful, whimsical tree, but I think a cauldron of these would be adorable on a table, or strung together as a garland somewhere.

It really couldn’t be much simpler. I used 1 1/2″ wooden balls and painted them in a base color that matched my glitter. Then I covered in glue and glitter. If you really didn’t want to deal with the mess you could skip the glitter step, but I never miss an opportunity for glitter.

Glittered Candy Ornament Step 1

Cut a piece of cellophane to 3″ x 6″. I found it available by the roll in the gift wrap section, but it also comes sold in a bag like tissue paper. I chose one that had a little opalescent sheen to it, because like I said, I don’t miss an opportunity for glitter. Wrap the cellophane around the ball and twist the edges, just like wrapping up a candy.

Glittered Candy Ornament Step 2

Tie a bow on one end, and then cut a piece of ribbon about a foot long. Tie a loop in one end to be the hanger, and then use the tails to tie a bow around the other end of the candy.

Glittered Candy Ornament Step 3

These make up really fast, especially in large batches, and are so cheap that I think they’d make great little festive trinkets for teachers or neighbors, or as little hostess gifts for whatever party you’re going to on the big day.

Glittered Candy Ornament

Trick and Treat Canvases

This project was one of those that started someplace entirely different and I only ended up here through a series of failures. I wanted to make a caramel apple ornament, and after that misstep, I went back to the drawing board. My local scrapbook store was hosting a collage canvas class from super creative Emily Falconbridge, and even though I couldn’t make it to the class, just looking at her project sent me off in a whole new direction.

Treat Canvas

This pieced background was totally a lift from Emily’s project. I used a 5 x 7 canvas board, painted the edge that would show a nice green color, cut up a whole bunch of orange paper, and started painting it down.

Treat Decoupage
I’m actually not a superfan of Mod Podge. It’s a little on the spendy side for what you get, I think, and I actually prefer the results when you use an artist’s quality sealer. Like this, but it’s also available in a matte finish.

Then I wanted to get as much 3-D action as possible, so I used a real popsicle stick, cut the letters out of chipboard before painting and glittering them, and raised the candy corn with foam tape. I drew the apple shape on some caramel colored cardstock and inked the edges.

Since I plan on using this as a Halloween tree ornament, I had to make it look good from all sides. So I flipped it over to address the opposite of a treat.

Trick Canvas

I was brainstorming for days to come up with a visual representation of a trick. I came *thisclose* to gluing a roll of toilet paper to the back. I thought a broken mirror was a little classier.

I wanted the two different sides to be kind of visually opposite too, so I just decoupaged one solid piece, in a lighter orange than I used before, on the trick side.

Trick Decoupage

I cut the mirror out of fun foam so I could get some 3-D on this side too, then covered it in glitter. Same for the letters, chipboard, paint, glitter. To make the broken glass I took a piece of tinfoil, wrinkled it up, unfolded it, and then cut it in the shape of the mirror. A couple of stamps and some inking around the outside made it look a little spookier than the happy Treat side.

I’m planning on just tucking these in the branches of the tree, but if you want a hanger I’d glue each end of a piece of ribbon down the sides to make a loop on the top. I think this could be cute as a doorhanger too. You could flip the canvas so that anyone coming near would know exactly what they’re getting themselves into.

I drew the apple shape and the mirror shape, so as a start to our Halloween festivities, I thought I’d share my pattern. It’s available as a free pdf download by clicking this link.