Sunday, December 14, 2014

Ornaments Made from Angel Cross Stitch Patterns

By Prairie School and perfectly lovely addition,
I think, to a Medieval Christmas Tree.

        These little cross stitch angel patterns, created 1993, were based upon Byzantine designs. They were also intended to be produced on black canvas backgrounds. Several years ago my oldest child stitched a couple of these unusual angelic motifs for our family Christmas tree. 
Michael and Gabriel, two archangels
        The Prairie School patterns depict angels in brilliant colors, formally positioned wings and with iconographic portrait features. I've included a sample of Byzantine angels in this post so that you may make your own comparisons.
       During the medieval period senior angels were often clad in every brilliant color, while junior ranks wore white by artists. Early Renaissance painters such as Jan van Eyck and Fra Angelico painted angels with multicolored wings. Depictions of angels came to combine medieval notions of beauty with feminine ideals of grace and beauty, as in da Panicale's 1435 Baptism of Christ.
      The two angels on the right were painted in a 12th Century icon. They are the two archangels, Michael and Gabriel. They wear the loros of the Imperial guards. The loros is one of the most important and distinctive parts of the most formal and ceremonial type of imperial Byzantine costume. It developed out of the trabea triumphalis of the Roman consuls. The loros was a long, narrow and embroidered scarf which was wrapped around the torso and dropped over the left hand. It was embroidered with gold and heavily embellished with gems.
       You can search online to find a wider variety of angels dating from the Medieval Period, 5th century to the 15th, in order to design your own ornaments. Ebay sometimes offers old Prairie School patterns for sale as well.

View and Read About Different Angel Types from The Medieval Period:

"A Mistletoe Maid"


A Mistletoe Maid
by Irving
 
I kissed her--yes, I did--beneath
The mystic mistletoe
When Christmas bells were pealing out
Across the drifted snow.
She was a maiden sweet to see
And just my style to boot,
And so upon her ruby lips
I placed a swift salute.

For she had twined the berried
bough
On chandelier and wall,
And wreathed it all around the door,
And draped it in the hall,
And pinned it to the picture frames,
And hung it on the latch,
And tucked it in her hair, and so
I had to toe the scratch.

Saturday, December 13, 2014

How To Make a Pine Cone Christmas Tree Ornament

Two versions of the same Christmas pine cone craft. The appearance of this particular ornament may be altered by switching out the materials that you use. School children in American often make this craft using pom poms. However, adults can use the same method to craft a very lovely woodland version of the ornament.
Woodland Pine Cone Christmas Tree Version
Above are detailed photos of the woodland pine cone Christmas tree.
 In this version, I used metallic beads to decorate my miniature tree instead
of the traditional pom poms.
 Supply List:
  • pine cones
  • a tiny acorn cap
  • metallic beads for the ornaments
  • hot glue gun 
  • white tacky glue
  • white school glue
  • white cotton batting balls
  • twine for hanging the ornament
  • glitter (optional)
  • pliers and scissors
Step-by-Step Directions:
  1. Glue a fluffy white cotton ball to the top of your pine cone and then turn it upside down so that the pine cone resembles a fir tree.
  2. Add a bit more of the white school glue to the snowy looking surface and spread this out with your finger tips. Let dry. You may decide to add glitter to the cotton for a extra bit of glamor. 
  3. Unravel a couple of white cotton balls and take these apart to form small amounts of fluff for the tips of your pine cone tree. 
  4. Add just a small amount of white glue to each scale and glue white cotton into place.
  5. Now use a hot glue gun to squirt a bit of the hot glue before gently pushing each metallic bead inside the cone. Work with no more than two squirts of glue and two beads at a time; hot glue dries quickly and will harden before you have had time to position the beads into place.
  6. Assemble the pine cone angel by taking apart an additional pine cone with pliers. You may need to cut and trim off the inside edge of each scale before gluing these together again.
  7. I used tacky glue to arrange the tiny scales around the tip of my index finger and then glued a piece of cotton batting to the top and inside portion of the skirt to hold everything in place. I then glued an additional teir (or ruffle)  to the angel's skirt. (pictured below)
  8. Roll a small amount of white cotton batting into the shape of a tiny head and glue this to the top of the cone shaped angel body. 
  9. Glue on a halo made from an acorn cap.
  10. Glue a metallic wire to the inside of the pine cone for hanging.
Here you can see me assemble the skirt of the angel tree topper from pine cone scales and a bit of cotton batting. The head is also made from cotton batting. The halo of my angel is made from an acorn cap.
I have glued two pine cone scales together with tacky glue and a wad of cotton batting. After these wings dry, you can then attach them with glue to the back shoulder blades of your angel. You will need to hold them in position until the glue hardens a bit.
Pine Cone Christmas Tree Version with Red Pom Poms
 
Above, I have included detailed photographs of the red pom pom variation of
this pine cone Christmas tree ornament. This version is also topped off with a
tiny turned wooden Santa figure.
  Supply List:
  • pine cones
  • hot glue gun
  • wooden spool
  • paints and/or decorative paper 
  • twine for hanging the ornament
  • A tiny ornament or star for the "tree topper"
Step-by-Step Directions:
  1. First you will need to decorate your wooden spool. I painted the edges of the one pictured above and then cut a piece of polka dot paper and glued this to the inside of the spool. This step speeds up the process of decorating the ornament.
  2. Next, hot glue a pine cone with the top of the spool. The top of the pine cone should be the end that you glue to the spool base so that the pine cone will suggest the triangular shape of a Christmas pine tree.
  3. Hot glue your pom poms to the tips of the pine cone scales. If you've turned the pine cone upside down and glued it to the spool correctly, there should be a natural "lip" for the pom pom to nestle inside. This is where you will squirt a bit of the hot glue before gently pushing each pom pom inside the cone. Work with no more than two squirts of glue and two pom poms at a time; hot glue dries quickly and will harden before you have had time to position the pom poms.
  4. Now hot glue a tiny "tree topper" to the tip of your pine cone tree if you wish.
More Pine Cone Tree Ornaments:

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Craft Your Own Set of Spun Cotton Icicles

      If you are anything like me, you will be reading this post at 4:30 in the morning while surfing for one last craft to make for your tree. The only difference between us is perhaps that I am looking to teach it and you are looking to receive it. 
       Although I've managed to keep my pocket book under control and I don't spend as much money as most Americans do at Christmas time, I still dream of decorating my home with items that would cost a small fortune in real life. And this dreaming starts about mid June for me, every year, without fail.
       I walk through the rooms of my home and I can't help but fantasize about draping evergreens loaded with tinsel, ice and extravaganza. However, I'm not just thinking about them in my own home, I am also thinking about them in everybody else's and I guess this is what makes me a little strange.
       What is this madness all about? I'm not quite sure but I think it has something to do with my childhood. My father was quite a daydreamer, something like Walter Mitty. He pursued architecture, religion and history throughout his life in that very order. He had the kind of curiosity that only children understand.
       My mother was the opposite, full of common sense and a little restrictive. She had to be as long as he was alive. But, since my father has died, she has become just as romantic as he was. As we age we begin to realize that what others did for us must be repeated in ourselves in order for their memory to remain alive. I think this is why my father cared so much about history. He just wanted to keep repeating the best parts of it so that the people he loved would never be lost or forgotten.
      So here is my next contribution. During the late 1800s through the first World War, cotton batting ornaments were most popular and although you may not be able to purchase a set of these spun cotton icicles realistically, you can handcraft them with just a bit of time and patience.
I handcrafted a set of six cotton batting icicles for my tree.

Supply List:
  • Both white cotton batting balls and a white cotton batting sheet
  • iridescent glitter
  • red holly berries
  • faux pin needles (cut an artificial branch)
  • masking tape
  • wooden skewers
  • newsprint
  • white school glue
  • white tacky glue
  • scissors
  • wire to shape a hooks
Step-by-Step Instructions:
  1.  I purchased wooden skewers for this project from the grocery store and then broke them in half. You may make your own icicles any length that you desire. But, do use a strong stick, pencil or skewer inside the core of your icicles. These will prevent the ornaments from breaking, should these receive a bit of rough handling over time.
  2. Crush newsprint and layer masking tape on top of it to shape your icicle's form.
  3. I used cotton batting wire to shape hooks on top of each icicle for hanging. Glue and tape these firmly in place before you begin wrapping the icicles with cotton.
  4. In this case, I recommend that you wrap the first layer with a sheet of cotton batting and white school glue. Wrap the subsequent layers with unraveled cotton balls.
  5. After you have layered both cotton and glue, ending with a light coating of glue always, let the icicles dry thoroughly in a warm area.
  6. Poke a hole into the surface of your icicle and fill it with tacky white glue and faux berries/pine needles. Let dry.
  7. Unravel white cotton balls and apply glue in a spiral pattern down the length of your icicle. Wrap and twist a last layer of batting to form the pattern demonstrated in the photos below. 
  8. Wipe on a final coating of white school glue and sprinkle a generous amount of iridescent glitter onto the wet surface. Let the icicles dry and then hang them on the tree for an impressive winter display!
Pictured above are the wooden skewers wrapped and ready to be turned into something special.
The first layer of batting is made of a cotton sheet, normally this is used to line blankets and quilts with.
After your icicles dry, poke a holes into their surfaces and paste in faux pine needles and berries.
To add the final touches, wrap and twist cotton batting down the length of each icicle with glue. On the far right you can see that I've also sprinkled glitter onto the surfaces of my icicles.
See More Versions of Spun Cotton Icicles:

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Fold Victorian Wire Ribbon Rosettes

My Victorian wire ribbon rosettes, three versions.
      Rosettes made with wire ribbon are made to last. They are considerably more durable and more expensive to make than the sample rosette projects that I have posted about in the past.
Left, wire edged ribbons. Center accordion fold from above. Right, accordion fold from the side.
       Wire ribbon may also be recycled easily. If you have dated looking bows and trims made with it, these can be taken apart and upcycled into something new. The Victorians often crafted with ribbon rosettes and so rosettes are frequently associated with the Victorian Era Christmas tree.
      Wire rosettes implement the accordion fold. This is the same fold that school children learn in order to shape basic paper craft projects. (video of accordion folding below)
Left, 3 wire, accordion folded rosettes. Center, cutting and pasting metallic paper rosettes. Right, gluing together the rosettes.
Left, back side of a completed rosette. Next, edge of a finished rosette. Center Victorian printed image. Right, pasted acrylic gem.

 Supply List:
  • acrylic gems
  • 2 to 2 1/2 inch wired ribbon
  • metallic cup cake liners
  • scissors 
  • stapler
  • tacky white glue
  • hot glue and gun
  • Victorian scrap angels
  • scrap cardboard
  • gold cord for hanging
Directions:
  1. Select a ribbon that you like, fold it front to back, on top of itself. I usually work with a length no longer then 20 inches. (pictured above)
  2. Pinch and adjust the folds so that these look consistent. Then pinch one end of all the folds together and staple.
  3. Now gently fan the unstapled side of the  accordion folded ribbon into the shape of a rosette. Staple together the two side ends of accordion folds. Conceal the stapled edges up inside the accordion folds or make sure that the staples are both on one side of the rosette. These will be less obvious on the back side of your ornament.
  4. For the ornaments shown above, I also layered metallic paper rosettes on top of the wired ribbon rosettes. These were made by first cutting the centers out of cup cake liners and then gluing the rippled paper edges back onto a sturdy cardboard round. This round was covered with the same metallic paper discarded from the centers of the cup cake liners. Why not just crush the cup cake liner without cutting it apart you may ask? Because it looks better.
  5. Then I used tacky white glue to attach a Victorian scrap angel to the center of the layered rosettes and pasted an acrylic gem to her halo.
  6. Fold an additional metallic paper rosette for the back side of your ornament. 
  7. Glue a gold cord between the layers of rosettes on the back side of your Victorian ornament and hang it on the tree.
Video by wonder studios.

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Craft a Shabby Chic Pink Silk Bauble

Many people would look at this handcrafted bauble and think that it is Victorian but it's not; it is most definitely Shabby Chic. Why? you may ask? The Victorians were actually sticklers for symmetry. Those who are Shabby Chic fanatics sometimes love Victorian designs and hang these on their Christmas trees. But true Victorian Christmas collectors would never mistaken one for the other. In either case, both are over-the-top if you ask me!
      This pink silk bauble is extravagantly bodacious or eccentrically glamorous or just maybe a really ridiculous ornament. It was made by a Shabby Chic zealot and designed especially for a Shabby Chic Christmas tree. All you actually need to know is how to use a hot glue gun without burning yourself, in order to craft a similar project. I still burn myself after twenty years of using hot glue guns. 
       You may need to scour a few resale shops to find the silk covered baubles. Some years these are sold through drug store outlets, hobby and craft or dollar store, but this year these seem to be a bit scarce. 
       Glue the braid onto the sides of your bauble first so that it will be easier to position the broaches in the center of each half of the ornament. The egg shaped baubles are more versatile because they may be used for both Christmas and Easter decorating.

Supply List:
  • buff pink velvet ribbon
  • egg shaped ivory silk bauble
  • an old broach and an old pearl earring
  • heavy metallic braid, silver or gold
  • hot glue gun
  • both pearl head and plain pins
How to make Shabby Chic angel ornaments

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Calvary Episcopal's Famous Church Bazaar

      Ready to wait in line? Calvary Episcopal's Annual St. Nickolas Advent Bazaar in Columbia Missouri is so famous that folks have to stand in line in order to get the chance to purchase one of their church mice ornaments! Ladies of Calvary Episcopal have been making these little critters for charity since the 1970s and, boy, they are cute. They also hold raffles for larger quilted crafts and serve a fine hot breakfast for visitors. After all, if you've got to wait in the cold to buy an ornament, you will surely need breakfast to warm you up afterwards.

 

See More Church Mice & Handmade Church Craft Ladies:

Lego Christmas Ornaments for Charity

Young students making a difference with their crafts.

  "Be not forgetful to entertain strangers: for thereby some have entertained angels unawares." Hebrews 13:2

      Lego is a popular line of construction toys manufactured by The Lego Group, a privately held company based in Billund, Denmark. The company's flagship product, Lego, consists of colourful interlocking plastic bricks and an accompanying array of gears, minifigures and various other parts. Lego bricks can be assembled and connected in many ways, to construct such objects as vehicles, buildings, and even working robots. Anything constructed can then be taken apart again, and the pieces used to make other objects.
      Lego began manufacturing interlocking toy bricks in 1949. Since then a global Lego subculture has developed, supporting movies, games, competitions, and six themed amusement parks. As of 2013, around 560 billion Lego parts had been produced. Read more...

Friday, December 5, 2014

Celebrate Santa Lucia for Christmas, December 13th

Saint Lucia martyred for her faith is called, "Light" She is the patron
 saint for the blind among many Orthodox Christians.
       Saint Lucia's Day is on the 13th of December, in Advent. Her feast once coincided with the Winter Solstice, the shortest day of the year before calendar reforms, so her feastday has become a festival of light. St. Lucia’s Day is celebrated most commonly in Scandinavia, where it is a major feast day, and even in Italy with each emphasizing a different aspect of the story. This feast is particularly seen the in Scandinavian countries, with their long dark winters. There, a young girl dressed in a white dress and a red sash (as the symbol of martyrdom) carries palms and wears a crown or wreath of candles on her head. In both Norway and Sweden, girls dressed as Lucy carry rolls and cookies in procession as songs are sung. It is said that to vividly celebrate St. Lucy's Day will help one live the long winter days with enough light.
       In Italy, the Saint Lucy's Day is a church feast day dedicated to Lucia of Syracuse (d.304), also known as Saint Lucy, and is observed on 13 December. A special devotion to St. Lucy is practiced in the Italian regions of Lombardy, Emilia-Romagna, Veneto, Friuli Venezia Giulia, Trentino-Alto Adige, in the North of the country, and Sicily, in the South, as well as in Croatian coastal region of Dalmatia.
       Saint Lucia is one of the few saints celebrated by the overwhelmingly Lutheran Nordic people — Danes; Swedes; Finns and Norwegians but also in USA and Canada and Italy. The St. Lucy's Day celebrations retain many indigenous Germanic pagan, pre-Christian midwinter elements. Some of the practices associated with the day predate the adoption of Christianity in Scandinavia, and like much of Scandinavian folklore and even religiosity, is centered on the annual struggle between light and darkness.
       The Nordic observation of St. Lucy is first attested in the Middle Ages, and continued after the Protestant Reformation in the 1520s and 1530s, although the modern celebration is only about 200 years old. It is likely that tradition owes its popularity in the Nordic countries to the extreme change in daylight hours between the seasons in this region.
       The pre-Christian holiday of Yule, or jól, was the most important holiday in Scandinavia and Northern Europe. Originally the observance of the winter solstice, and the rebirth of the sun, it brought about many practices that remain in the Advent and Christmas celebrations today. The Yule season was a time for feasting, drinking, gift-giving, and gatherings, but also the season of awareness and fear of the forces of the dark. Read more...

       "Every Jultide season the Lindsborg Swedish Folk Dancers, a group of high school students, celebrate St. Lucia Day on the Saturday closest to the traditional date of December 13. The town of Lindsborg, Kansas was founded by settlers from Sweden in 1869. Townsfolk of both Swedish and non-Swedish decent honor the early pioneers with Swedish festivals throughout the year. For more see www.visitlindsborg.com."

More Links to Saint Lucia's Day Celebrations:

How to Sew Sock Snowmen Ornaments

Left, is a sock snowman made by my younger child when she was eight
 or nine years old. Right, is the snowman that I made while working along
with her during the family craft project. I can recall her giggles while
making these even now. Her snowman hangs on our family tree and mine
on her own tree in her bedroom.
       Sock snowmen are so easy to craft that your children can craft these along with you. They make great introductory assignments for a children's sewing class too. 
       Always be sure to give young people new needles to work with and do not allow them to share their needles with any other person. Keep peroxide on hand for accidental pricks!

Supply List:
  • clean, white tube socks (infant sizes)
  • additional decorative Christmas themed socks (infant sizes)
  • solid colored socks and fabric scraps
  • pom poms
  • buttons, beads and ribbons
  • needle and white thread
  • dental floss
  • cotton batting for stuffing
  • Sharp scissors 
Step-by-Step Directions:
  1.  Cut the top half of each white tube sock where the heal meets the ankle. This is the part of the tube sock that you will use to sew your snowman's body.
  2. Sew a straight stitch (with dental floss) across one end of the tube and then turn the sock inside out before stuffing it with cotton batting. It doesn't really matter if you choose the smooth side or the textured side to face outside for the body. This is a matter of preference.
  3. Sew the open end of the tube closed using a slip stitch and the dental floss. The floss is stronger and will stand up to wear.
  4. Thread/knot the floss on your needle again and then hand bast around the center of your stuffed figure, while pushing the stuffing to the left or right to form snow ball like shapes in the tube. Pull the basting firmly into place and back stitch over it so that it will not come loose. You may like to do this more than once in order to sew a snowman with multiple torso parts.
  5. You can dress your snow person by cutting up more decorative socks for his cap, sweater and scarf. Whenever you attach an additional knit piece be sure to turn under and slip stitch the ruff edges, otherwise these will unravel over time.
  6. Sew on buttons and beads to make interesting, quirky expressions.
  7. Tack on ribbon for hanging these funny little guys on your tree.
These sock snowmen are made with rubber bands and rice. 
A little too heavy for the tree but delightful to decorate 
tables and chimney mantels with.

More Sock Snowmen:
More Snowman Crafts for Christmas:
  1. Snowman diorama (video)
  2. Paper snowman mobile
  3. The snowman crafts from Crafty Journal
  4. Cotton Ball Snowman Craft For Kids
  5. Snowman made with egg cartons (video)
  6. How to make a snowman using large plastic cups (video)
  7. Hot glue snowman ornament
  8. Glow in the dark milk jug snowmen

Cut and Paste Victorian Clown Paper Rosette Ornaments

I chose to make the collars of my scrap clowns using cup cake liners; this allows me to price these little rosettes for less at craft fairs. I can also produce them quicker saving both time and money.
Supply List:
  • pom poms
  • striped and solid colored cup cake liners
  • Victorian scrap of clown heads (portraits)
  • thin metalic string for hanging
  • white glue
  • scissors
Directions:
  1. Purchase or print Victorian scrap of clowns
  2. Cut out the center unruffled portions of two or four striped cup cake liners. You can use more than this to make the ruffled collars of each clown; it's a matter of preference. 
  3. Glue the tips of each ruffle to the outer edge of a single circle backed with the same papers. 
  4. Glue two rosettes together, face sides out so that only the decorative parts are seen.
  5. Clip, ruffle and reglue a smaller rosette from a solid colored cup cake liner to the front of each collar. 
  6. Glue the Victorian clown scrap on top of this second layer. The cord for hanging should be sandwiched between these two final layers.
  7. Glue on pom poms.
More ornaments made with paper rosettes:

Cardboard Tube Santa Claus Craft

Far left, you can see that I've sealed the bottom of my tube with a cardboard end and painted this black. Center, I also added a bit of faux fur trim to Santa's cuffs with a glue gun. Right, I dabbed on a couple of layers of different shades of red to mimic the red velvet texture of Santa's hat. I used grey, tan, ivory and white to drybrush his beard.
Supply List:
  • jingle-bell
  • cardboard tube
  • faux fur trim
  • acrylic paints: red, yellow, black, flesh, white, ivory, pale blue, brown
  • acrylic varnish
  • velvet fabric scrap
  • needle and red thread
  • hot glue and hot glue gun
  • scrap cardboard
  • scissors
  • pencil
  • cotton batting stuffing
  • wire or ribbon hook for hanging
Step-by-Step Instructions:
  1.  Trace around the end of your cardboard tube on top of a piece of scrap cardboard. Cut this circle out and glue it onto one end of your tube. Let dry.
  2. Draw and then paint a Santa figure onto the cardboard tube. Make sure that the sealed end is the base of the figure.
  3. Stuff the tube to the top with cotton batting stuffing.
  4. Measure the circumference of your tube by wrapping a piece of yarn or thread around it's end. Cut this to size. Now lay this piece of yarn out straight on top of your velvet fabric scrap. Cut out a tall narrow triangle adding approximately 1/4th for a seam allowance to it's circumference. This triangle should be about the length of your cardboard tube; it's measurement doesn't need to be exact. The triangle doesn't need to be perfectly drawn. It will look cute even if it is not perfect.
  5. Sew up the two longest sides of the velvet triangle with the two ends facing together. Leave the shorter end open. Turn the triangle inside out. Whip stitch a small bell the it's end.
  6. Glue the open end of the triangle to the open end of the tube with hot glue.
  7. Varnish the paper tube and let it dry.
  8. Now measure and glue the faux fur trim and hot glue this piece over the edge of Santa's hat.
  9. Attach a ribbon or wire hook through the velvet hat for hanging.
Santa's red velvet hat is simply a triangle with it's two longest sides sewn together. If you cut your triangle too large, simply gather it to fit around the end of your tube before using the hot glue to attach it. The edge of this cap will be covered eventually with faux fur trim and it won't be visible.
More Santas Made Using Cardboard Tubes:

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Make This Spun Cotton Antique Looking Wreath

This spun cotton wreath looks vintage but it's not folks. I made it yesterday!
      This little antique looking wreath is so easy to make and it can look very different depending upon the small embellishments that you have on hand to attach to it. 
      I picked up some wire mesh scouring pads in a dollar bin at my local grocery store in order to wrap some of my cotton batting ornaments economically. Dresden ornaments were often wrapped profusely with Bouillion wire and I wanted a similar look in some of my handmade crafts as well. But, how to save money on my ornaments was key. Then, I saw them, from across the isle; it was love at first glance. Oh scouring pads, how relieved my pocket book is gonna be this Christmas, hurrah!

Supply List:
  • white cotton balls
  • old recycled curtain ring 
  • wire mesh scouring pads (new in package)
  • tiny pine cones and red berries
  • tiny burned out Christmas light
  • white school glue
  • white tacky glue
  • silver wire for wrapping and hanging
  • silver beads
  • old dull scissors
Step-by-Step Instructions:
  1. Glue and wrap the curtain ring with unraveled, white cotton balls. Let this dry.
  2. Apply a thin outside coating of white  school glue to the surface of your wrapped curtain ring and let this layer dry before continuing.
  3. Use tacky white glue to paste down the tiny pine cones and red berries around a vintage Christmas light bulb. Yes, I really do collect and save these for projects.
  4. Make sure the all of the parts of your spun cotton wreath have dried. Then clip apart the wire mesh scouring pad. You will find that it unravels into a tube like shape. 
  5. I cut across this mesh wire tube so that I could wrap it once around my cotton wrapped wreath. I needed approximately 1 1/2 inches of wire mesh for my wreath. How much you will need largely depends upon the thickness of your cotton batting. If you don't use older dull scissors for cutting this mesh, your new scissors will become older dull scissors, no joke.
  6. Now wrap thin silver wire around the wire mesh in order to firmly attach it to the cotton batting surface. Twist the wire around itself to make firm connections that will not unravel. The wire mesh does unravel a bit while you are working with it but it still gives a lovely antique affect to the ornament if you will work with it. Be stubborn.
  7. You could purchase Bouillion Crinkle Wire if you would prefer this to my economical solution.
  8. Lastly, wrap more silver wire around the wreath and string this with silver beads to make an attractive hanger.
Fun Christmas Wreath Eye Candy:

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

DIY Jewelled Moorish Ornaments

Above, are glamorous ornaments for a Medieval Christmas tree!
      These Moorish shaped ornaments remind me of the jewel encrusted covers found on Gothic manuscripts. My versions, however, will not cost you a king's ransom to create. These little beauties are made from recycled egg cartons, plastic gems and a bit of black paint. Use your imagination and take your time with this project. The more gems the better I think.

Above, are Easter eggs that I made using similar methods.
Supply List:
  • sharp scissors
  • clean egg cartons
  • black acrylic paint/brush
  • plastic, flat backed gems
  • tacky white glue
  • seed beads
  • wire
  • needle and thread
  • embroidery needle
Step-by-Step Instructions:
  1. Cut apart the geometric shapes used to protect eggs inside of their paper carton. Use your scissors to clean up the edges as well.
  2. Now you will be gluing these little shapes to create your own forms for the jewelry inspired ornaments. I used a very tacky white glue for this process in order to speed it up.
  3. Make sure that your forms are thoroughly dry before painting these with acrylic black paints. It is important that you use acrylics because these dry rapidly. Papier-mâché egg cartons will  slowly break down in water colors if their is too much water or in oil base paints because the oils and chemicals will "eat" through paper that has not been treated with Gesso.
  4. Paste on the plastic gems where ever you like.
  5. String seed bead tassels to dangle from the bottoms of some of your ornaments. Thread seed beads through some of the wire hangers on others.
Cut shapes from paper egg cartons to assemble these Medieval inspired Christmas ornaments.
Details of Christmas ornament craft using plastic gems and recycled egg cartons.
 Inspirational Medieval Design:
Medieval Christmas Ornament Crafts:
Learn More About The Medieval Christmas: 5th to 15th Century:

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Craft a Golden Tassel Angel Ornament

This elegant Victorian angel ornament is made with a lovely golden tassel and cotton batting wings. Tassels were often used on ornaments during the Victorian Era.
Click to download largest file.
 Supply List:
  • prefabricated porcelain doll head with shoulders
  • gold tassel
  • short white feathers
  • white cotton balls
  • two ribbon types, wired edges
  • hot glue gun
  • white school glue
  • tiny embellishments: flowers, gems etc...
  • cardboard
  • scissors
  • white chenille stem
  • white or gold glitter
Left, here is a gold tassel. It is so shinny that I can hardly photograph it without a glare! The porcelain head is easy to find in a hobby shop. These kinds of items are popular around Christmas time. The cotton batting wings are not as easy to find. You can make these yourself though.

See how snug and finished the tassel skirted angel looks?
This is because all of the hot glue is hidden inside of the
doll's breast plate. Now all I need to do is wrap the out-
side of her bodice with a gold ribbon.
Step-by-Step Instructions:
  1. Cut one chenille stem in half and wrap each end with a bit of cotton batting; these will be the "hands" of the angel.
  2. Cut to fit two narrow pieces of wire edged ribbon to wrap around the chenille stem. The wired edges should be wrapped around the wrist's of the angel. Glue these ribbons into place.
  3. Fold the finished chenille stem arms in half and hot glue this stem up inside of the angel's shoulders. See photo right.
  4. Now hot glue the tassel up into place just underneath the chenille stem arms. There should be enough room behind the breast plate to accommodate the tassel neatly. Be generous with the hot glue. 
  5. Now wrap a gold ribbon around the breast plate all the way to the back of the angel's shoulder plate and clip off so that the ribbon is the size that you need to cover the top half of the angel's torso neatly. Hot glue this ribbon in place.
  6. Hot glue the angel's hands to hold whatever embellishments you have collected for her arms.
  7. Click and print out the wing pattern above to trace on top of your cardboard.
  8. Hot glue white feathers along the lower half of the wings.
  9. Unravel a few white cotton balls and glue a layer or two of cotton batting around the upper half of each wing covering the ends of the feathers. Repeat this step several times. Be sure to also wrap the batting around the edges of the wings.
  10. End with a final layer of white glue on top of the cotton batting and sprinkle the wings with a bit of white glitter. Let the wings dry.
  11. Hot glue the wings to the backside of the angel's breast plate at her shoulders.
Left, cut the chenille stem in half and glue a bit of cotton batting to the tips of the wire stem to create soft stubby hands. Center, the doll's head has a cavity and breast plate. I will fill this cavity with hot glue and push the wire armature inside it before I hot glue the tassel in place. Right, see I have measured the length of the arms to my own liking before wrapping these with a wire edged ribbon. Don't glue the arms into place until you have checked out the length of the stem and wrapped it in an attractive ribbon.

This little porcelain beauty is dressed; all she needs now is a set of cotton batting wings.

More Tassel Skirted Dolls:

How To Make A Tassel From Scratch.

Stitch a Sampler For Your Colonial Christmas Tree

My eldest child stitched this little Colonial sampler when she was a young teenager. This was her first cross-stitch project. I mounted it on heavy cardstock in order to hang the needlework on an Colonial American Christmas tree.
       When my girls were in their preteen years, my husband and I decided it was time to take them on a trip to visit both the Smithsonian Institute and Colonial Williamsburg. Although it was not an inexpensive adventure, we felt it to be one of the most educational vacations of their young lives.
       During their visit to Williamsburg, my girls were most fascinated with the lives of children, specifically girls, who lived in this recreated historical village. They wanted to know what the girls learned in school, what kinds of chores they were responsible for and what were their hopes and dreams.
      I backed my daughter's cross-stitch sampler with heavy cardstock and a lovely old piece of olive/ochre tapestry. I added braided ribbon and ivory tassels to the ornament as well. Contrary to popular opinions in America, design motifs in the Early American Colonial Era were not always rustic or primitive. In our Colonial Era, designs were sometimes very sophisticated and refined. Age does not always imply "lack" of knowledge or supply. Most of the ornaments that actually hung on the 20th century Williamsburg Christmas trees made by employees during the 1970s were from the pioneer era in America and were far more rustic than those that would have actually been designed by the English and German immigrants of the British colonies. (see 1rst volume of ornaments here) The later published Christmas ornament collection is designed to teach young students about American Folk Artists, some of these lived during the American Colonial times, some of them lived in the 20th century. (see 2nd volumes review here)
       This experience is what influenced my eldest to take up needlework for a brief time during her teen years. I purchased her a small sampler kit to reproduce, hence the ornament that you see at the top of the page.
Plate II.—Sampler by M. C. 
16th-17th Century.
       Colonial American samplers by young children often included alphabets, numerals and simple motifs; the letter motifs seem to be preferred by American Colonists in specific during the 1700s. Marcus B. Huish, author and collector writes, "Although a sampler without either alphabets or numerals would seem to be lacking in the very essence of its being, it is almost certain that the earliest forms did not contain either, but (like that in Plate II.) were merely sheets of decorative designs. For the need of pattern-books of designs would as certainly precede that of copy-books of alphabets and numerals, as the pleasure of embroidering designs upon garments preceded that of marking their ownership by names, and their quantity by figures. A sampler would seldom, if ever, be used as a text-book for children to learn letters or figures from, except with the needle, and the need for lettering and figuring upon them would, therefore, as we have said, only arise when garments or napery became sufficiently common and numerous to need marking. This period had clearly been reached when our earliest dated samplers were made, for, out of dated specimens of the seventeenth century that I have examined, two-thirds carry the alphabet upon them, and the majority have the numerals. It is rare to find later samplers without them, those of the eighteenth century containing assortments of every variety of lettering, Scottish ones especially laying themselves out for elaborately designed and florid alphabets. With the advent of the nineteenth century, however, the sampler began to lose its raison d’être, and quite one-half of those then made omit either the alphabet, or numerals, or both." Marcus B. Huish
       If you would like to make a similar sampler like the one Natalie stitched you can visit the shop at Colonial Williamsburg and order a sampler from their historic collection. These do change from year to year but there is always an assortment of them available.
      Learn more about "The oldest surviving samplers were constructed in the 15th and 16th centuries. Samplers often included the alphabet, figures, motifs, decorative borders and sometimes the name of the person who embroidered it and the date. The word sampler is derived from the Latin exemplum - an example. Expert Joy Jarrett shows us part of her rare collection and explains some of the history behind them."

Additional Sampler Videos:
Click to download the largest available free sampler patten from my blog.
Sampler Pictures, History and Patterns Online:

Monday, December 1, 2014

DIY Shabby Chic Scrap Piecework Baubles

      These Shabby Chic baubles are definitely French Cottage. I pinned this set for my younger girl who happens to adore anything remotely French or Austrian that was produced during the Victorian Era. I wrapped my Styrofoam balls with white glue and variegated, pastel colored yarns. Then I snipped and clipped my way through several vintage shawls, table cloths and dollies yellow and stained with age and wear. Most of these items came to me via an elderly aunt who hadn't the heart to throw them away. I think Hannah will be quite pleased with the end result.
More examples of Shabby Chic Scrap Piecework Baubles. On the far left you can see the beaded chain that I added for hanging the baubles. These piecework baubles have scraps of lace built up on top of yarn covered Styrofoam balls in pastel shades. The color combinations are quite elaborate; not merely shades of white and ivory.
These pieces are fun to work on; it's difficult to know when to stop though.
Details of embroidery and lacework pinned to the Shabby Chic Baubles.
Left, vintage shawls, antique lace and old table linens are the kinds of supplies you will need to acquire for this craft.
A dresser with a distressed
finish and mismatched
drawer knobs, in
Shabby chic style.
      The "Shabby Chic Style" started in Great Britain and evokes the type of decoration found in large country houses where there are worn and faded old chintz sofas and curtains, old paintwork and unassuming 'good' taste. The end result of shabby chic is to achieve an elegant overall effect, as opposed to the sentimentally cute Pop-Victorian. Recycling old furniture and fabrics is an important aspect of the look and was especially popular with modern Bohemians and artisans that made up a sidelined counter-culture movement during the 1980s when expensive quality decor became very fashionable with the upper middle classes. The original shabby chic interiors were usually considered in themselves works of art.
 More painted and layered Shabby Chic Christmas Baubles