February 21, 2013

An Easter Bunny ready for the Festivities


Paint a chubby wood body and a wood bead with craft paint. Make a neck collar from ribbon and ears from felt. A fur pom-pom is used for the tail.

The cute little bunny is easy to make. Glue wood buttons onto the body. Make a neck collar using tack stitches (sew up and down and pull tight). Cut ears from felt using the template and glue them on. Glue on wiggle eyes. A bit of flax twine with a wood bead are nose and whiskers. Everything is glued on with a glue gun.

Attached file:  Pattern (87 kB)

February 20, 2013

A Quilling Butterfly on a Greeting Card


This is a fun technique in which narrow veaving paper strips are rolled or twisted using a quilling pen and then wedged in a quilling board and glued together. The shapes are glued onto a greeting card.


1. Roll or twist the weaving paper strips using a quilling pen.


2. Place the rolled up paper strips in a desired mould in the quilling board.


3. Remove them carefully from the quilling board. To hold the size and the shape, glue them together with clear marker.


4. Place in the mould on the quilling board again. You could use pins to keep the same distance between the turns. Now glue with clear marker. The glue is gel-like and not runny. Let it dry.


5. Glue a piece of color paper onto a greeting card using double-sided adhesive tape.


6. Glue the paper coils onto the greeting card in a desired pattern. In this example: a butterfly.


7. Glue strips of paper along the edge.

Plaited Jewellery with Silicone Cord, Jewellery Chain and Beads


A plaited bracelet and necklace from silicone cord, metal jewellery chains and drop beads threaded onto a piece of copper wire.


1. A bracelet with a braided fastening: Cut three 25-30cm long pieces of silicone cord, depending on the circumference of the wrist. Also cut a piece of bead chain same length as the silicone cords and a piece of macramé cord measuring approx. 40cm.

Place the four cords side by side (with the piece of bead chain close to the middle silicone cord). Also place the slightly longer piece of macramé cord in the middle.


2. Twist the piece of macramé cord which is placed the same length as the other four equally long cords four to six times tightly around the mentioned four cords – from left to right.


3. Thread the long end of the macramé cord onto a darning needle and secure the end by fastening it underneath the four to six twists made onto the other four cords.


4. Now plait with the three pieces of silicone cord, letting the piece of bead chain following one of the silicone cords.


5. When the plait is finished, secure the plait with the macramé cord, by twisting it around this end four to six times and secure following the same procedure as under point No. 3. Assemble the two ends of the macramé cord and place them parallel. Cut a new piece of macramé cord and make a braiding.


6. Trim the ends of the braided section and melt the ends with the flame from an ordinary lighter. Tie a knot onto the ends, secure the knots and secure them by melting them.


7. A necklace with a swivel clasp: Thread black rocaille seed beads onto a piece of copper wire measuring approx. 55cm and clear drop beads onto another piece of copper wire of the same length. Fasten with a knot.


8. Cut two 50cm long pieces of silicone cord and an approx. 75cm long piece of jewellery chain. Keep the cords and chains together with a piece of masking tape as illustrated. Use the same procedure as the one described under point No. 2 and 3.

Please note that the  macramé cord which must be secured before and after the plaiting, should not be more than approx. 20cm long.


9. Plait following the same procedure as the one used for making the bracelet (see point No. 4).


10. Use a pair of pliers for opening the chain. Attach a swivel clasp to the open link of the chain.