Thursday, February 5, 2015

Photo "Clothesline"


     Looking for a way to display photos, cards, or other items, or to keep track of memos and to do lists?  Try making this photo "clothesline."

Materials:
*Ribbon
*Thumbtacks
*Mini clothespins

Directions:
*Hang the ribbon up on the wall using thumbtacks.  If you're working with a narrow wall, instead of hanging the ribbon straight across, try letting part of it hang down.
*Use the clothespins to hang up photos and other items.

Curious about the color dipped photos hanging from my "clothesline"?  Next week I'll explain how to make them.

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Ribbon and Hearts Bookmark


Materials:
*Ribbon
*Scrapbooking paper
*Scissors
*All purpose adhesive
*Stickers

Directions:
*Cut a length of ribbon about an inch longer than you would like your bookmark to be and knot both ends.
*Cut out four heart shapes from the scrapbooking paper.
*Adorn hearts with stickers.
*Glue hearts to the ribbon.

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Zombie Valentine's Lotto Ticket


    Here's a slightly different take on the Valentine's lotto tickets I've seen floating around online.  Instead of having prizes underneath each scratch off heart so that your loved one is guaranteed to be a winner, add zombie images under some of them.  You can still think up a prize to correspond to the zombies if you would like, but don't tell your valentine about that beforehand.  Keep them in suspense as they play the zombie Valentine's lottery.

Materials:
*Zombie lotto ticket printout (either my template or your own design)
*Pink cardstock
*All purpose adhesive
*Acrylic paint
*Liquid soap
*Pencil
*Paintbrush
*Scissors

Directions:
*Print out zombie lotto ticket, either my design (pictured below) or make your own design.


*Glue template onto pink cardstock.
*Write/draw/paste in your zombies and prizes.  I used photos of my sister Katie, Brian, and me dressed up as zombies (as well as a photo of zombie gingerbread) for the zombie hearts.  You can use whatever ratio of zombies to hearts you would like.  Since I'm rather cruel, I stacked the odds against Brian, adding five zombies and four prizes:


*Take a strip of contact paper and trace nine hearts onto the back.
*Mix one part liquid soap with two parts acrylic paint.
*Paint the soap/paint mixture across the contact paper.  Set aside to dry,  Add a second coat if necessary.  (Full disclosure: I didn't have any contact paper, so I used packing tape instead.  I stuck each end of the tape to the bottom of a drinking glass and then painted it.  Once the paint was dry, I traced hearts onto the paint using a black permanent marker, ending up with the situation pictured below.  It worked, but it was a lot more challenging than I imagine using contact paper would be.)


*Once dry, cut out the hearts and stick them over the text/image hearts.  Now you're ready to pass it off to a loved one to play.

Unfortunately for Brian, he ended up with a zombie.  Somehow he survived the encounter and I told him he could scratch off until he won a prize.  After a second close encounter with the zombie kind, he finally won a kiss.


Thursday, January 15, 2015

"I Think I Might Like You More than I Like Zombies" Valentine's Box


Materials:
*Heart shaped box
*White paint
*Paintbrush
*Mod Podge
*Red, pink, and white tissue paper
*Scissors
*Colored pencils
*Glitter glue
*Black permanent marker
*Zombie owl template
*Colored pencils

Directions:
*Paint the box white and set aside to dry.
*Cut out squares of the various colors of tissue paper.  Once the paint has dried, glue the squares to the box using Mod Podge and then set aside to dry.
*Once the box has dried, paint with a coat of glitter glue and then set aside to dry.
*Resize the below owl template to the desired size and print out.


*Color in the owl the desired colors.
*Once the box is dry, glue down the owl and write in the phrase "I think I might like you more than I like zombies" on the box.

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Christmas Memory Box

      Hope you all have been enjoying your holidays.  Here's a neat way to preserve your holiday memories.  I bought an unfinished cigar box from Joann and painted and then stuck in some little mementos of Christmas, such as gift tags, paper snowflakes, and some bubbles I got from my family's annual "yucky" swap.  It's hard to tell from the photo, but I have a couple of pieces of cardboard behind each of the three framed pictures inside the box to make them "pop out."  Also, the little "present" opens up into an accordion style photo album.  Check out the video below for more details and check below for a few more pics :).


     This is what the outside of the box looks like,

     Here's what it looks like with the photo album pulled out and the little book moved aside.  You can see that I have a little photo of my tree that hides behind where the book goes.

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Six-Pointed Paper Snowflake Tutorial


     Ever wondered how to make a paper snowflake with six points, like a real snowflake has?  Check out the video tutorial below.  Don't be intimidated by the video's length.  If you're just looking for the paper folding technique, that happens within the first five minutes, but I encourage you to give the video as a whole a watch.  Brian is my co-host for this tutorial and he's pretty funny.

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Finals Week Polly Pocket Ornament

     Finals week.  For the past seven years it has been just as much a part of my holiday season as decorating the tree.  In fact, I took my grad physics exam this afternoon, so it's just now finally over.  When I was a kid, I always wanted a Polly Pocket ornament and this ornament gave me the chance to combine that desire with my background in mathematics and physics (notice that Polly's textbooks are on nuclear physics and differential geometry).

Polly's "House"

Materials:
*Wide jewelry box
*Scrapbooking paper
*Felt
*Pencil
*Marker
*Scissors
*Needle
*Thread
*All purpose adhesive

Directions:
*Trace the back, two short sides, and one of the long sides of the jewelry box onto the piece of patterned paper.  Trim as necessary to get them to fit inside the box and then glue into place.
*Trace the lid of the box onto the sheet of felt and cut out.
*Glue one of the long sides of the box inside the lid as pictured.  Set aside to dry.
*Once dry, cut the felt to fit inside the lid to make "carpeting" for the "house."

Blanket
Materials:
*Fabric square
*Needle and thread

Directions:
*Cut out a fabric square the size you would like Polly's blanket to be.
*Sew a blanket stitch around the edges of the fabric square to complete the blanket.

Owl Pillow
Materials:
*Felt in color of choice for owl body
*Orange felt
*White felt
*Black felt
*Needle and thread
*Stuffing
*Miniaturized owl template (can be found here)
*Scissors
*Permanent marker

Directions:
*Print out a miniature version of the owl template given in my Felt Owl Pal post.
*Trace two large circles onto the white felt for eyes, two small circles onto black felt for pupils, a triangle onto orange felt for a beak, and two of the body template onto the desired colored felt for the owls body.  Ignoring the wings and belly pieces, which I did not include because the details were too fine for the scale I was working on, follow the directions for sewing a felt owl pal.

Books
Materials:
*Images to use for book covers
*Plain paper
*Scissors
*All purpose adhesive

Directions:
*Using Paint or a similar program, design textbook covers and print out.  Print one copy of the front cover and two copies of the back cover.
*Cut out 20 or so sheets of plain paper to the same size as the covers.  Add front cover and one back cover to the book.
*Cut the remaining back cover so that it is slightly wider than the thickness of the stack of papers making up the book.  Add adhesive to the back of the strip and then place to form the spine of the book.  The strip of paper should overlap the front and back covers slightly.

Notes/papers
Materials:
*Computer and printer
*Plain paper

Directions:
*Take screenshots of papers you have written (I used pages from my Master's Thesis), shrink to small sizes, and print.