Used mohair to create a scarf using a hairpin lace loom (see scarf in wooden platter). The pattern resulted in a warm, light weight scarf; but it left a lot to be desired in terms of overall appearance. The lace created by the hairpin isn't visible because of the fuzz from the mohair blocked out the definition.
Because mohair has a tendency to cling to itself after being knitted or crocheted into a fabric, I chose to make another scarf out of the remaining yarn instead of unraveling the one pictured in the wooden platter.
A lacier, yet warm scarf (shown on mannequin) was created using a pattern from Designing Vashti called "Lovepod Boa" and strings together a series of crochet stitches commonly known as Love Knots or Solomon's Knots.
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Book'em
Weight loss seems to be a constant theme in my life. This year, I accepted a challenge from my sister called the 20/20 plan. The major premise was that I would work out and eat right then enjoy a 20 pound weight loss in 20 weeks.
Well, it didn't work. I did lose ten pounds but that's it. So, I started another program called 2/wk. My goal is to lose two pounds each week by working out at least three times each week and avoiding the food products that would hinder my weight loss.
So far, I haven't been consistent. The beauty of th eprogram is the short time frame for measuring results. Each week, I am reminded of my goal and the efforts that I have put forth to reach it.
Because I am a tactile person, I like to write down what I've eaten and the exercise I've done on a piece of paper instead of on a computer or a PDA. I make small booklets from old calendars, paper headed for the recycle bin and other art items. This helps me depelte my stash of art supplies and recyclable items.
Well, it didn't work. I did lose ten pounds but that's it. So, I started another program called 2/wk. My goal is to lose two pounds each week by working out at least three times each week and avoiding the food products that would hinder my weight loss.
So far, I haven't been consistent. The beauty of th eprogram is the short time frame for measuring results. Each week, I am reminded of my goal and the efforts that I have put forth to reach it.
Because I am a tactile person, I like to write down what I've eaten and the exercise I've done on a piece of paper instead of on a computer or a PDA. I make small booklets from old calendars, paper headed for the recycle bin and other art items. This helps me depelte my stash of art supplies and recyclable items.
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
This Marks the Spot
In August 2010, my husband and I hosted a book signing party for his first published novel, Honest Faces. We thought it would be nice to give a small gift to those who purchased a book. Keeping the gift focused on reading, I remembered the tutorial Lisa Vollrath provided for making bookmarks from unused business reply envelopes.
I started saving the business reply envelopes and had enough for Steve and I to make 50 bookmarks in one evening.
I enjoyed making the bookmarks and our guests seemed to enjoy selecting a unique bookmark from the available assortment.
Labels:
business envelope,
recycle,
reuse,
reusing paper scraps
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Lunch Left Overs
In August 2010, I participated in a meeting that included box lunches. The lunches arrived in sturdy boxes that were untouched by food due to the packaging used for the individual items.
Hating to see these perfectly good cardboard boxes being dumped in the regular trash (we were in South Carolina where I failed to see recycling of anything). I asked several meeting participants to give me their box if they had no other use for it. I received four boxes which I unfolded and took back to Maryland with me.
These boxes were cut into 4X6 inch rectangles. They will be transformed into postcards before this year ends. The Postcrossing website is devoted to the exchange of postcards. I exchange cards with a yahoo group, the Postcard Xchange, which focuses on members making and sending out postcards.
The smaller pieces were cut into 3.5X 2.5 rectangles. They will be used to make Artist Trading Cards (ATCs) that I will send to others or keep for myself. Lisa Vollrath has a great "how-to" for making ATCs.
Hating to see these perfectly good cardboard boxes being dumped in the regular trash (we were in South Carolina where I failed to see recycling of anything). I asked several meeting participants to give me their box if they had no other use for it. I received four boxes which I unfolded and took back to Maryland with me.
These boxes were cut into 4X6 inch rectangles. They will be transformed into postcards before this year ends. The Postcrossing website is devoted to the exchange of postcards. I exchange cards with a yahoo group, the Postcard Xchange, which focuses on members making and sending out postcards.
The smaller pieces were cut into 3.5X 2.5 rectangles. They will be used to make Artist Trading Cards (ATCs) that I will send to others or keep for myself. Lisa Vollrath has a great "how-to" for making ATCs.
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Torn Pages
Several friends and two wonderful ladies that I have not met yet who live in Colorado swap cards a few months each year. The cards are designed to meet challenge criteria established by our leader and card creator extraordinaire, Bev.
For the month of October, I used pages torn from a book that had been discarded because it was falling apart at the spine. To make ten cards, I used 15 pages that were cut into strips then layered onto a mat. The mat was placed on a larger mat that had been randomly stamped with a floral image.
As I made each card, I found a different way to improve the card. So, the ten cards all came out differently yet each had a page from the book and the same message "Sending You A Smile".
I encourage you to re-purpose printed text by using it as a patterned paper in your next project.
For the month of October, I used pages torn from a book that had been discarded because it was falling apart at the spine. To make ten cards, I used 15 pages that were cut into strips then layered onto a mat. The mat was placed on a larger mat that had been randomly stamped with a floral image.
As I made each card, I found a different way to improve the card. So, the ten cards all came out differently yet each had a page from the book and the same message "Sending You A Smile".
I encourage you to re-purpose printed text by using it as a patterned paper in your next project.
Friday, September 24, 2010
The Hook Up
To organize my knitting and crochet supplies, I decided to make a crochet hook holder. I found a free pattern on Raverly which called for crocheting with two strands of alpaca yarn to create a large rectangle that would be eventually washed and felted to a 7" x 15" rectangle.
I finished my crochet hook holder in one day by skipping the creation then felting of the large rectangle by re-purposing a purse I had felted in 2007. The purse had been stashed in my craft closet waiting for a new zipper and interior lining.
The Steps
I ripped out the lining then cut the seams (because the purse is felted, it is similar to a heavy cloth and won't unravel). I used a straight edge to cut off the sides in order to create the 7" x 15" rectangle.
The last step was to follow the pattern to crochet a lacy strip that was hand sewn across the middle of the rectangle. I crocheted two more thinner bands to go across the top and the bottom of the rectangle to keep the hooks from falling out.
The holder rolls up to a cylindrical shape and is held closed with a button and a short crocheted chain. It's very portable, easy to store and I have all of my hooks in one place. I know now I have duplicate hooks that I can freecycle or give to friends.
Let me know if you need an F or G aluminum crochet hook.
Labels:
crochet hook,
felted purse,
hand bag,
holder,
recycle,
reuse
Friday, September 17, 2010
Queen for a Day
My friend recently celebrated her 50th birthday by hosting a large card party. I re-purposed an empty rice container (a good way to avoid recycling plastic containers is to buy items in bulk and use refillable containers). For this plastic shape, I had two over-sized playing cards that I had gotten through a swap many years ago. The card fit with minimal trimming. For the other two sides, I cut up box tops and added pieces of playing cards and book paper. Around the lid, I applied ribbon using heavy duty glue dots. The top of the lid was covered with a circular disc cut from paper and layered with a circular playing card. The container could be used to hold small items on a desk top or to store small items. For the party, it served as the collection bin for thoughtful notes her guests had written in celebration of her big day.
Labels:
playing cards,
recycle,
reuse,
reusing plastic containers,
rice
Friday, September 10, 2010
Love Never Ends
Steve and I visited my friend Betti who recently moved. Her home had such a clean, uncluttered feel that I had to ask her what did she do with all of her stuff. She said in the process of moving, she and her husband decided to get rid of a lot of things they didn't need or use. Fortunately for me, Steve agreed that we could do some reducing of stuff. We have one closet that we haven't used because our daughter has stored items in it for the past six years. We decided to begin our purging by cleaning out this closet.
We began by having Cassandra decide what she wanted to keep. She told us everything, except for a pair a jeans and a shirt, could be given away. Thus, the closet was empty and could be used for storing winter coats, blankets, and extra pillows.
Before filling the closet with different items, I wanted to cover up the marks on the wall. I found green planet paint left over from painting Cassandra's and Michael's rooms. I worked evenly up all sides of the closet from the baseboard with the blue paint until I emptied the can. After it dried, I used blue masking tape to create a horizontal line around the closet. Next, I painted green from the top of the blue tape to the bottom of the shelf at the top of the closet. After the paint had dried, I used large foam rubber stamps and black acrylic paint to press letters spelling "Love Never Ends" along the blue/green border. I used a hand carved Adinkra stamp Steve had bought in Ghana to add decorative symbols. With some remaining green paint, I added color to the open spaces of the letters and the symbols.
With the coats hanging in the closet, the words aren't seen, but I know they're there.
We began by having Cassandra decide what she wanted to keep. She told us everything, except for a pair a jeans and a shirt, could be given away. Thus, the closet was empty and could be used for storing winter coats, blankets, and extra pillows.
Before filling the closet with different items, I wanted to cover up the marks on the wall. I found green planet paint left over from painting Cassandra's and Michael's rooms. I worked evenly up all sides of the closet from the baseboard with the blue paint until I emptied the can. After it dried, I used blue masking tape to create a horizontal line around the closet. Next, I painted green from the top of the blue tape to the bottom of the shelf at the top of the closet. After the paint had dried, I used large foam rubber stamps and black acrylic paint to press letters spelling "Love Never Ends" along the blue/green border. I used a hand carved Adinkra stamp Steve had bought in Ghana to add decorative symbols. With some remaining green paint, I added color to the open spaces of the letters and the symbols.
With the coats hanging in the closet, the words aren't seen, but I know they're there.
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Jelly Belly Balm
During a conference, I visited an exhibitor's booth that was handing out Jelly Belly candies in small kidney shaped tins. The candies were stale and very hard to chew so they had plenty to distribute to attendees. I picked up three of the tins and wish I had gotten more. The tins are so cute and they close very tightly so they're great for holding small items.
After watching an episode of "Simply Beautiful", a cable program than "explores the world of natural beauty and fashion", I decided to use one of my kidney bean shaped tins to hold an all natural, home made lip and cheek balm. On the show, the hostess uses three simple ingredients to make a product that adds color and moisture without chemical additives (click here for her recipe Beet Red Kiss).
With insightful advice from a friend's daughter, I was able to make a vegan version of the lip balm by replacing the recommended beeswax with edible shea butter. She also noted soy wax could be considered as an alternative to beeswax.
Here are the ingredients
Begin by melting the shea butter and the cocoa butter in a double boiler or very carefully in the microwave (when it melts, the oils become very hot and can splatter). Break open the beet root capsules and sprinkle over the oils. Stir to combine then pour slowly into a vessel.
Meant to note the need to thoroughly clean whatever container you are reusing to hold your balm. I washed my tin with soap and warm water then dried thoroughly.
Leave the container until the butters have cooled and become solid. I added four capsules of beet root to get a deeper color. This created a grainy effect because all of the powder did not dissolve.
After watching an episode of "Simply Beautiful", a cable program than "explores the world of natural beauty and fashion", I decided to use one of my kidney bean shaped tins to hold an all natural, home made lip and cheek balm. On the show, the hostess uses three simple ingredients to make a product that adds color and moisture without chemical additives (click here for her recipe Beet Red Kiss).
With insightful advice from a friend's daughter, I was able to make a vegan version of the lip balm by replacing the recommended beeswax with edible shea butter. She also noted soy wax could be considered as an alternative to beeswax.
Here are the ingredients
- Two capsules of beet root (look for this in the vitamin and supplement section)
- One tablespoon of shea butter
- One half teaspoon of cocoa butter
Begin by melting the shea butter and the cocoa butter in a double boiler or very carefully in the microwave (when it melts, the oils become very hot and can splatter). Break open the beet root capsules and sprinkle over the oils. Stir to combine then pour slowly into a vessel.
Meant to note the need to thoroughly clean whatever container you are reusing to hold your balm. I washed my tin with soap and warm water then dried thoroughly.
Leave the container until the butters have cooled and become solid. I added four capsules of beet root to get a deeper color. This created a grainy effect because all of the powder did not dissolve.
Friday, August 27, 2010
To Jimmy with Love
Another padded envelope, decorated with a variety of materials then placed back into the postal system for delivery. While at a meeting in Columbia, SC; box lunches from a local restaurant called Jimmy John's were provided in sturdy paper boxes. I folded mine flat and collected several from others to save for making post cards and artist trading cards. The next day, I had to send a birthday present to my brother, James who I call Jimmy so I thought the lunch box would be perfect for creating an address label on a previously used padded envelope. The lunch box lid added a nice touch for him because the colors (red, black, and white) are the same colors my brother uses in his personal training business www.phiferfitness.com.
In addition to using a piece of the lunch box, I used items collected from my craft table: a poorly stamped image (Oxford Impressions), a heart punched from scrap paper, a printed floral paper from a poorly copied scrapbook page that was destined for the recycle bin, and a part of a playing card left over from items cut up for card-themed party. I layered these on the envelope and arranged them to my liking then sparsely used glue dots to place them before covering with clear packing tape. The photo was taken before the mailing address and the packing tape were added.
Hope this inspires you to reuse any envelope that makes its way to your home. Just remember to completely cover the incoming postal information and cover the paper items with packing tape to keep them in place.
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Paper, Glue, Glitter
Still contemplating other ways to make use of my excess jewelry catalogs. I combined a few bold images from the catalog with pages torn from an old dictionary and a foreign language book along with one rubber stamp to create a dozen postcards.
Technique: From heavy card stock paper, cut out postcards that are 4"x6". Use a large rubber stamp to place an inked image on the left corner of the postcard. Tear the dictionary paper and the text book and glue to the front of the card. Cut images from the magazine and layer on top of the torn paper. Type text in a word processor and print on any paper you are trying to use up. Cut out the text and glue across the postcard.
I told my friend, Donna, that one of my goals is to deplete my craft supplies before I die. So you could stop at this point and have a nice postcard suitable for mailing (remember to cover everything with clear packing tape to prevent being ripped off in the mail). I went a little further by using glitter glue to outline the text from the word processor. I also used some sparkling watercolor paint and copic markers to add color to a few of the images from the rubber stamp. I cut them out and covered them with the glossy stuff - can't remember the name (there are several types to choose from)- it makes everything feel like an epoxy has been applied. Then I glued them on each card.
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Catalog Clearance
After: Gift wrapped package |
Not one to throw away good glossy paper, I started using the catalog pages as wrapping paper.
To get the largest piece of paper, I remove the pages from the center of the catalog. The pages lift out from the center in one piece. I use colored duct tape as an accent color and as an extra strong adhesive to keep the "wrapping" paper in place.
Before: jewelry catalog and gift that needs to be wrapped |
The birthday tag was made from a poorly copied scrapbook page (destined for the recycle box), a few fabric flowers, and an extra large brad to create the flower's center.
Sunday, August 8, 2010
Signed, Sealed, Delivered
Packaging tape keeps the pieces together. |
Remove original mailing labels when possible. |
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Toe Up
Finished my first pair of socks - an early birthday present for Steve who's showing that they fit. I've always wanted to make a pair of socks yet feared I wouldn't make it past the heel. I couldn't imagine how to switch direction smoothly to transition from the straight leg to the horizontal foot of the sock. Thankfully, there are numerous books, patterns, and youtube which explain everything you need to know to make it through the transition and complete a pair.
Making socks doesn't directly relate to recycling except if you have some excess light weight yarn from another project, you too can whip up a pair of socks. These began from the toe then expanded for the arch onward to the heel turn which is created by using a wrap and turn technique (Cat Bordhi's wrap and turn) and ending with the cuff - repeated rows of knit two and purl two.
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Earthbound
Meant to enter this recycling idea in March instead of this evening as the Mid-Atlantic states welcome nightfall as the only relief from a heat-wave.
Many of the warehouse-membership stores (e.g., Costco, BJ's Wholesale, Sam's Club) sell produce in bulk quantities. To create specific amounts of produce, these stores often use various types of packaging. To reduce the amount of plastic that gets discarded, we've opted to buy most of our produce elsewhere and to reuse the packaging when purchased.
The photographs show how to use a plastic container to create a mini-nursery indoors for flowers or vegetables. My husband partially filled a few of the containers with potting soil then added seedlings he had sprouted. By closing the tops of the containers, you can create a humid environment which helps the plants get established. As the plants grow taller, you can remove the lid.
During the time that the plants are indoors, place the container in a spot where it will have access to sunlight or a good light source.
Now, these containers are outdoors and a new crop of potential herbs and vegetables are being grown.
Monday, April 19, 2010
TP Tag Holder
Here's a great way to reuse toilet paper rolls and paper towel rolls. When flattened, they can be quickly decorated with patterned paper then bound together to make a tag book. Although I used Bind-It-All to secure the ends, the same impact can be achieved by punching holes in the ends with a sturdy, hand held, hole punch. The binding material could be yarn, ribbon, waxed linen thread, metal rings from office supply stores, twine or raffia.
These are the four tags nestled inside the decorated rolls. The back of each tag is covered with patterned paper and a blank piece of paper for notes, photos, recipes, thoughts....whatever you want to add. Instructions for completing each tag will be uploaded to Attainable Treasures soon.
This one's my favorite tag in the bunch.
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