Saturday, July 19, 2014

Sew Primitive Sock Snowmen Ornaments

       As my children grew, I seemed to loose many matches of socks! But being a thrifty parent, I saved the random selection of socks in a basket just encase I ever managed to find a matching pair. 
      After several years of this ongoing frustration, I decided to use up the matchless pairs in a craft, of course, and now you see the result of my endeavors pictured on the right.

Supply List:
  • Very primitive snowman with shell button nose.
    white baby socks
  • old white button
  • plaid felt (brown tones)
  • small wire stem with leaves
  • yellow wool
  • hook for hanging
  • batting
  • needle and tan or white thread
  • black embroidery thread
Tea Bath Supply List:
  • black tea
  • small pot of water
  • stove top
Step-by-Step Instructions:
  1. Bring a few cups of water to a boil on the stove top; then turn off the heat.
  2. Add the black tea bag to the water and let the tea bath steep for ten minutes or more just to ensure that you stain will be dark. Don't remove the tea bag.
  3. Now soak the white baby socks in the tea bath for 40 to 50 minutes.
  4. Remove the socks and set them outside on a glass surface to dry. Make sure that you don't leave these to dry on top of something that you care not to stain! Do not dry the socks in a drying machine. The tea dye will leave a residue that may stain other clothes. Do not rinse out the socks either, this will remove some of the tea stain.
  5. Now stuff the socks with a poly-fill batting. 
  6. Wrap a small strand of embroidery around the middle of each sock to create a segmented looking snowman.
  7. Sew over this knotted floss, a small clipping of wool for the snowman's scarf.
  8. Twist the wire stem with leaves into a wreath shape and tack this element onto the front of the snowman's belly with thread so that he looks as if he is holding the miniature wreath.
  9. Sew on his button nose and add two little black "cross stitch" eyes.
  10. Cut from the plaid felt two triangle shapes and sew these right sides together leaving the shortest end of the triangle open to fit on top of your snowman's head.
  11. Turn the little hat right sides out and stitch the pointed hat to the top of the snowman's head.
  12. Push the wire hook through the back side of the knit material to hang up your primitive snowman. 
  13. Not only does he look cute, he smells good too!

Friday, July 18, 2014

Snip, Stitch and Tuck Snowmen From Notions

What a cute way to recycle old odds and ends from your sewing box!
       Some ornaments are "sew" easy they hardly take much consideration at all to assemble. Make these fun little fellows with your children on a lazy Sunday afternoon. All you need is a treasure trove of old sewing notions and an nice skein or two of white wool yarn.



Supply List:
  • white wool yarn
  • thimbles and a flexible measuring tape
  • pins and needles
  • buttons and old hooks
  • old wooden spools
  • card stock
  • hot glue gun and glue
Step-by-Step Directions:
  1. Wrap wool yarn around a bit of card stock over and over until the wool forms round balls. 
  2. Attach and stack these yarn balls to each other with a long threaded needle using a similar color to the white wool.
  3. Hot glue an old wooden spool or a old tin thimble to the top of the snowman's head to serve as a "hat"
  4. Sew onto the snowman's face tiny odd notions: buttons for eyes, old hooks for noses, flexible measuring tape for scarfs etc...
  5. Weave a thin wire hook into their backs for hanging.
More Ornaments Made From Recycled Wooden Spools:

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Craft Easy Nativity Star Ornaments

This Nativity ornament is so easy to make but yet it looks as though took a long time to craft!
      I just love the way this easy little star ornament turned out. I took very little effort on my part to produce it. Depending upon the stickers you use, this project could look quite different. I purchased these nativity stickers at a Michael's hobby store but you could find similar ones at any number of retailers. This is a perfect Christmas ornament project for those who love to scrapbook.

Supply List:
  • plastic star ornament container
  • white glitter
  • white school glue
  • sand paper
  • wire hanger and one cotton ball
  • silver tinsel
  • Nativity stickers
Step-by-Step Instructions:
  1. Rough-up both the inside and outside of the plastic ornament container with sandpaper. This will help the glitter stick to the plastic surface.
  2. Then layer white glitter on both the outside and inside of the plastic star. You may choose to brush on the glue but I used my finger tips instead. Make sure to give the ornament extra coats of glitter around the edges of the star.
  3. Glue inside the ornaments a small amount of silver tinsel. Many retailers sell this material for mere pennies during the holiday season.
  4. Now add extra glue to the backing of your stickers and firmly press these to both the inside and outside your glittery star!
  5. Cover and wrap a wire hook with cotton batting using white glue. Twist the wire through the plastic hook or hole provided and hang the ornament on your tree.
Left, plastic star ornament containers come with two sides; so you can craft two separate miniature dioramas. Next, rough up the surface of any plastic form in order to give it a surface that will except glue/paint. Center, apply the glitter and glue generously in stages. Far right, glue inside the star ornament a bit of inexpensive tinsel. This ornament has real bling!
More Nativity and Advent Ornament Crafts:

Sew Easy Iron-On Embroidery Rose Heart Ornaments

      You can make these simple layered heart ornaments with scraps of fabric, embroidery threads and embroidery decals. I trimmed my layered fabrics with a blanket or button hole stitch. Normally you would iron on the embroidery patch only and finish off the project. However, I added an additional blanket stitch to the edging of my iron-on embroidery roses because these examples were cut from an old recycled pair of jeans. I then added a ribbon to each one for hanging.

The blanket stitch demonstrated.

Learn More About Embroidery Techniques on Machines:

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Assemble a Milkweed Pod Baby Ornament

The milkweed pod babies I craft for fairs and to hang on my own tree.
        These little milkweed pod babies are so easy to make. I love to go for long walks in the Fall with my family. Sometimes we collect a few milkweed pods from a field or roadside for fall crafting. If you should choose to do the same, make sure that you do not take all of the seeds. Spread some of these to the wind so that there will always be milkweed in the area you harvest from. 
      I crafted these little pod babies by first hollowing out the seed pod and setting aside the soft fibers and seeds for the finishing touches. 
      Then I squeezed a generous amount of glue into the pod. Fill this pod with soft cotton and glue into one end of the pod a little clay baby head. These may be easily manufactured from a press mold. You can choose to use flesh colored clay when you make these but I painted my pod baby faces using acrylic paints: pink, flesh tone and brown. Glue the soft fibers with a few seeds back onto the surface of the cotton for a finished look.
      The milkweed filaments from the follicles are hollow and coated with wax, and have good insulation qualities. During World War II, over 5,000 t (5,500 short tons) of milkweed floss were collected in the United States as a substitute for kapok. As of 2007, milkweed is grown commercially as a hypoallergenic filling for pillows A study of the insulative properties of various materials found that milkweed was outperformed by other materials in insulation, loft, and lumpiness, but scored well on various metrics when mixed with down feathers. Read more... 

Help Save The Monarch Butterfly, Plant Milkweed:

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

The Festive Christmas Tree In 1906

Small boys surround a Christmas tree in 1905.
      It will not be the fault of the shop keepers if your Christmas tree is lacking in characteristic beauty, for as early as November first the toy departments were beginning to assume a "Christmasy" aspect.
      The number of people who purchased decorations at that time was altogether surprising, and from the first week of November to Thanksgiving the buying has been unprecedented. There are two good reasons for early buying; the novelties, of course, quickly disappear and the stock becomes exhausted; again when purchased in ample time there is less danger of the frail ornaments being broken, which is sure to occur when the holiday rush is on for good and everybody is making for the same goal. 
      While there is nothing strikingly new or unusual among the fanciful embellishments for this year's Christmas tree, they are sufficiently satisfying and ornate to please the little men and women for whom they are intended, happy sojourners in the Land of Delusion.
      It is probably owing to the small box-like rooms that prevail in recently built houses and the growing popularity of flat-life that brought the diminutive tree into favor. At any rate, real and artificial trees from 24 inches to 1 yard high and from this height to the fast vanishing giant balm that ends unwillingly beneath the ceiling are all equally desirable according to recent advice.
      Every purchaser buys a tree best suited to the available space in his home. Children may trim and untrim small trees and so engage their time for days at a stretch, whereas with the usual size tree this is not possible. Besides, there is an economical side to the dwarf-like tree, which is vastly better than none at all, when a larger one proves too great a tax for a slender purse. The attendant annoyance of falling greens and the time required in trimming the trees are reduced to a minimum.
Babies underneath the tree in 1908.
      Small trees are also employed to bear the gifts for the children, which is even more fun than finding them under the tree.
      A number of very attractive shapes are shown in colored glass ornaments, besides the standard ones that have been doing service for many years. The coloring this year seems to be unusually brilliant, three or four hues often being combined in one piece. Many of the more expensive ones are hand-painted and rainbow tinted, with queer little spirals of gilt running over and around them.
      About a hundred and one different models for airships, some horizontally built, others like balloons swinging vertically, are in profuse assortment. These are mostly seen in a single color with spirals of gilt surrounding them. Boats, horns of plenty, besides hosts of others, may be added to the list. Many musical instruments are displayed alike in painted glass, with bright and dull finish.
      Bunches of grapes in gold, silver, green and purple glass are available from 5 cents to 1$, and must assuredly be included among the essential decorations.
      Miniature fans with the tops finished by frills of a plain color and enlivened with tinsel, ornate flowers, fancy heads and sparkling dust, are among the attractive novelties; these fans vary from three to six inches, the sticks are of gilt and silver paper, some of which are mounted on heavy cardboard.
      The Christmas fairy does not flourish in her undisputed sway today as she did when we were nursery enthusiasts. But she is the same ornate fluffy spangled lady, sometimes wearing frilled skirts of gold paper, again one of coarse lace with paper flowers and bits of tinsel and stars or one of cotton net standing out in a characteristic, bouffant fashion.
      Quite amusing are the little roly-poly decorations, dudes, Indians, clowns, dancing girls, besides those of the animal tribe, rabbits, dogs, cats, pigs, bears and what not, all fancifully garbed, with their bearing attached to swing on the tree.
      Both plain and crepe papers enter largely into the fanciful designs of all sorts. Very graceful indeed are the horns of plenty of embossed gold and paper filled with flowers, some of which support a fairy butterfly, glistening with vari-colored diamond dust.
1908, girls making ornaments for sale
      Large single flowers, the rose, chrysanthemum and sunflower, besides sprays are realistically designed in colored papers, their petals touched with gold and silver dust. Torpedo bonbons,
wishing bon bons gayly decorated with tinsel, fancy heads and flowers are fashioned of colored papers. These, it may be whispered, are not in the least difficult to make and very effective, and in white, scarlet, yellow, pale blue and pink make a good showing. I neglected to say that in some of the single flowers of crepe paper a little doll's face unexpected appears.
      Among the most effective novelties handled by several houses are those of varicolored beads, made up into unique little ornaments. Many of these are of pendent persuasion and occasionally combined with glass beads, as in air ships, for example.
      Strings of glistening glass beads and crystal shapes, some in one color shading from light to dark, again several colors alternating with each other, produce a most artistic effect when arranged in garland fashion. In pure white they catch and reflect light, like so many diamonds.
      Crystal or glass fringe in gracefully shaped oval pendants of varying color add a refined brilliancy to the tree as a whole that seems unmatched by any other medium of decoration. Marjorie

Ornaments From The Gilded Age 1870 - 1900:

DIY Cotton Batting Cup Of Cocoa Tutorial

My Christmas cup of cocoa ornament made with cotton batting.
Supply List:
  • a child's tea cup or a demitasse 
  • white cotton balls
  • masking tape 
  • newsprint
  • white school glue
  • brown, red and green acrylic paints
  • white glitter
  • green lace trim
  • wire for the hanger
  • soda pop or beer bottle lid
Step-by-Step Instructions:
  1. Line the inside of your tea cup with masking tape sticky side up.
  2. Crush newsprint tightly into the child's tea cup or demitasse.
  3. Remove the shape and apply masking tape again to all of the outer surfaces.
  4. Mask the entire surface of a soda pop or beer bottle lid and glue this to the bottom of your cocoa cup to mimic a foot.
  5. Now roll a piece of wire inside newsprint and bend it into the shape of a handle. Mask this piece and attach it with a bit of glue and tape to the cup shape.
  6. You are ready to wrap your form with cotton. Unroll the cotton balls several at a time so that you have long soft strips to works with. 
  7. Apply a generous amount of white glue to the surface of your cocoa mug with your finger tips. 
  8. Wrap the cotton around the surface and gently press it into the glue as you go. Let dry.
  9. Repeat step 8 until you have covered the entire form. Always end with a glue application.
  10. Roll between your finger tips a wade of cotton and glue until you have shaped miniature "marshmallows." I made three for this hot cup of cocoa.
  11. Paint and decorate the surface of your cup with red and green stripes, dots and lace. The lace should be applied with the same white glue that you have used to layer the cotton onto the surface with. Glue on a bit of glitter for foam on top of the cocoa too.
  12. You may also wish to wrap a small wire hanger with cotton batting so that you can hang your ornament on the tree.
Above is the masked cocoa cup that has been shaped with the aid of a child's play tea cup; you could form a similar miniature ornament from a demitasse.
As you can see, I have wrapped every surface with cotton batting and glue before painting it.
More Tea Cup Ornaments:
More Cups of Cocoa Ornament Kits:
This sweet little video about "how to make 
a felt coffee mug" is by Tammy Hallam