Birthday Placemats and Hand Towels

My final birthday gift was shipped all the way from Mississippi by my crafty friend/neighbor/classmate/Jester sister Chelsey.  One of the hardest things about moving is going from seeing people like her several times a day to a few times a year.  It was so nice to come home and see the shipping box with her handwriting sitting on my dining room table.  I knew I was going to love whatever she’d sent me!

Placemats and Hand Towels by Chelsey

Yes, that is Amy Butler's Midwest Modern Honeycomb!

These placemats look so wonderful on our kitchen table.  I decided to use the hand towels in the bathroom rather than the kitchen because, since we don’t use paper towels, kitchen towels have a really rough time around here.  I couldn’t be happier with these beautiful gifts, and I can’t wait until Chelsey visits and can see her handiwork in its new home!

(photo via Stitchy Sweet; click the picture to visit Chelsey’s blog and see her tutorial.)

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Birthday Basket!

My sweet sister Dawn gave me this wonderful healthy gift basket for my birthday last week. I love birthdays so much, which is why I’ve neglected posting for the past week. I’ve been too busy having birthday fun!  Click the picture to read more over at Turby and John :)

a basket full of birthday treats

Pumpkin granola, luna and larabars, Ms. Meyers room spray, cake mix, a handmade headband, and a beautiful birthday card!

(Photo courtesy of Turby and John)

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Wacky Chevron Terra Cotta Pots

I made these back in May as Mother’s Day gifts. True to form, I neglected to take any usable pictures (I did a lot of work on these while watching Dexter and just couldn’t take my eyes off of the television long enough).  I passed out my Mother’s Day gifts and put this project on the back burner until I got the chance to go through all the steps again and take pictures.

These colors make me think of Rocko's Modern Life.

(Side note:  the above picture was taken back in May, while we were still living in our crummy little apartment in Columbus.  I know it’s only been two months, but seeing this picture now makes my stomach hurt a little.)

To make these, you’ll need:

  • Plain terra cotta pots in whatever size you prefer
  • Acrylic paint and paintbrushes
  • Tape measure
  • A calculator if, like me, you can’t do simple math in your head

Start by picking out the two colors you, or the person you’re giving the planter to, like together.  For this container, I started off simple with black and white.  At this point you may cover the pot in an even coat of one of your two colors.  OR, if you’d prefer to have a mixture of exposed terra cotta and paint (like the turquoise and terra cotta planter above), skip this step.  If you aren’t sure, you can always go back and paint the terra cotta parts if you don’t like the way the combination of terra cotta and paint looks.

mine measured about 27.25"

Measure the circumference of the planter around the widest point, then divide that number by something that will come out close to even.  Mine was 27.25″, so I divided it by 6 and got something like 4.5″–rounding is key here, because paint will cover most of your mistakes and it’s way too much trouble to worry about getting everything exact.  The most important thing to remember is that you have to divide by an even number, otherwise the pattern won’t turn out right.  Around the widest point of your planter, make marks in intervals the length that you got when you divided.  You’ll have the same number of marks as the number you divided by.  Since I got 4.5″, I made a mark every 4.5 inches–six marks total.

i used my tape measure to help me draw a straight vertical line

Next, at every mark draw a straight vertical line from the top of the bottom of the planter.  This part is kind of tricky because the pots get smaller as they go down, but I was able to conform a tape measure to the pot and mine seemed to turn out straight enough.

i made marks at 2", 4", 6", and 8"

Measure one of your vertical lines and then divide it by a number that makes sense. My vertical lines were 8″, so I divided by 2 and got 4.  Starting at the top and going down the vertical lines, measure and mark intervals as far apart as the number you get  by dividing.  Again, you should have as many marks as you divided by–I ended up with 4 marks, each 2″ apart.

we had blue painters' tape left over from painting my parents' upstairs bathroom

Next, simply connect the marks you made on the vertical lines with tape.  You’ll be outlining one stripe and filling in the other–it’s hard to explain, but the above picture should make it pretty clear.  This blue painters’ tape worked really well, but I’ve used plain old masking tape with success too.

almost as easy as a coloring book

Just paint inside the lines; I used acrylic paint because that’s what I have on hand.  Terra cotta really sucks up some paint, and while it dries amazingly fast that means it’s really hard not to get streaks.  For these reasons, I imagine spraypaint would work like a dream for this project.

my sweet little catnip had really outgrown it's previous container

After taking off the tape I decided I wasn’t too crazy about the white and terra cotta, so I covered the exposed terra cotta with black acrylic paint.  After letting the pot dry, I transplanted a puny catnip plant from a small container it had outgrown and am really happy with the way it turned out .  I’ve found that a mother of millions looks great in these containers, too.  I love the combination of bold colors like these with plants whose flowers aren’t too showy–otherwise I feel like the plant and the container are competing for attention.

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Ill-Fitting Tank Top into Stuffed Owl

A stuffed animal/pillow hybrid.

Lately I’ve been getting divine crafty inspiration from on high; as I was sitting in my Capstone class earlier this week I got the idea for this sweet little stuffed owl seemingly from nowhere.  I sketched the concept in the margin of my notes and went back to my discussion of Lily Bart, almost forgetting about the owl until I cleaned out my tank top drawer later in the week.  (Yes, I have a tank top drawer, and until a couple of days ago it was very full.)  I’m making an effort to get rid of a lot of stuff before we move, and part of that effort involves getting rid of anything I haven’t worn in the past few months.  One of those things is this brown tank top.

Ill-fitting brown tank top.

Ill-fitting brown tank top.

It started out white, and I never wore it.  At some point I dyed it brown because I thought that would make me wear it more (which obviously didn’t work as the fit, not the color, was the problem), but I was wrong and it continued to languish in my tank top drawer with no sense of direction or purpose.  The “dotted line” below represents where I cut.  Out of laziness, I tried to use as much of the original side seams as possible.

Please excuse my photo-editing skills.

After I cutting, I turned the top inside out and sewed up the top.

Inside out, after sewing.

After sewing up the top, the inside looked like this.  I then turned it right-side out again and stuck it in an embroidery hoop and attached the eyes.  For the eyes, I used scraps left over from a men’s shirt I previously turned into an outdoor pillow along with scraps from a t-shirt I dyed a cream color with tea and used to make another pillow.  I used one of my vintage snuff glasses and a tin of Burt’s Bees lip balm to get the right sized circles for the eyes, and I secured them with fabric glue before doing some very remedial embroidery, mostly for decorative purposes, but also to tack down the edges.

My remedial embroidery in all its glory.

Almost finished with the eyes, before adding the beak and stuffing.

Rather than sewing the bottom closed, I made a small cut on the wrong side of the hem at the bottom and fed some embroidery floss through, making a sort of drawstring, then cinched it as tightly as possible.  There was still a small opening where stuffing could come (or be pulled) out, so I hand stitched that closed.

I see a lot of potential to have fun with this project–buttons for eyes would be really cute (but they’re a choking hazard, so be careful!), and depending on what fabrics you have on hand the potential for interesting color combinations is really limitless.  I toyed with the idea of adding applique wings in another coordinating fabric, and I may try that out at a later date as well.  Having said all that, I’m really happy with the finished product, which is sort of a stuffed animal/pillow hybrid.  I already have a sweet little boy who might need a stuffed owl in mind.

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DIY Doily Shirts for Girls

You can probably, by now, sense a trend among the gifts I give to kids.  I have a deep fondness for fun, stylish clothes that are still inexpensive enough to run, jump, eat watermelon, and make mud pies in.  My dear friend Liza’s little girl, Holland, just turned five and had a very cool princess skating party.  I made her a couple of fun shirts, using the same process as the doily tote bags I gave as Christmas gifts.

The finished product, just before I wrapped them up this morning.

The finished product, right before I wrapped them up this morning!

The lace is sweet and girly, but the colors are fun and bright enough that I think Holland will still feel like a rock star/princess, or whatever it is kids want to be these days!  To make these sweet shirts, you’ll need: a plain shirt, acrylic paint in a coordinating color, spray adhesive, a doily, and textile medium.

Here’s the process:

Step One

  • First, pick out where you want the doily pattern to show up on the shirt.  I’m partial to bottom left corner and around the collar.  Using the spray adhesive, stick the doily to the shirt, making sure that no air pockets are left between the fabric and the paper.
  • Next, mix the acrylic paint and textile medium according to the instructions on the textile medium package.  Mine required two parts medium to one part paint.

  • Using the doily like a stencil, paint over all the spaces where the shirt is showing through.  Be careful not to go outside the doily, and not to apply too much paint (so that it doesn’t bleed). If you’re using a color you’re afraid won’t show up, you can let it dry and apply another coat rather than slathering a ton of paint on all at once.

  • Once you’ve given them ample time to dry (a few Weeds episodes did the trick for me!), peel the doily off and wash, dry, and iron the shirts before giving them away.

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