Tuesday, November 17, 2009

FREEBIE CRAFTS FROM MARTHA STEWART!

I have been a fan of Martha Stewart for many, many years. I sure would have liked to have done what she has been able to do! However, life is not always what we want! So, I just watch what she does and enjoy the show! And I have most of her recipe books - those from years ago when they were full color and so wonderful and amazing that you got hungry just looking at the beautiful pages!

Anyway, I joined her newsletter that comes out about every week or so, just a "short" version of her web site of the Martha Stewart Living magazine, which is one of my favorites!

Here is the email address to the newsletter - I can't find how I joined it, but you can just email here and get directions. It is FREE!!!!!

Martha_Stewart_Living_Newsletter@mso.marthastewart.com

And as much as I enjoy looking at her Crafts, most are really nice but "what would I do with it" or just a bit to expensive for my budget is what comes to mind. But there are alot that are just exactly what I need them to be! Here are four that came in the newsletter this week, and they are now on my "to do" list of crafts! Free...easy...and Martha Stewart...don't get much better than that! There are ones you just download a pattern, or copy the template onto paper or labels. Quick, easy and FREE!

Free Lunch bag tags

Free Jam Jar Labels

Free Recipe Keepsake Cards

Free Napkin Crafts

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Halloween is on the way - Here's some crafts!

Halloween is just around the corner....heck they already have candy and costumes in stores!!

So get on the ball and get your Halloween crafts going! Here's some great Halloween costumes to make yourself! Unique and easy - what a team!

How about a "No Candy" Halloween this year? I hate spending that money for candy - never even know it the child will eat or should eat it, so I choose to give things they can use or play with. So here are some Ideas for a No Candy Halloween Trick or Treat Night I have gotten more oh's and ah's with these things than I did with candy!

And what about Homemade, Inexpensive Halloween decorations? Here are some good ones!

So have fun with at your spooky and goblin family night!

Sunday, October 11, 2009

9 Halloween Homemade Halloween Decorations

If you are a Halloween person, then decorating your house is a project you look forward to. But these days, when prices are high and budgets are tight, buying the decorations is often not an option. You've made a homemade costume but now, how do you decorate?

You create and design your own! It isn't hard, and very inexpensive so why not dress up your house to the scariest or "autumn-ist" as you like!

Here are 10 craft projects that you can make and create to fit your Halloween house decor.

1. Make your own Pumpkins! This is so cute and what a way to "hide" what you need and use what you have for decoration! What you'll need: Your extra rolls of toilet paper, orange tissue paper, brown paper, green paper and pipe cleaners. Take 2-3 sheets of the tissue paper and keep them layed together. Set your roll of toilet paper in the center. Gently, pull the sides of the tissue paper up to the top of the toilet paper roll and gently again, stuff the ends of the tissue paper INSIDE the toilet paper roll. Doing one side at a time seems to work best. Just look at what you are doing and make sure all the "pleats or folds" of the paper are either in a straight line/fold or slightly angled to show the indents on a real pumpkin. To make the stem, use brown cardstock and cut to the length of stem you want and then roll the paper up. Crinkle it some, twist it to make it resemble the shape of a stem. Bend it a little and then insert it into the roll of the toilet paper. To make the stem, using green cardstock, cut out in shape of a leaf and glue pipecleaner onto the back side of the leaf. Once completely dried, gently bend the leaf around and insert it into the toilet paper roll. Voila! Instant pumpkins! Make a dozen! When Halloween is over, unwrap your pumpkins and use them!

2. Use Gourds instead of pumpkins - they last much longer and have such odd shapes, anything goes with these guys! They come in so many different colors and shapes, your imagination is the only limits! You can get a large round one and paint the face on it. You can get 2 smaller ones and stack them on top of each other to make a head and a body. Get gourds with stems on them. Leave the stem until you are sure you don't want to use it, then break it off. Stems are great on the "head" part of the figure.Long gourds make for a "tall" character, smaller round gourds make for a small bunch of "kids" in the display.

Materials to use to decorate: Absolutely anything from nature - pine needles, pine cones, leaves, branch parts, seeds, rocks, just walk your yard (or the neighborhood!) and pick up what looks interesting! Leaves are great for hair, rocks and acorns are great for eyes. Nuts and their shells have amazing uses. Beans, seeds, sticks and stems. The local craft store will also have tons of great trinkets you can use! To asemble: A glue gun is your best friend in the craft project. Also use toothpicks to secure things.

3. Kleenex Tissue Ghosts: This is an old time favorite. You will need 2 kleenex tissus, a short piece of string or embroidery floss and black felt-tip pen. Cut lengths of the string or embroidery floss about 5 inches long. Take one tissue and roll it into a ball in your hand, gently but firmly. Once a ball is formed, take the other piece of tissue and place it over the ball. Gently, smooth the tissue down over the ball to form the ghosts head. Place the "neck" of the ghost on a length of string and tie the string around the "neck" and pull it tightly. This "fluffs" the ghost's "gown". Using the felt tip marker - draw your choice of facial features! To hang the ghosts - using same string or floss, cut a length for the place you want to hang the ghost. Tie the string again, around the "neck" of the ghost and hang where you please!

4. Insect Punchies: Local craft stores (or if you are a scrapbooke you might already have one!)carry craft punches. An ant and spider punch are the perfect additions to your Halloween holiday decorations! Just punch them out of black cardstock and sprinkle them around! You can often find "glitter" paper to punch them out of which would just pick up a bit of light to make the bugs shimmer! You can also glue or tape these little critters to the inside of a lamp shade and when the lamp is turned on... bugs will appear!

5. Insect Stickers - Get some bug stickers and stick them on the windows! Window clings are similar but sometimes you just want the little bugs crawling around! You could also use these stickers on a glass or pitcher of drink. Yikes! There's a spider in my drink!

6. Buy some of those pumpkin shaped sugar candies. A bag is only about a bucka nd you can just set these pumpkins around! Or line them up along the fireplace mantel or window sill. You can also get black cats and even candy corn to add to the Halloween theme!

7. If you have or can get, glass jars with lids - fill them with colored water and put a plastic insect in them to "float" around as they would be in a mad scientist's lab!

8. Pumpkins come in all shapes and sizes these days. A large array of white pumpkins mixed with orange and yellow pumpkins.. use large to tiny in size, add some gourds and decorate with some dried leaves from your tree in the back yard. Throw on a plastic spider or gummy rat and you have a really nice outdoor decoration spread to welcome the tricker or treaters. If you want to make it a more cheery theme, add some pretty riboon bows around the pumpkins or on the stems and some dried "indian" corn. What a spectacular scene

9. For a more "fall/autumn" theme - walk the neighborhood looking for dried leaves that have fallen from trees. Even pinecones, acorns or interestingly shaped branches or twigs. Collect the biggest and nicest and fill a large barrel or basket with them. This makes a great entry way decoration or even, no a smaller version, a really nice center piece.

Saturday, August 8, 2009

How To Paint Terra Cotta Pots

Terra Cotta Pumpkin Pots


How to Paint Terra Cotta Flower Pots

An absolute fantastic and quick craft for kids of all ages, the art of painting terra cotta clay garden pots is a craft that has endless possibilities both in the "how-to" aspect as well as the "made for.." reasons! Whether they are made for decoration around the house and garden or made to give as gifts, terra cotta pots are a fantastic art form with endless possibilities! I have included many clickable links to places that have pictures of painted terra cotta pots so you can see examples of things you can do and create.

Terra cotta pots come in a large variety of sizes... from very small to very large. They are squared, rounded, tall, short, wide or narrow. What this means is that you have an abundance to choose from which makes the first step of the creating a project very easy. Clay pots can be paint literally any theme you choose! How To Paint Terra Cotta Pots is great source to start learning how to do this "never a dull moment" and oh, so useful craft! Once painted.. they have variety of uses... storage for pens, pencils, wash cloths, hair barrets and ribbons, utensil holder, small item holder and yes.. even plants can be put in a beautifully, painted terra cotta clay pot! Indoors, a very large painted terra cotta pot can be used as a toy "box", a laundry hamper, a magazine holder or craft supply "bucket". Smaller ones can be assembled to create a variety of projects.

I use regular acrylic paints purchased at the local craft store for (on sale ) 50 cents each. Can't complain about the price on that one!. Another great creation comes when the pots are sprayed with "chalkboard paint" ... yes, you read that right, chalkboard paint! It comes in a spray can and you just spray it on (you can spray it on anything!) and when dry... with chalk in hand, your child can create, erase and create again!

Painted Terra Cotta Pots Make Great Holiday Decorations!
Terra cotta flower pots offer a wide variety of uses for holiday decorations. Halloween Pumpkins made from terra cotta flower pots is not only quick and easy, but cute, darling and just the perfect decoration for your home during the Halloween days! And for Christmas decorations , how about the nativity trio. What's extra special about this creation is that you can choose any size terra cotta pot to make the figurines, it just depends on where you want to use them! Make the large ones to use outdoors and use the small ones to decorate the mantel. And of course, for Easter or springtime.all you have to do is simply change the colors and embellishments!

Make "Pot Animals" out of Terra Cotta Pots
Usually made with small, turned-upside-down terra cotta pots, with paint, pom-poms, pipe cleaners, wooden balls and wiggle eyes you can have a whole circus of animals.. or a yard full of bugs! At How to Make Clay Pot Animals you can find instructions for a nice variety of animals to make out of terra cotta pots! You can also create a more elaborate decoration and make a Harvest Time Terra Cotta Farm . Wouldn't that just be the cutest thing out in your garden?

The possibilities are endless and the finished creations are fabulous. Clay terra cotta pots...they are a wonderful art supply!

Source:
The-Artistic-Garden.com
http://familyfun.go.com/arts-and-crafts
http://www.ehow.com/how_4486948_make-clay-pot-animals.html

Saturday, August 1, 2009

How To Make Dinosaur Eggs - Or Treasure Eggs! Or...

My grand daughter loves dinosaurs. I mean LOVES DINOSAURS!! She wants to be a paleontologist when she grows up! So when I found this craft in a magazine, I forget which one, I knew I had a winner! However, you can also use the same craft for your child’s “favorite thing” or just for a “treasure” egg hunt.

If you don’t drink coffee to get the grounds, go to a Starbuck’s and they give the grounds for away for free.

Dinosaur Eggs

1 cup flour
1 cup USED coffee grounds (let them sit over night to dry out)
½ cup salt
¼ cup sand - (get at local craft store)
¾ cup water
Small prizes, such as plastic toys, marbles, rings - anything that will fit into a small “egg” shape.

How To Make a Dinosaur Egg:

Heat the oven to 170*. In medium size bowl, combine the dry ingredients. Slowly add the water, stirring until the mixture forms a dough. Pinch off a piece of the "dough" and roll into a ball, the size a bit larger than the item you intend to place inside the “egg”. Use your finger and press a hole into the center of the “egg” and then push the “prize” into the hole and press it closed with the dough - just keep pressing it together until the hole is sealed. Add a tad more dough if you need to. Repeat this process with all the dough. Place the “eggs” on a baking sheet and bake them for 40 minutes. (I baked them for 60 as I used my toaster oven and I just wanted to “be sure”). Basically all you are doing is drying all the ingredients out, not actually baking them. Allow them to dry completely. (I placed them on the patio outdoors over night -again just to make them more dry and a bit harder)

Now the fun part starts. I hide the “Eggs” and my grand daughter finds them, and does her “Paleontologist” work. To pick the “eggs” open, use your own judgment based on your child’s ability - I gave my 8 yo grand daughter a spoon to use the end of, a plastic knife that was a stronger plastic, a toothbrush and a small paint brush. Sit the kids outside and let them cut, crack, pick and brush the eggs to find the prize! It can make a bit of mess so just make sure it is done in an easy to clean up area!

I found some small plastic dinosaur figurines and pushed those inside the egg so it seemed like she was actually digging up a dinosaur! That was her favorite, but I also put some rhinestone “jewels” in for her to find

“treasures” and also, check out the party favor isle at most stores - lots of little trinkets there to use!