[Happy Thanksgiving]

Today will be filled with baking, gym time, and somewhere we’ll fit in a trip to the theater to see the new Muppets movie that releases today.

The girls have a Thanksgiving vacation ‘calendar’ of sorts that we have scheduled in fun things on so they know when it’s happening, and how much of a break they have left. Today is the 1/2 way mark – it’s going by so fast! We’ll be getting the tree and decorating the house (and heading back to school) in the blink of an eye…

I will be back on Friday to post another installment of the holiday crafting series – until then I wish you all a Happy Thanksgiving (or just a happy wed/thurs. if you’re not in USA!)

day 7 | homemade apron

Yesterday was a big success for 3 reasons: First of all, I started + completed my FIRST real sewing project of 2011. This year… I have not been sewing and it’s a source of personal frustration. I’ve not made time for it, and I want to. The second reason is that I made my first apron – a type of project I’ve wanted to tackle for a very long time. Finally, I made my big trek to the post office and am all but done shipping gifts. (FIST PUMP!!)

 

My first apron (soon to be followed by #2 and #3 for my own girls) is for the coolest girl in middle school I know. I saw the fabric shown above and *had* to give it a go. I figured she’d love the funky skeleton animals with holiday cheer. First I doodled (badly) and wrote some numbers and generally wrapped my head around how-to and what pieces I’d be cutting. Making an apron has endless options…

Next up? Carefully cut all the pieces. Despite wanting a frilly ruffled apron at first – I knew it would be too much and I’d either mess it up, or go mad from trying to figure it out on my first time.

Also? get out iron + ironing board. My kids were fascinated. What IS this thing? (can you tell how often I iron?). The lesson I’ve learned in sewing projects past is that you MUST IRON IT ALL. The fabric needs to be pressed flat/creased/etc. The iron is your friend. Straighter lines, fewer screw ups – that is what the iron does for sewing projects. Don’t try to fight it.

Below you see my pieces as I’ve been cutting them and laying out – PRE iron. Laying it out helps me think about the order in which I need to sew, see if I like where it’s going, and generally gives me time to make sure I like what I’m doing. Simple as this project is, it’s not easy in the sense that I was using my brain on FULL CAPACITY the whole time. No day dreaming or “slapping together” for me when it comes to this kind of project!!

Ok. Pleased with my pocket size, thickness of straps, etc. I iron, iron, iron, and sew the pieces as needed. I sewed all the pieces (except neck strap and straps to tie in back) onto front before stitching a (black polka dot) piece of fabric to the back to give apron better weight and such.

There was a point… when I sewed the apron strings into it and flipped right side out to make sure it was working that I realized “oh holy crap. This is going to work.” To be perfectly honest I didn’t do more documenting or anything because I wasn’t sure I could pull it off.

Elizabeth models my apron – and asks when I’m going to make hers with the fabric she had picked out. I used myself and Elizabeth to gauge sizing. Obviously doesn’t need to be exact, but I wanted to be sure it’d be a good size for the young lady it’s heading to.

The very BEST part? I can not tell you how accomplished making this made me feel. I have tried aprons before with patterns – I failed spectacularly EVERY TIME. This time I just grabbed my plain single piece of fabric fronted apron and added my own touches (belt, pocket, etc) – and it worked better. It was a success. I know I’m going on and on – but this was a HUGE breakthrough for me – and I’m slightly giddy.

Will I hit the craft shows? Open my own apron shop? Probably not. My sewing is still weak at best – but I will happily accept this victory and mail off this first (maybe only) homemade gift of the year.

Happy Crafting.

question: would you want to see a process video (of next one) and have sizes/pieces used to make such an apron? Let me know in comments… I am thinking about if I want to do more tutorial as I gear up to make the next one…

day 6 | digital holiday invite

I have said since the beginning that this series is about REAL holiday crafting. Now I’m all for playing and creating just for the love of it – with no particular goal in mind. However this time of year, time is tight and I want to share the crafting that I’m doing for use immediately in my holiday season. I have some decor fun projects planned – but we shall see how much time I can work in!

Today I want to share how I easily use digital supplies (frame + 2 borders in this case) to create invitations. You could actually do this in Word (just layer behind text!) if you wanted. Anyhow, here’s my invite + how I quickly made it but look super awesome to my family:

Open PSE and create 2 new files. One that is 8×12, the other 8 1/2 x 12 1/2.

I used designs by Rhonna Farrer for this – they coordinate so beautifully. Ok, so open the two borders and one frame and drag and size onto the 8×12 file as desired. Type in text and flatten image. Drag onto the larger file, center, and add drop shadow.

Email to invitees! [or print + mail]

It’s seriously that easy. I play with font size, what to say, etc… but it’s so simple!

I *LOVE* how these supplies (Which I purchased for some hybrid crafting this season) can be useful in creating one of a kind invites. You can check out more at www.rhonnadesigns.com

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day 5 | semi-homemade gift topper

While I don’t make my own holiday cards, I do like to stamp cute things onto the backs of the sealed envelopes. This is my collection (all hero arts designs) – love the stamp/postal ones as well as that cute reindeer. Stamping envelopes will likely be an Elizabeth job this year – she’s ready for it.

Today though – what I really want to share is a quick & easy ‘semi-homemade’ gift topper idea. Grab a wooden unfinished ornament (I got a bunch from Michael’s this weekend for about 50 cents a piece!) and coat with liquid adhesive. I used multi-medium – that’s fine too! Then coat in glitter, let dry, and attach to a bow.

My gift? A plain white box. To spruce this up a bit more I stamped a snowman (as seen above in my holiday stamps for this year!) that has to and from on the back.

Bam! It’s done and it’s one of a kind. How easy was that?


day 4 | holiday photo

We’ve never done a newsletter, but we’ve always done a photo.

Some years it’s been a pet photo, other years J & myself on vacation someplace fun, in recent years the kiddos have taken over the duty of being the annual photo that gets tucked into our Christmas cards. I’ve done the photo card, but mostly I do a traditional card + tuck photo into that. Reason? Not really. You can get amazing photo cards. I was tempted by some at www.persnicketyprints.com except I’ve already got plenty of holiday cards here and needing to be used.

So – if you don’t already have a photo to use (and you want one) here’s my advice:

  • Good natural light is a must
  • simple background
  • take loads of photos. Just keep snapping away
  • try a few angles/poses
  • if working with kids (or pets) work QUICK. Be set up first, test out your spot before you call them in! 
  • consider taking separate photos of each individual, then make a collage of sorts if you can’t get a group shot

Here’s some from holiday photo session (wearing holiday 2011 dresses) 2011:

I often print and use some of the goofy shots in a scrapbook layout about the holiday photo, that year in general, etc. The one I use in the card isn’t always my favorite either. One of the things I *LOVE* about doing this each year is seeing how the girls grow and change, and what their idea of smiling is. Becca is in a toothy phase… and Elizabeth – oh I love seeing those adult teeth coming in!!!

While I love the idea of a photo with our Christmas tree in the background, using it for our card means waiting until after Thanksgiving weekend to take the photo, it’s almost NEVER good natural light in front of the tree, and the images if including enough of the tree also mean less of the girls being featured. Mostly though, I don’t like the delay. I’d rather have a nice photo featuring the girls in their holiday dresses taken, ordered, in my cards ready to go before things get too crazy and I feel pressure to do it vs enjoy the experience.