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Decorative baubles

Wednesday 12 November 2014

Once I'd finished the wrapping paper, I was really in the creative zone! I'd seen this fabulous tutorial to decorate a tree ornament on my favourite site The Graphics Fairy.  I found some ceramic baubles in Hobbycraft and I already had some old book pages and some music wrapping paper.



Start by ripping the paper into small pieces.  Don't worry about the size or shape of them.  I started off with this page of writing but ended up using music paper for the rest of them.  I liked the musical notes behind the images.  I got my sheets of music from The Fruit Pixie


I used modge podge to coat the ceramic balls and then also to coat the paper.  Once each bauble was covered I then downloaded and cut out images from The Graphics Fairy


I wanted to sparkle them up, so covered them in this iridescent glitter that I had


Finally I strung wire through the top for hanging them up (there were some holes in the baubles) and then I tied ribbon around the tops.  I think they will look really pretty on the tree!






Gift tags and bunting

Still on the Christmas theme, I mentioned gift tags in my previous post.  My Etsy shop Alegreya has been up and running for a few months now.  A slow start but I was excited to get some sales of my Halloween masks and as soon as October was over I started on some Christmas ideas.






So far I've designed Christmas bunting.....




...and gift tags.  Pleased with how both have turned out.  I printed the tags onto heavy weight paper 167g/m and cut out with a craft knife, punched a hole in the top and attached to my gifts.  The bunting was also printed onto card stock.  It downloads as a double-ended pennant, which then folds down over ribbon or sting.  I glued the insides together and hung up.


I'm planning on more tags and bunting with some more traditional themes.  All the items are instant downloads so there's no waiting around for the post.  Just download, print, cut out and use!  You can find the Christmas items here


Ho, Ho, Ho.....

I'm surprisingly organised this year and despite it only being early November I've already done most of my Christmas shopping.  Yes, sad I know but in my defense, I have family that live abroad so I have to get super organised to get it delivered in time.

Anyway, this year I decided to get all creative with my wrapping paper and instead of buying expensive gift wrap I bought 2 rolls of brown paper and printed it up using a lovely stamp I already had plus a homemade potato stamp!


First I got together my paper, ink and stamps.  The brown craft paper was from Hobbycraft and cost about £2 for a large roll.  I did buy a new white ink pad but the others I already had.


The stamp is from Noolibird and is a lovely image of a reindeer.  They do the most beautiful stamps, not cheap but I got this one a few years ago and have made countless Christmas cards and wrap so it's earning it's keep!


I find it hard to be totally random in my stamping, so as you can see this is a fairly regular pattern.


A close up of the stamp.  Gorgeous!


I wanted to stamp some stars so took a humble potato and cut it in half.


I then used a marker to draw a rough star....


...and then cut it out using a knife.  Just be careful not to cut through the star, just around the edges about a half centimeter or so in depth.


Stamp away!  It's not the most perfect star but I don't mind it's quirkiness.  All part of the charm.


I did find though that the water in the potato did mess up my ink pad a little and I'm not sure how much stamping you could do with one potato stamp.  I did about half a metre with mine because that's all I needed.  




And the finished paper stamped and presents wrapped.  Really pleased with the final result.  The gift tags are mine and can be found in my Etsy shop

Halloween Masks

Monday 20 October 2014

I thought I'd have a go at some Halloween masks.  I've had such fun making these and thought they'd be a bit of fun for the forthcoming 'witching' season.  Great for Trick & Treating or a party.

These can be instantly downloaded from my Etsy shop Alegreya and are best printed onto card stock or heavy weight paper.  A huge thanks to Ann Martin from All Things Paper who featured them on her website in an article about paper masks for Halloween




All images from the superb Graphics Fairy


Happy Halloween!


Etsy!

Friday 5 September 2014

Gosh where has the summer gone?  It's been ages since I wrote anything, mainly because I've been super busy in the garden (pruning and general tidying), but also because I've been working solidly on setting up an Etsy shop in the hope that someone might love (and want to buy) my little digital works of art that I've been creating.  That hasn't been helped by our computer breaking.  Sadly it was beyond repair and we've had to splash out on a new one.  Hopefully this one will be better behaved!

Anyway, back to Etsy....I've so loved messing around on Photoshop Elements that I decided to try and fund my sabbatical from work by designing gorgeous pieces of digital ephemera that can be downloaded and used in collage or scrap-booking.



I used to have an Etsy shop a few years back where I sold hand made jewellery.  It's been sadly empty for a while but if I can start getting some digital sales then I hope to start working on some new jewellery pieces.

It's a bit time consuming setting the shop up, but it's getting there. I've some more listings to load but you can check it out by going to Etsy 

One of the more time consuming aspects was choosing a name.  I'd spent weeks thinking about names - should I use something that had digital in the title, or something else that described what I made or should it just be a lovely name or something that had meaning to me?  In the end, the choice became extremely limited as virtually every name I liked had already been taken!  I eventually chose the name Alegreya (which is actually the name of a font) but I thought it had a beautiful sound and doesn't restrict me from selling other items in the future.

Hope to see you there!  Wish me luck...

Chairs and cushions

Tuesday 5 August 2014

Thought I'd share how I recovered the director's chairs and made the cushions for the summerhouse.

The chairs...

I used the old covers to make a template for the new ones.


As you can see, the fabric was a little worn!


Very pleased with this fabric.  It needed to be quite robust and hard-wearing so don't choose anything too thin.  Remember the fabric will need to take your weight.


I sewed the back covers first.  The top and bottom edges were hemmed and the side edges were hemmed with a gap large enough to push the back upright struts of the chair into.



Finished back pieces.


The seat was similar - the back and front edges were hemmed but the side edges needed to be able to fit a small piece of dowling in.  This dowling then slots into two grooves on the chair and keeps the fabric seats firmly in place.  Of course other makes of director's chairs might be different.



I top stitched all the seams on the chairs for sturdiness.  It also looks  more attractive and professional.

The cushions...


I made two styles of cushion - this one which was rectangular, with a panel piece of the chair fabric and a Velcro fastening on the reverse.


The front - with the 3 sections of fabric.


Sewn together and top stitched.


The back was cut into 2 pieces straight down the middle. Then hemmed and Velcro attached for a nice neat and easy closure (below).


Both back and front were then sewn right sides together, and then turned right side out through the Velcro opening.

 The front of the finished cushion.


The second cushion was a 16" square with a pillowcase opening so I could add contrasting fabric and pretty ties.


The most complicated bit of this cushion is making sure your contrasting flap is sewn in the right way!


Cut a nice deep rectangle of fabric the same width as your main cushion piece.  Hem the one long end and then sew the other  end right sides together to the front of your cushion piece.  At this point you want to also slot it one lot of your ties.  These can be made from fabric, as I've done or you can use ribbon or anything you want really.


On the back piece of your cushion, hem the top edge and sew in the other two ties to the wrong side.  Make this a nice deep hem with some top stitching as it will form the opening of the cushion.


Put both right sides of your cushions together but make sure the contrasting flap is sewn the right way.  It has to encase both back and front pieces.  Sew along the each side and the bottom and turn the cushion back the right way.