Sunday, 16 December 2012

The 'You'll Never Guess What It Started Out As!' Scarf

Pinterest Project #3 was t-shirt infinity scarves and I love how quick and easy these are! So quick and easy (and cheap!) in fact, that I've made 3 and planning a 4th!
 
I started out with a XXL men's t-shirt from Primark (£2.50 - total bargain!) and cut off the hem them cut from armpit to armpit.
 
 
Pull and stretch the body so the cut ends curl in a little then that's the scarf essentially finished. These can be fancified as much as you like.
 
For one scarf I added tassels that I made from some yarn. These are also simple to make; wrap some yarn around a scrap of card, tie at one end and cut the other...
 
 
 
Then wrap more yarn around the top and tie tightly.
 

 
I simply sewed these onto the scarf in a line.
 
 
 
For another scarf I took an even simpler route. I used small bits cut from the hem and tied them around the seams to pinch the scarf in on both sides. I sewed these into place and covered the fabric with a big button.
 

 
 
For the final scarf I got carried away. I cut several small strips and tied them together at the seams.
 
 
 
I made little flowers from the leftover t-shirt fabric with pearl beads on to cover the ties and add a little something special and it's done!
 
 
I hope the recipients like them!

Christmas Crayon Art

Following on from my crayon art project several months ago I decided to make a Christmas version to give my otherwise bland hallway a little bit of festive flair.

Just like last time, this project was cheap and easy. I simply got a cheap canvas from The Works, two 24- packs of crayons (one pack wasn't quite enough) and cracked on with it; removing the paper from the crayons and chopping them into 3 small pieces, sketching out a rough (turns out it was very rough, but it isn't one of my projects if it isn't a little wonky!) Christmas tree and stuck the crayons around the shape.

Once the glue had dried (I left it overnight) I simply used my heat gun to melt the crayons and turned the canvas as I went so the drips would all fan outward.


Despite the wonkiness I really like this and I think it's nice how it's festive touch without being too in-your-face Christmassy!

Saturday, 15 September 2012

Watercolour Me Happy

Pinterest Project #2 was to make my own take on State Art.
 
This was so easy it took me about 30 minutes to make all 3, and I'm a terrible artist so if I can do it, anyone can!
 
I got some canvas paper and watercolours then printed out basic map outlines of 3 places important to me, mainland Britain, the Dominican Rebublic, where we got married and Florida, where we honeymooned.
 
I copied the rough map outlines onto the paper, got a punched heart (so that when it was removed it would leave a clean white heart) to cover the cities where we live , wed, and honeymooned then filled in with the watercolour paints, finishing off with a little paint splattering to make it look like the messy nature of the painting was on purpose... unfortunately it made a bit of a mess of the carpet- hope hubby doesn't notice! Oops! Worth it though!
 
 
 
 
Now I just have to decide where to put them. We need to move to a bigger place, a little 2-bed flat just doesn't have enough space for all of my projects!

 

Friday, 14 September 2012

H is for...

I was in Hobbycraft a while ago and saw some unpainted paper mache letters for the bargainous price of £1.99. I decided that even if I screwed it up it wouldn't matter and I'd have fun trying. Thankfully I don't think I did screw it up and it sits pride of place in my living room!
 
 
I used a matching paper set called 'Sweet Pea' from Craftwork Cards, it ties in with our decor perfectly and it's just really pretty without being too girly.
 
Each 'leg' of the H is decorated with a different pattern and embellishment. There's a flower and 'ribbon' detail (which is actually card that I curled up a little).
 
 
Here are some punched hearts that I layered for a pretty, fluttery look..
 
 
Some layered punched flowers.
 
 
Another flower and 'Card Candi'.
 
 
The whole thing is wrapped around with a diamante chain.
 
 
Some of the flowers were made by punching out hearts and overlapping them in a circle to create petals.
 
 
The others were made with 3 different sized flower punches. My mother-in-law had a huge craft punch clear out so I got a little carried away!
 
 
To make the whole thing a little more durable it got a couple of coats of Mod Podge which is my new favourite thing!
 
And here it is in situ!
 
 
 
And to explain just why I'm decorating H's (my Mum was seriously confused, I don't think she's quite accepted that I've changed my name!)... here's a hint as to what my surname is! This is another recent project and I love it so much I think I've decided what all of our friends are getting for Christmas!
 
 


Luxury Cards on a Budget

I'm a bit of a hoarder. Well, a massive hoarder if I'm honest, I've got boxes and bags and drawers full of things I can't bear to throw away. My husband hates it!
 
Whilst having a little of a clear out a few months ago (well, moving junk from one box to another) I found a load of broken costume jewellery, bag charms and keyrings that I'd kept because they were too pretty to throw away but I never wore or used and I finally realised what I could do with it all, rip it apart and stick the bits on cards of course!

 
This card has a little 'Je t'aime' heart charm from a necklace, and a Thomas Sabo perfume sample ribbon- I never throw ribbons out!
 
 
This is a broken earring set on a fabric sample from Next! 
 
  
This was a necklace...
 
 
As was this...
 
 
A phone charm...

 
 
Another phone charm...
 
 
And finally a bag charm...
 
 
I love making cards that look luxurious but cost nothing since it's all stuff that was destined for the bin (and in some cases freebies from shops!). Now I have a new issue, I don't want to give the cards away as they're too pretty!



Sunday, 26 February 2012

Crayon Art

I have discovered Pinterest. I never really got it before but now I do and I have no idea how it took me so long! I now have a list as long as my arm of craft projects to undertake so this weekend was the perfect time to undetake Project #1- melted crayon art!



I am no artist, and to be honest most of my arty endeavours do look like the work of a child, but it keeps me amused and I figure that one day the arty thing may well just click. This was super easy though, even for me! I was pretty cheap too thanks to a 24-pack of crayons only costing £1.24 in Wilkos and the canvas only costing £1.99 in The Works. Ah, I do love my cheap shops!

So, on with the details. I discovered too late that 24 crayons are not enough to reach from one end of the canvas to the other so had the delightfully tedious job of removing the paper from each crayon, sharpening the blunt end and cutting it in half. Glued them all on with a liberal (read accidental 'Argh it's gushing out the bottle and I can't stop it!!!!') application of PVA and left it overnight to dry. I cut out a mask of the figure holding the umbrella and gently stuck it on so it could be removed, sadly it was a little too gently stuck and some wax got behind it! I had planned on drawing the figure directly onto the canvas but because of the mess I was left with I drew it on some canvas effect paper I had and glued it on afterwards.

I used my heat gun to melt the crayons with the canvas sitting upright, carefully moving it around so no one area was getting too hot. Wax went flying in odd directions so it is a good idea to put newspaper down!


I love how the wax has formed drips, it adds to the rain affect!




I'll be honest, I'm not 100% sold on the person, think I need to go over it again with more crayon or maybe something more substantial like oil pastels (I'll have to buy some first) so this is still kind of unfinished, but I really like it in theory so wanted to share!

Monday, 19 December 2011

Not-quite-a-wheat-wheat-bag

So when I made my Kindle covers I had plenty more jumper left over to play with so I decided to make some wheat bags out of the arms; they were super easy, just chop the arm off, sew one end closed and attach some ribbons to the open end so that it fastens and creates a little pouch for a separate wheat bag to slide in.



I decided to make the separate wheat bag as it would then be replaceable should anything go wrong and I didn't really like the idea of throwing the cashmere in the microwave over and over again. It was just made from some white sheeting, stuffed then sewn closed.

I didn't really know what exactly I needed for the filling, 'wheat' seemed a little amiguous so I had a little Google and found that normal rice does the same job (and doesn't go manky like pearl barley does after a while) so my not-quite-a-wheat-wheat bag is actually stuffed with white rice and a crushed up cinnamon stick for a nice smell (I hate lavender!).




Pop the inside bag in the microwave for 2-3 minutes, pop it in the cashmere pocket and snuggle! I made 2 as Christmas presents and I wish I had a 3-arm jumper so I could have made another one for myself!