I am such a craft-aholic. If they had craft-anon, I would have to be the first person to sign up. My family would have a craft intervention...they would read letters describing how my crafting affects them. There would be crying and snot bubbles...
I heard somewhere "If it doesn't move, put glitter on it!" I am not a glitter person, so I ammend this to "If it doesn't move, CRAFTIFY." There's no shame in that! ...ok, a little shame. I may or may not have a problem...
Case in point, my bill book. I have a strong aversion to filing cabinets. I mess with them at work all day long, so when I think about using them at home, I cringe a little. I do have a filing cabinet at home, but I just throw stuff in it...mostly craft stuff like construction paper and elmers glue that I use occasionally, but not often enough to warrent a place on my giant crafting bookshelf. But for sure, my elmers is not filed under g for glue. In fact, it is all filed under T for Thrown-in.
At any rate, this means that I have no filing space, so I made a bill book, which is just a binder with folders in it. I use it for keeping my paid bill invoices and such...Like a good adult...For a long time, it was just an ugly blue binder with an add for a tile company on it. My hubs works at a carpet store and likes to bring things home if they were throwing it out at work. He is a hoarder...HE needs an intervention. Not that its all bad, I got a bill book out of it...and the computer chair I am sitting in right now. It had a hole in the plastic arm. We covered the hole with electrical tape...and then I yarn bombed the arm...now I roll around in comfort and style!
So anyways, I hated looking at the ugly blue binder. It reminded me of money that I could have spent on more craft stuff if only I didn't have stupid bills. So, I craftified it. (I like that "craftify"...it sounds like rectify..."I am going to rectify the situation"..."I am going to craftify the situation". What can't be fixed with a little modge podge and scrap book paper?) Here is my better bill book:
All I did was cover it with fabric (I love this fabric...in person especially, the black makes the colored polka dots stand out so bright and cheery like). There are tutorials for this all over the internet. Then I just appliqued on some felt bird shapes. I got these at Pat Catans (an awesome craft store I have mentioned before) when I went to visit my sister, M Jr. But you could cut out your own felt shapes. All in all, it was a really easy project that makes me feel happy when I look at my bill book...until I open it, then sad again...then shut it, and back to happy. Shut happy, open sad, shut happy, open sad...you get the picture...
I have another ugly blue binder that I would like to cover. I plan on keeping all my different patterns in it that I have printed out or scavenged from different places. This time, I would like to try to modge podge fabric onto it, instead of sewing a cover. My bill book cover is awesome, but it does shift around and try to flee the country when I have the book open...and open=sad anyway, so then I am extra sad. The pattern book will be happy whether open (with awesome patterns awaiting perusal) or shut (with happy fabric prettiness). I don't want to tinge my happy with shifty fabric cover, so I plan to modge podge. As for applique on this binder, I plan on doing some Aronzo Aranzi ones...if you don't know Aronzo Aranzi, google it! The have the neatest stuff! (I have The Cute Book and The Cuter Book. They are pretty similar, but they do have a couple different projects that make it worth having both to me. Plus amazon discounts make it hard not to be able to justify.)
I also have discovered Kanzashi flower makers. I first heard about them on futuregirl's blog. (She does cool stuff and has some great free patterns and tutorials.) I only have one of the different makers, I know there are at least three different ones, maybe more. (The store I got mine at had three different ones.)
It was easy to use. I had fun making my little flowers. There are a lot of applications for the flowers too. I used mine and made magnets for my fridge...it was a little barren looking before. (Now it is CRAFTIFIED!) I think if you have kids that are old enough to hand sew this would be a good project for them too. Simple enough not to frustrate, but not so simple that you're bored. I would like to *eventually* get the other flower makers that I have seen. You can use a single flower (like the picture on the packaging), or combine the flowers into layers (like I did in the picture above). I think if you used roundy edge petals with pointy petals (the one I have) it would be AWESOME!
On the crochet front, there has not been a lot going on. I am a cold weather crocheter for the most part...So now its getting back to crochet season in east Tennessee and I am slowly winding up. I have been working on a couple things. I have a few scarves going on, and a cowl or two. I have a huge afghan that I have been working on for a while...I will talk about that in a ta-da post in the future. It's so close to done that I hate to admit how long I have been procrastinating on finishing it up... I am also working on some little double crochet squares for another afghan (I just started last week). My sister, M Jr, gave me a whopping bag of Red Heart super saver when she came to visit. This yarn is great for people that are new to crochet/knitting, because it is cheap, comes in a million colors and very easy to use (it doesn't split, which I think it a big pain when you are trying to learn). The downfall is that it is kinda scratchy. Red Heart has other yarns that are nice (and not as inexpensive) like the one I used for my blooming cushion (pattern courtesy of the lovely Lucy of Attic24):
The yarn is Red Heart Shimmer. I got mine on sale for around $2.50 a skein. Normally, at Michaels it is around $5. It is pretty soft, even with having a metallic floss running through it. I thought that the metallic stuff would scratch you, but so far no scratching has occurred. The pattern is easy, although crocheting in the front loop/back loop is not usually my favorite, on this pattern it is not that tedious. Gold star for Lucy of Attic24. If she ever does a project I don't care for, I will eat my hat...ok, I'm not wearing a hat...but I will eat something...it will probably be cake.
My friend Maria's daughter is going to have her quincenera in November. This is kind of like a Bar Mitzva, but for Latina girls. Its celebrates her 15 birthday as a symbol of going from child to young woman. It is a big deal. I don't celebrate birthdays...another year closer to death? HORAY! ...yeah, I don't get it. I do appreciate the cultural significance of quincenera though (from an anthropological standpoint...I watch "Bones" a little too much I think.) Maria is so excited and proud of Yari (her daughter...I love that name!). Yari was the recipient of my Pixie doll that I mentioned in an earlier post. A big part of quincenera is the doll, which is meant to be the last doll of childhood because after this you are an 'adult'. (For the record, I was not an adult at 15 and I am still not one at 28...maybe I need some kind of quincenera magic or something for this to happen...I don't know...but I like being a kid, so no quince for me!) Maria has made thirty-two dolls for Yari's party so far...Yeah, a lot of dolls. And she gave one to me!
I am not usually the barbie kind, but I do enjoy all the details that went into this one. There are tiny beads and flowers and sequins all over this thing! She styled the hair and made tiny bouquets for them to hold. 32 TIMES SO FAR!!! I rarely repeat a project, so the thought of doing the same thing over and over gives me the heebie jeebies! Scary!
I am not usually a trendy kind of gal, but this year I have noticed that I am liking several of them: red/aqua (or really, red/robin egg blue if you ask me), chevron patterns...I loves me a good zig zag or ripple, and mustaches. Although, my husband has had a mustache ever since I have known him, and I don't think that mustaches were trendy 9 years ago. (His mustache goes back farther than that, but I have only known it for nine years.) He is a trend setter and doesn't even know it. He mocks my mustache love as much as I mocked his mustache when we first met. But now I love his stupid mustache and all that goes with it! So here's a little mustache love for the week:
That's right, some mustache love! I did several of these wooden block people at the same time, but I scrapped all of them but this guy. (He is a magnet now.) The others were losers...and this guy is cooler than Freddie Jackson sippin a milkshake and a sno cone. My sister Teddy says he looks like my husband, but with less chest hair and more head hair. Also, the hub's mustache is a little less 70's porn than this guy. *insert bow-chica-bow-wow music here*
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