January 31, 2013

Boxes and Trivets with pressed Flowers


The papier-mâché boxes are painted with craft paint and decorated with pressed flowers and leaves which are glued on using medium glue lacquer.


1. Paint the lid of the box or the trivet with craft paint in a pastel colour.


2. Apply a generous layer of medium glue lacquer to the area on where you will apply the flowers. Lay the flowers on the glue lacquer. Spread glue lacquer on top to coat the flowers. Let it dry.


3. The trivet’s glass plate is then glued onto the flowers. Use a glue gun or just glue. Assemble the box lid and glue with a glue gun.


See more examples

January 30, 2013

A Crocheted Necklace from Beading Wire with Silicone Stop Rings


This necklace is crocheted from beading wire with silicone stop rings threaded onto the wire randomly as you go along. Five crocheted pieces of beading wire have been crocheted to make this necklace. The five necklaces are assembled into one necklace in a magnetic clasp.


1. Thread the silicone stop rings onto the beading wire. Do not cut off a piece of the beading wire, but leave the beading wire still on the roll. Feel free to choose the number of silicone stop rings.


2. Cast on a stitch at the end of the jewellery wire.


3. Crochet five or six chain stitches before pulling the first silicone stop ring along the wire towards the nearest stitch. Then continue crocheting.


4. Continue crocheting following the illustrated process until the stretched length of the necklace measures approx. 65cm. Crochet a total number of five pieces of beading wire.


5. Assemble the ends of the five pieces of crocheted beading wire in a knot and cut off the excess.


6. Add a blob of glue inside both hollow end caps of the magnetic clasp. Push each end piece of the crocheted necklace inside the end cap and hold in place until the glue has dried.

Junk mail typography collage art


I made this awesome re-arranged typography wall art with two junk mail postcard sale mailers. This is what you need to make this junk mail wall art plaque! This tutorial will showcase each step I took to complete this art piece.


Materials:
- Substrate of your choice: cradle board, canvas board, illustration board, plywood or wood
- Cardstock
- Cutting tools
- Ruler
- Mod Podge tools: Brayer and Squeegee
- 1″ SQUARE shape paper punch
- 2 Crate and Barrel postcard mailers
- Any Mod Podge, I used Mod Podge Paper and Mod Podge Gloss


1. Cut 25 pieces (1″ squares) of the red and white section only.


2. TIP: I taped a piece of cardstock to my cutting mat. This type of mat has measurements printed on it, so it is easy to make accurate lines (see photo). I made two straight lines: one vertical and one horizontal; this made my layout easy to place . . . I knew I needed 5 rows of 1″ squares across since I was working with a 5″ x 5″ block. I used Mod Podge Paper to mount the squares in place . . . then let dry for 15 minutes. Then, I cut the mounted pieces at 5″ x 5″.


3. Decoupage the FRONT with the re-arranged 1″ square blocks. *TIP: I used a brayer that had some dried Mod Podge from previous projects, because when I run it over the paper it will give it a aged, rustic look and scuff it up. If you don’t want that look, use a clean brayer. Next, I decoupaged the back with a random piece of printed cardstock.


4. I decoupaged the sides with 3/4″ white cardstock.


5. Attach hanging hardware to the back. TIP: I find for something small like this a triangle hanger is easiest! All, you do is find the center, mark it with an AWL, then insert a screw. . . Then I attached two bumpers to the bottom.


Project completed! Ready to hang. Wouldn’t it be fun to try this on a huge scale?