Monday, April 29, 2013

DIY Woven Embroidery Thread and Chain Bracelet

 
I was so excited about this bracelet I saw on pinterest. The tutorial from Honestly...WTF is very easy to follow and turns out amazing results. Note for next time- Find a better starting bracelet. The starting bracelet in the tutorial is chunky and beautiful on it's own. You will not be able to find a good starting bracelet at the craft store. This is one pin I'll be trying again soon.
Honestly... WTF


Monday, April 15, 2013

DIY Scrapbook Paper Origami Box

 
Unlike my previous origami gift box, this tutorial from Activity Village only uses 2 pieces of paper. I made many of these last Christmas to hold small handmade gifts. I loved using different scrapbook paper from the same paper pack. This way the box and lid coordinated without being too matchy matchy. In general I much prefer handmade bows (like these here) to curling ribbon, but honestly it doesn't feel like Christmas til I've curled some ribbon.
 




Monday, April 1, 2013

Origami Book Page Gift Box

 
8 pieces of paper... 10 minutes of folding... 2 paper cuts... then.... JOY!
I followed this wonderful tutorial from Creature Comforts
 



Monday, March 18, 2013

DIY Birds Nest Necklace

 
Thank you Pinterest! I have a serious bipolar relationship with this crafty website. I love the inspiration and tutorials I find on Pinterest, but I have to wonder... how much more crafting could I get done with the hours I spend wandering from board to board. Today is a Pro-Pinterest day. Without such a time-sucking brilliant site, I would never have stumbled upon this necklace tutorial.
 
 

Bracelet made from leftover leather cord that I used for the necklace. It's just 2 pieces of cord twisted together. So simple. Such wonderful raw edges.



Monday, March 4, 2013

Boys I-Spy Quilt


Christmas present for my nephew. I used the same cheater binding that I did on my hand quilted baby quilt. In an attempt to make the quilt a little modern, I only used I-spy quilt patches on every other patch. My most time-consuming craft to date, but pretty self-explanatory.

 
Back view of the quilt. To monogram the quilt I cut out letters with my cricut on paper (I have yet to master cutting fabric with the cricut) traced the paper letters on the flannel, cut out the flannel letters, sewed with a zigzag stitch.  


Monday, February 18, 2013

Hand Quilted Baby Quilt


A friend is having a baby in a couple of weeks, so it's time to get crafting. Since this is baby #2 and the family already has most of everything they need, I wanted to create something more treasure-able
than strictly useful.

Everything prior to quilting my quilt, was done with the sewing machine. I would love to craft an entire quilt by hand... someday... in the far off future when I no longer need to eat, sleep, clean, or raise a child. I sit at my computer desk in awe of such beautiful things, but I have been blessed with a sewing machine. Thank you God for my sewing machine :)

1. I used this method from Smile and Wave to piece the quilt top together
2. I used safety pins to baste the quilt. That is, to hold my quilt top, batting layer, and quilt bottom in place.
3. Let the quilting begin! After seeing this on Pinterest I knew I had to try the adorably sweet look of hand quilting. The sign of a good quilter would be even, perfect looking stitches, but the thing I love most about hand-quilting is the imperfections. I followed my stitch-in-the-ditch lines, then went on diagonals across the quilt.
4. I used this method from Prudent Baby for binding.






 
When all was said and done, I slung the quilt over a chair to use as a backdrop for 6 month old baby pictures:


 

Monday, February 4, 2013

DIY nursing cover



"Don't make something unless it is both made necessary and useful;



but if it is both necessary and useful,



don't hesitate to make it beautiful." -- Shaker dictum




I don't know about you, but I adore handmade baby shower gifts. The things I cherished the most from my own baby shower were all handmade. They are the things that I love to use because they are beautiful, useful, and made with love. It was with that appreciation for the things made for me, that I made this nursing cover for a friends baby shower.
 

I followed this tutorial from Prudent Baby. I am head-over-boots about the boning which makes it easy to see baby while you're nursing. Believe you me, nursing with a cover is no picnic. Baby is squirming like crazy, trying to find the nipple, trying to pull off the cover, getting blasted in the face because your milk just let down. I don't have an extra hand to hold the cover in the right place to insure visibility without flashing the room. I currently have 2 covers. One with the life-saving boning... one without. I bet you can guess which one actually gets use.
 
The one change that I made to this nursing cover is that I lined it with flannel. Soft, but not as heavy as fleece or terry cloth. Something to give the cover a little more weight, and an absorbent opportunity to clean up milk spray.