Friday, December 5, 2014

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

Sunday, November 30, 2014

Reproducing a Vintage Christmas Stocking

A new stocking for baby in blue or pink felt; how sweet!
      This little drawing of  a blue felt sock is of an actual vintage stocking that once belonged to my husband when he was a baby. It is so tattered and worn but somehow it makes it's way onto our Christmas tree every year. It is far too fragile to fill with gifts however. The stocking was made by some loving grandmother in the late 1950s I'm sure. My husband's sister had a similar one in pink I believe. During the 1950s pastel colored ornaments and stockings on shimmering silver tinsel trees were all the rage. I've redrawn and included a pattern similar to this homemade stocking for those of you who would like to reproduce it. 
       A pair of pinking shears was used to cut the felt stocking out originally. Use a pair of ordinary sharp scissors to cut the marked openings on the sides of two identical felt stockings so that you can weave a pale pink ribbon through the center of the stocking. If you are making a pink felt stocking for a girl, use a blue ribbon instead of the pink. The Christmas trees are also cut from white felt and tiny sequins and silver beads are sewn on to give them sparkle. The "Hello" on the bottom of the stocking is made from silver rick-rack. This word is stitched into place with silver thread. This little felt stocking would be a charming addition to any tree for a new baby.
Click to download the largest possible file.

Free stocking with the purchase of Ivory Snow.

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Handcraft Marbleized Baubles for Your Christmas Tree

This tiny glass bauble would look nice on a Shabby Chic Christmas tree.
     People have been marbleizing glass baubles for years and why not? It is both a fun and a simple way to add a bit of pizzazz to ordinary glass baubles.

 Supply List:
  • acrylic paints: one very light color combined with one or two very bright colors
  • clear glass bauble with detachable metal catche and hook
  • disposable paper cup
  • Ribbon or fancy wire for hanging
  • tacky white glue
Step-by-Step Directions:
  1.  For this peppermint swirled, glass bauble I dripped red and white acrylic paints into my glass bauble and swirled these two colors around inside the ornament. 
  2. Then I turned the glass bauble upside down and stood it inside of a disposable paper cup. I let this drain for an hour or so.
  3. Then I removed the bauble and turned it right side up, cleaned off the lip of the glass and replaced the metal catche.
  4. I twisted an old sprig of winter white berries around the metal catch adding tacky glue to the old vintage wire.
  5. I looped a piece of matching winter berry spring through the bauble's hook and twisted it to make a fancy hoop in order to hang my marbleized bauble from my feather tree.
      You can also make similar marbleized ornaments with alcohol inks and
 compressed air. Ranger Ink has a video here to show you how to do this.

A Quilted Colonial American Christmas Angel Ornament

Left, you can see the store bought, angel stamp that I purchased for the ornament project. Right, the finished quilted Colonial American Christmas Angel ornament, trimmed in white eyelet lace.
       I made these foam stamped angel ornaments several years ago for family and friends. Although I purchased this little Colonial American angel stamp ahead of time, crafters may decide to manufacture their own versions by using a die cut stamp making technique. I've included a video below by Michelle Joy Wecksler that shows how to make these.
      You don't really need fancy inks or paints to stamp nice images onto cotton fabric; I used ordinary acrylic, red, paint for my stamped ornament version above. I backed the printed fabric with a layer of cotton batting plus an additional cotton backing using the same muslin. Then I quilted the three layers together. I followed the outline of the angel with my needle and quilter's thread until I reached the oval's edge of the muslin medallion. Then I repeated the same process for the backside of the ornament. 
       Choose the nicest of the two quilted medallions for the front of your ornament. Sew with a straight stitch around the edge of the medallion perimeter a piece of white eyelet lace. Turn this lace to the inside of the medallion's center and sew the back medallion piece face down on top of the front side, leaving a one inch opening for stuffing. Turn the oval medallion inside out and stuff it with a soft cotton batting. 
      Turn under the one inch opening with your needle as you close up the opening you used to stuff your ornament with a whip stitch. Clean up the puckered edges using a slip stitch with additional quilter's thread.
      Cut a simple white ribbon and tack this onto the outside of your cotton muslin medallion using quilter's thread.
I printed my Colonial American angel on top of white cotton, using a red acrylic paint that I purchased from my local hobby store. Right, you can see a detailed shot of the quilted stitches up close.
 Make your own die cut foam stamps.

      I've included examples of angels below that can be found carved into Early Colonial American tombstones. Sometimes similar primitive angels can by found in Pennsylvania Dutch frakturs. However, not all angels were illustrate so primitively on those manuscripts. Some folk artists preferred naive looking angels and others preferred angels that looked more realistic. Frakturs drawn during the Colonial American era depict both styles because they were produced by artists of various degrees of talent and/or taste. Personally, I prefer the primitive fraktur and tombstone angel designs.

Winged skull & winged soul effigies on Phebe (1757) and Timothy Peck
 (1790) gravestones, Morristown, NJ
Granite tombstone of Josiah Leavitt (1679–1717), Hingham Center
 Cemetery, Hingham, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Captain Andrew Drake (1684–1743) sandstone tombstone from 
the Stelton Baptist Church Edison, New Jersey
See More Early American Tombstones Depicting Angels:

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Craft a Juggling Snowman Ornament

      This charming little snowman ornament has always been a favorite on our family tree. I made him when my adult kids were very young. This was back when I had lots of little mismatched socks floating around the dresser drawers, under beds and stuffed between cushions in my living room! So the supplies needed for my snowball juggler will be easy for young parents to acquire.

This snowman juggles snowballs on my Christmas tree every year!
 Supply List:
  • white or ivory felt
  • red and stripped children's socks
  • plaid wool scraps for snowman's scarf
  • pom pom to match the sock for your snowman's stocking hat
  • papier-mâché pulp (Celluclay)
  • brown embroidery floss and needle
  • thin wire
  • cotton batting (stuffing)
  • Sculpey (white, oven bake clay)
  • black, white and  orange acrylic paints
  • white, translucent glitter
  • miniature cookie cutter for the button 
  • tacky white glue
Step-by-Step Instructions:
  1. Draw and cut a snowman's body in any size that you like. You can trace the general shape of my snowman from the photo above. I did not really use a pattern of any kind to make my juggler; snowmen can be just about any lumpy shape and they will look cute.
  2. Trace around the pattern with a soft pencil on top of your white felt. I used ivory colored felt for my snowman but that is what I had on hand at the time.
  3. Leave the bottom end of the felt snowman open. Turn the felt sewing inside out and stuff the snowman's body with cotton batting.
  4. Sew the opening of his body shut using a slip stitch. 
  5. After this step, I used brown embroidery floss to embellish the seams of my snowman with a blanket stitch. Then I also added the words, "Let It Snow" with a back stitch across the lower half of his body. 
  6. Then I took a child's red sock and cut off it's cuffs and toe in order to wrap the remaining tube around my snowman's torso. Then I cut the remaining cuff of the sock in half and wrapped these around the snowman's arms, whip stitching the sides together with red thread. I also turned under all of my sock seams and whip stitched these shut so that my knit sock sweater would not unravel with use over time.
  7. Cut a thin piece of plaid wool and wrap it around the snowman's neck to give him a scarf. 
  8. Cut the toe from a second baby sock, roll it's edges a bit and fit this over your snowman's head. Whip stitch around this stocking cap in order to keep it in place. Sew on a matching pom pom.
  9. Unwrap your Sculpey, roll out a carrot shape for his nose and cut out a tiny snowman using a miniature cookie cutter. Take your embroidery needle and add two button holes through the clay before backing everything at 170 degrees in the oven for ten minutes. 
  10. Let the clay cool and paint the nose bright orange. Paint the button as you please.
  11. Glue the carrot nose onto the snowman's face. 
  12. Paint a few black dots for eyes and a mouth to imitate coal.
  13. Sew on the clay button to the snowman's sweater.
  14. Clip and bend you wire and poke this with a bit of tacky glue on it's tips, through the felt hands of your snowman. It helps for the end tips to be bent a bit so that the wire will not work it's way out of the felt over time. You will need to wrestle with this a little but it is not as hard to insert as it sounds.
  15. Take a bit of Celluclay from it's package and add a very small amount of water to the mixture. Stir and form snowballs over the wire armature. Let this dry hard overnight.
  16. Paint the snowballs with white acrylics and then glue on the translucent glitter to finish your juggling snowman ornament.
Close up shots of my juggling snowman.
See more little crafted felt snowmen:
How to craft more snow people for Christmas:
  1. Snowman crafts from favecrafts
  2. Claypot snowman craft for Kids
  3. Laughing snowman paper bag craft
  4. Snowman craft idea using white chrysanthemums
  5. Cute pom pom snowman craft
  6. Glass block snowmen (video)
  7. A wooden melted snowman craft
  8. Snowglobe Snowman
  9. Craft a Paper Snowman Wreath

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Christmas Quatrains

     These quatrains would be lovely to include in a church bulletin for parishioners to recite during a Christmas service. You don't need to write to ask for permission to use them. George Creel's work is in the public domain folks.

Christmas Quatrains 
by George Creel

Again the star dawns in the eastern sky;
Again we hear the shepherd's startled cry
As waking from his midnight sleep he sees
The camels of the wise men sweeping by.

The years have worked their measure of decay.
Where are the inn and stable? Who can say
"This is the spot" or "There the very place
Where the Lord Christ came into the light of day?"

No more chants Caiphas his vengeful song,
And scattered to the winds are all the throng
That clamored for Barabbas, only held
In memory by reason of their wrong.

The weak souled Pilate long has passed away;
Great Caesar, too, is now at one with clay,
Their mighty Rome forgotten save as theme
To keep the grumbling schoolboy from his play.

But still the scent of frankincense and myrhh
Steals down the centuries, and as it were
But yesterday, so sweet and now it seems,
Did Virgin Mary bear the Harbinger.

Let fools with much pretense of wisdom scout
The truth and wag their heads in owlish doubt
Of Great Jehovah's all embracing scheme
Because there is a door they stand without.

Content are we, the children of his hand,
To wait, nor insolently demand,
Assured that in God's own good time he will
Unlock the door and let us understand.

Of all thy gracious gifts, O God Most High,
The dearest of them all is this clear eye
Of faith with which we shrine the miracle
Of far off Bethlehem and time defy.

O Virgin, wert thine eyes less unafraid
Or didst thou shrink, sore startled and dismayed,
When first thou felt that life within and learned
On thee God's precious burden had been laid?

What must have been thy happy, sweet amaze
To see the aureate halo blaze
And from the wide flung gates of paradise
To hear the mighty harmonies of praise!

Loud sang the golden throated cherubim
And all the wheeling hosts of seraphim,
Whose snowy pinions changed to canopy
Of virgin white the heaven's sapphire rim.

Hosanna! Glory to the Son of Man!
O happy moments ere his work began
Of lifting from the world its weight of sin
And making straight salvation's tender plan!

No hint of Pontius Pilate's last decree,
The lonely horror of Gethsemane;
No prescience of thorny diadem
Or shadow from the hill of Calvary.

Humility divine! A manger birth--
The humble stable bathed in holy light--
The Babe upon a truss of straw--the mild
Eyed kine awaked to wonder at the sight!

Alas, still lingers issue of that kine,
The thick of wit, who can detect no sign
Of God in Christ's dear birth nor understand
The marvel of the holy bread and wine.

And sons of doubting Thomas still abide
With us on earth and still the truth deride
Because they cannot grasp his nail torn hands
And see the blood gush from his pierced side.

O shame of shames! The wise men saw on high
God's guiding star gleam in the eastern sky
And straightway journeyed forth across the world,
With ne'er a question of where or why.

They place within the heavens ever hold,
O blessed star, and like those men of old,
May we have faith and hope to follow on
And at our journey's end the Christ behold!

Quick and Easy Christmas Bauble Craft!

This Christmas bauble has a traditional message, "Merry Christmas" and lots of holiday sparkle.
      So your racing around town and you've forgotten to purchase something for your students to craft during their Christmas party. You need something quick and easy that you don't have to think about or plan ahead for? Here is such a craft and any youngster can complete it quickly without too much fuss or mess. This is what you will need to purchase:
  • Christmas ribbon with a greeting of some sort printed on it. 
  • lots of shiny, glittery and festive colorful ribbon chopped up into small pieces
  • glass or plastic transparent Christmas baubles
  • hooks, string or ribbon for the hanging of the ornament
  • metalic permanent ink pens to write a date and name of the student on the outside of the ornament
      To assemble the ornaments all you will need to do is remove the caps and fill them up with the above supplies. Then replace the caps and write the student's name and the year they made their Christmas ornament. Tie on a string, ribbon or wrap a hook around the caps stem and your ornament is complete. 
 

 Kids can make more simple ornaments to trim their trees at home. Below are a few more suggestions for crafting hand made decorations: a cardboard star, a beaded chain, pine cone people and birds, painted jacks, a funny rubber ball head bee, a marshmallow gnome, an apple gnome and gumdrop animals.
Illustrated ornaments made by kids.

Easy Christmas Craft For The Kiddos!

Make a wool Christmas tree with stacked
concentric circles.
      Your little ones can make a bright wooly Christmas tree of their very own this year. Just cut and stack wool circles one on top of the other to make the tree you see here. Of course you will need to thread these concentric circles on a stiff thin wire. Perhaps a long ornament hook will do just fine for this craft. Bend one end of your wire and attach it with a piece of tape securely to a large flat circular piece of cardboard. Add glue for extra sturdiness. Cover the bottom of the cardboard with another felt or wool circle to give your project polish. Now poke each wool concentric circle in the exact center onto the wire until you have just enough wire left to thread through a star shaped button. Hook the top end of the wire around the back of the button; Mom or Dad will need to help with this part.

Sew a Vintage Yo Yo Clown to Give As A Gift

I discovered this little vintage, yo yo clown stuffed inside a bag of fabric remnants in a resale shop. What a unpredictable yet happy purchase I had made!
      Young students can make a small yo yo clown to give to an even younger sibling (ages three to five) at Christmas. You don't really need fancy gadgets to make yo yos. In fact sewing these little round fabric puffs used to be the activity of young inexperienced sewers back in the day. However, sharp needles can prick so I wouldn't encourage very young children to experiment with the process. Boys and girls in fourth or fifth grade may certainly give it a try. 

Important Tips:
  • Keep some Bandaids, peroxide and a couple of thimbles on hand, just to be on the safe side. 
  • Make sure that all of the needles used in a project made by a younger family member are brand new. 
  • New sewers need to be guided by an adult in order to complete the project. The project takes two, a parent and a preteen working together!
Supply List:
  • three circle stencils
  • fabric scraps (laundered and machine dried)
  • scissors
  • one finer needle and matching threads or quilter's thread
  • one large embroidery needle
  • embroidery floss for facial features
  • 1 skein of red yarn for pom poms
  • 36 inches of red ribbon for collar trim
  • 2 inch wide cardboard strip
  • cotton batting filler
Step-by-Step Directions:
  1. Prepare your fabric scraps if you have not already done so for former projects. The fabric needs to have it's sizing removed in the laundry. Plus the fabric should also be preshrunk. By laundering the fabric you will prevent shrinking and tearing in the future should you ever need to wash the toy after baby handles it. This preparation also prevents bright dyes from "bleeding" onto lighter colored fabrics in the wash.
  2. Cut circle templates or patterns whose diameters measure: 1 inch, 1 1/2 inches and 2 inches. Trace and cut out 28- 1 inch circles, 32- 1 1/2 inch circles and 17- 2 inch circles from  your scrap fabric for the clown's body. An additional helpful video for this project is by Wendy Harbaugh.
  3. Thread and knot your needle to begin sewing your first yo yo. Holding the wrong side of the fabric circle up, use large stitches to turn down the raw edges as you work around the inside of the circle. Then gather the edges together and gently pull them to the circle's center to make a puff. 
  4. Now work the needle through the the gathered edge on the right side of the fabric to reinforce the gathering, tightening it up as you go without sewing through the gathering to the right side of your yo yo.
  5. Backstitch over your work and snip off the thread. Set the yo yos aside for stringing later.
  6. Make four red pom poms measuring approximately 2 inches in diameter. Wrap yarn around a piece of 2 inch wide cardboard at least 50 times, pass a small piece of yarn through the center of this wrapping and remove the cardboard. Tie the yarn tightly to bind together the twisted mass and then clip all of the loops to make your pom poms. Be sure to trim the pom pom in order to make a more uniform looking pom pom for your doll's hands and feet. Click here to view a video that demonstrates how to make a pom pom with your hands.
  7. Use a thick thread to string the body together. Knot the end of your thick thread and string it first through one pom pom and then thread together 16 - 1 1/2 inch yo yos for each leg. Then take the ends of each of these threads used to string the legs and insert them into the eye of a large embroidery needle. On this combined threading add the 16- 2 inch yo yos. Stringing carefully through the center of each. After completing this stage of the stringing, neatly tie off the threaded ends and then sewing them down firmly to the last yo yo's right side. You should have one 2 inch yo yo left that was not strung onto the torso of your clown. 
  8. String together a pom pom and 14 - 1 1/2 inch yo yos for an arm. Repeat for the second arm. Attach each arm using the stringing thread to the last 2 inch yo yo of the torso.
  9. Take the remaining, left over 2 inch yo yo and neatly attach this on top of all of the exposed threads at the end of the clown's torso. This will hide this part of your stringing ends. You may choose to sew this yo yo down through the back side of the top yo yo in order to make a firmer finish.
  10. Now cut a strip of any fabric 2 inches wide and 27 inches long for the ruffled collar of the clown. Fold a ribbon over one raw edge concealing it and run a straight stitch on top of the ribbon. 
  11. Gather this collar piece and whip stitch it securely to the end yo yo piece where the head of the clown will be attached.
  12. Cut a 4 inch in diameter, circular, solid colored piece of fabric for the clown's head. Gather this large yo yo's edges as before and finish the puff. Stuff cotton batting through this yo yo's small hole with the tip of your scissors until his head is filled firmly. Take a pencil and draw a face and embroider his features as you prefer. Attach the head using a slip stitch to the top of the clowns collar.
  13. To sew the clown's hat, cut a very long triangular shape, sewing together the longest two sides. Attach this to his head turning under the raw edges of the cap as you use a slip stitch to attach the hat to his head permanently. You can cover this edge with a bit of extra red ribbon used to make the collar. 
  14. Make a tiny pom pom for the tip of his hat. Stitch it on firmly babies may try to eat!
Yo Yo Christmas Garland from Thrifty Fun.

This Year, Join In Our Affordable Christmas!

"A friend loves at all times, and a brother is born for adversity." Proverbs 17 : 17

      The angels' song, "On Earth Peace, Good Will Toward Men," can also be translated "peace to men of good will." This version is timely, as well as correct for the Greek. For peace can and shall come to men of good will, and it cannot come to men of bad will.
      Who is the man of good will? It is he who has a choice of happiness, of righteousness, of goodness for all men. It is he who desires that men may be blessed, and who tries to make the desire effective. The man of good will does not hate. Neither does he incarnate hate in any weapon offensive or defensive. He is free from revenge, and is full of forgiveness for the penitent, He may not forget injuries, but, what is more important, he is eager to make injury the occasion for helping the offender to overcome the evil within the heart or will out of which the injury sprung. He is capable of mighty indignations, but he does not suffer himself to be conquered by them. Without being impassive, he is calm in the face of wrong, and he is very patient, being more willing to be the victim than the agent of evil. His hatred of all sin and his love for the man who, despite his manhood, is guilty of sin, are alike strong and lasting. He is free from suspicion, he thinketh no evil. He loves his neighbor, not only as himself, but even more, being more eager to do justice then to receive justice.
      The qualities and elements which constitute the man of good will also constitute the commonwealth of good will.
      Such a commonwealth is a commonwealth peace. Willing good to others, others will good also to it. Armaments in such condition have no longer any function to play, and they melt away. The battle flags are furled. Wars cease and rumors of wars are not heard. Men become brothers in mutual service and happiness, as they are brothers in origin and destiny. Charles F. Thwing

      Every year Journey Church, St. Louis gives to Mission St. Louis' Affordable Christmas. What a happy celebration these parents are given through the ever expanding hearts of the volunteers and contributors of this program. Come share God's joy with the children of St. Louis this year by visiting Mission St. Louis here and at their website here.

Every year we learn more and more about our neighbors and friends. We learn how to encourage, prosper and invest in others through kindness, education and joy.

Monday, November 24, 2014

Tutorial for Weaving Christmas Stars With Yarn/String

Left, my ten pointed, woven Christmas star. Right, a traditional eight pointed woven star ornament in reds and greens.
      This Christmas star ornament craft reminds me of a flat Japanese temari. It's origins are, however, most likely in Scandinavian culture. Nordic peoples have been weaving with straw by similar methods for centuries.
       I remember my art teacher showing me how to wrap these same stars when I was a school girl in the 1970s. It is an excellent introduction to simple weaving for older elementary students.
      The process can be made more or less complicated depending upon the age and or experience of the person producing the ornament. I took the idea a step further and invented a star wrap pattern of my own as well. The nice "how to" video below was made by an art teacher for her classroom students. Given the detailed nature of the weaving, I recommend that you watch the video while you craft your own star versions. Although the process is simple, it seems more complex when reading instructions for the method. For this reason alone, I'm going to recommend that you watch the video before attempt to follow any instructions that I include here.

Ms. Gentry made this nice weaving video for her 6th, 7th and 8th grade students.

Supply List For Both Star String Projects:
  • multiple skeins yarn, spools of string and embroidery floss
  • cardboard
  • tacky white glue
  • ruler
  • scissors
  • large sharp embroidery needle (for 2nd star version)
Left, 10 pointed, original star template but I made modifications
to it so that crafters only need to poke a needle through one
 layer. Right, the square template glued together for the eight
 pointed star version.
      Cut out 2 squares of equal size from the cardboard and glue these together, one on top of the other, to form an eight pointed star. (Left)
      If you are making the second star pattern version depicted below, I have provided a pattern for you to print out and trace around below. The second star only requires one piece of cardboard per ornament. You will also need a sharp embroidery needle to poke holes into the cardboard.
      Once your eight pointed cardboard shape is dry, you may proceed to wrap it with the first selection of yarn/string.
      Keep in mind that this weaving project has only a finished front side for young students who have limited experience in sewing or weaving. For every wrap that these students make, they will need to "tie off" their yarn strands on the back of their cardboard templates. However, if you are making these stars and have more experience with a needle, you can make your woven stars two sided. Simply snip, tuck, glue and hide the ends of your wrapped design as you proceed through the steps. I used a large embroidery needle and a bit of tacky white glue to hide my yarn ends as I wrapped.
First wrap step for both woven string stars.
      Above I have included a photo of the first wrap around each of the cardboard star patterns. On the left you can see that the floss is wrapped between each of the ten points on my own version of this craft. On the right I have completed the first wrap for the six pointed star described in the teacher's video above.
Above you can see me weaving a large embroidery needle in and out of the holes made just beneath my star tips.
      After wrapping the 10 point star with blue embroidery floss, I simply repeated the same wrap with yellow. Then I proceeded to make two sets of holes using the sharp tip of my embroidery needle beneath each of the ten points of my star. I wrapped multiple colors of floss in a herringbone stitch through the lowest hole. Then I used a whip stitch to create the feather like tips of the outer points of my star by threading through the upper hole.
The second wrap of the eight pointed star, back and front photographed.
      The second wrapping of the eight pointed star is photographed above. On the left, I show the back side of my work. Note how I have added tacky glue to hold the center crossing ends in place while I work. Also, see in the second wrapping how I have a strand of floss crossing in the back. I will cut this away after I wrap a third and fourth time over the green floss. This will not harm my weave because it is trapped beneath top layers. Keeping the backside clean of crossing strings will make it attractive enough to be a two sided pattern. Just right, above in the photo you can also see traces of tacky glue on the edges of my cardboard template. This glue helps to keep my weaving in place over time and it will also dry transparent.
Left, third wrap. Next, fourth wrap. Middle, fifth wrap. Far Right, sixth wrap.
      The photograph above depicts the 3rd through 6th wrapping sequence for the eight pointed star. After completing these steps, I threaded a finer needle and stitched a cross stitch pattern in green over last top square of my design. I attached a green tassel to the bottom to finish the look.
My tassels for these ornaments were made from embroidery floss. I have also included a simple video below that demonstrates the basic method that I used.
Click to download the largest file, 10 point star shape template.