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On my worktable – men’s ties disassembled
11 Wednesday Dec 2013
Posted in crafts
11 Wednesday Dec 2013
Posted in crafts
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26 Tuesday Nov 2013
And of course we did crafts!
First we played with paper dolls. She picked which outfits I should cut out.
Little Miss Christmas and Holly Belle, a reprint of a favorite paper doll I had as a child.
When it was bedtime, my granddaughter insisted that Little Miss Christmas and Holly Belle have soft bedding. So we quickly made card stock beds with tissue-stuffed tissue pillows and tissue sheets and blankets.

20 Wednesday Nov 2013
Posted in crafts, On my Worktable
On my worktable this evening, torn paper fringe, made from a vintage French book.
This fringe will be used for the same project as the tiny snowflakes.
The book, Le Voyage De Monsieur Perrichon, is in poor condition, which makes it suitable for use in crafts. The binding is tight and the paper not too brittle but the book has pen and pencil scribbles on almost every page. I was going to erase the tiny pencil marks but decided they added to the charm. The paper is soft, dusty and easily torn.
19 Tuesday Nov 2013
Posted in Christmas, crafts, home decor, miniature, On my Worktable
27 Saturday Jul 2013
Posted in crafts, Gilded Life, God, home decor, lighting, photography, projects, Uncategorized
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home, house, kitchen remodel, painting, replacing tiles, tile, tilework
The facebook post said “What has been your favorite find lately? Please share!!” They found a pair of ornate candelabra lamps. I haven’t purchased anything lately but figured surely I could find something “for a whole new purpose” in this overstuffed house. Perhaps an item I had forgotten. Hmm, yes, there was the old mirror still in the garage. That would do. It was my father-in-law’s and I’ve been planning on cleaning it up for a couple years now. How can years go by like that? Years!
Anyway, we were just talking about the tile work in the kitchen and I mentioned we needed six tiles as close as possible to the original tile to fill the hole. Photography is really difficult in such a dark kitchen so we’re painting all the cabinets white and the walls a beautiful creamy white. I can’t wait! The lighting will be glorious! Here is my cluttered, dark, Kitchen Before, with out-dated orangey woodwork, brass knobs and fruit-that-matches-NOTHING tiles.

Stove area before the redo, with fruit tiles that don’t match a single thing in my entire house and orange wood cabinets.
I’m looking forward to using the mirror and working with tile this week. What fun to go treasure hunting in my own garage. God cares about so many little details in our lives and the fact that he made sure eight years ago to stow away six little tiles I’d need today is just amazing.
18 Thursday Jul 2013
Posted in art, crafts, handmade books, journals, mixed media, tutorial
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coffee dyed, crafting, crafts, DIY, handmade paper, make your own, paper arts, paper crafts, tutorial
A couple months ago I made some beautiful coffee-dyed, wrought iron patterned paper completely by accident. I wanted coffee-dyed paper for a project so I boiled coffee grounds (about twice as strong as a usual pot of coffee) in water and let it steep about half an hour. I strained out most of the coffee grounds by pouring the mixture through a coffee filter and then added another couple tablespoons of instant coffee.
Even though it was spring, the sun was high in the sky and it was hot out so our cast aluminum, wrought iron-style table was hot. I figured all the heat would help the paper dry.

The day was bright and and the sun was high when I dyed the paper. The large pan of coffee dye was wide enough for the paper to fit comfortably.
I dipped each sheet of drawing tablet paper into the coffee dye and let it drain a little against the edge of the pan. Within seconds of being laid on the table, the table design showed up on the paper! Here you can see the still-wet sheen of coffee on the paper.

The coffee pooled on the top of the paper and the pattern of the table magically appeared on the surface of the paper.
I covered as much of the table as I could with the dipped paper and loved the variety of design on each sheet of paper.
I wish I had written down how long it took the paper to dry, perhaps half an hour. Once there were no more puddles on top, I flipped all the papers over to dry more. When I turned each sheet over, the design on the bottom looked amazing! It is beautiful on both sides but especially smooth and beautifully shaded on the bottom.

The wrought iron design on the bottom side of each sheet has a beautiful creamy color and delightful shading.
I will be using this paper to make handmade books and journals.
If you dye paper like this using a wrought iron table, please let me know how it turns out. Cast aluminum doesn’t rust so there was no rust residue on my paper. A wrought iron table might have a different effect on the paper.
The table surface was very hot. I haven’t experimented to see if this works on a cold table.
There may be coffee dripping from the paper so don’t do this over a deck surface that you don’t want brown drips on. There was very little coffee dripping from the paper because the day was hot and dry and the paper absorbed it very quickly and it didn’t matter to me if there were brown specks on my deck.
08 Monday Jul 2013
Posted in crafts, jewelry making
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It turned out better than I hoped. Lots of vintage beads with crystals and a cut geode. The beads match the color of the geode crystals.

I love surprises so this necklace has the cut side of the geode facing in. Only the wearer will know about that extra special glitter that no one else sees on the outside.

28 Friday Jun 2013
Posted in crafts
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It was my absolute favorite mug.
It was an accident and he acted really remorseful when he slammed the cupboard door and broke the handle off my Royal Grafton Chelsea Gardens mug. Nevertheless, the mug couldn’t be replaced. I just didn’t have the heart to throw it out so it sat forlornly on the shelf for months, with sharp broken stubs where the handle used to be.
I’m not sure why I had the flowers. I couldn’t believe how perfectly they matched since I had very few flowers and couldn’t even remember buying these. It was remarkably serendipitous. But there they were, scattered in the bin of craft supplies. I used hot glue to attach the flowers over the sharp handle stubs.

I’ve been using this beautiful mug to hold pencils for 12 years now. It has endured amazingly well! And now it’s my favorite Pencil Cup.
21 Friday Jun 2013
Posted in community, crafts, God, Inspirational, Scoliosis, sewing, Uncategorized
“What?” I asked.
I was standing in the middle of the room with my arm up in the air but those words abruptly stopped me.
“You’re reaching the wrong way.”
It had been a rough week. Someone had said cruel things. A big and unexpected bill arrived. And there was never enough light in the room, never enough light. Everything came crashing down at once so I got mad. I was angry at others. I was mad at the never ending bills. I was mad that my back wasn’t strong enough for me to get a job and how stupid was that! I was mad that I was mad. Life wasn’t fair.
So I stood in the middle of the room and puzzled all of this. There seemed to be no solution. Slowly, the anger drained out. Anger takes a ton of energy and I didn’t even have enough energy to sustain anger so I had to let it go. I forgave the cruel words. I decided to trust God that the finances would somehow work out, and maybe there could even be a solution for the poor lighting. God helped calm me down and I was aware of Him. But he was invisible and I wanted desperately to see him. Friends hug friends, don’t they? And when Jesus walked on the earth, just a touch of his garment healed disease. So I stood there and reached my hand toward the ceiling and waited to touch the hand of God.
Nothing.
How soon we forget sometimes. It was just a couple minutes before that I decided to let go of anger and now it started to bubble up again. Only this time, it was against God.
I stood on my tiptoes and said “Do I have to be higher to touch your hand?” I kept my arm up, rigid. I looked across the room and eyed the chair. “Do I have to stand on a chair?” I stretched on tiptoes as high as I could and felt the old adrenaline surging again, for all the wrong reasons. “Do I have to stand on my bed? Huh??? How high do I have to go to touch your hand, God???”
I started toward the bed, my hand still held high, but God interrupted my thoughts.
“You’re reaching the wrong way.”
His voice wasn’t angry, it wasn’t impatient or disgusted. It was calm and honest.
I let my arm drop and stared at my hand. What on earth did that mean “You’re reaching the wrong way?” If holding my hand up was the wrong way, then I had to lower it. I slowly lowered my hand, lower, lower, until it was held out down by my side, palm up. Then I looked at my hand and waited and wondered. And God answered.
God said “What you do to the least of these, you do to me. So if you want to touch my hand, you have to reach down to someone else.”
My eyes brimmed over. Yes.
This week, my hands sewed.

A group of helping hands gathered together to sew tote bags to tie on walkers for patients at a rehab center.

I volunteered to take some unfinished bags to sew at home. The smooth fabric moved through my fingers as it fed through the machine.

Despite the pain in my back, it felt good to be using my hands for someone else. Why should my hands be limited just because my back complains?

It was just a couple months ago that I still needed a walker. Back then, it took great effort just to cut socks into strips to wrap the bars. It was such an effort that I could only wrap one. One of my sons finished the other. I know what it’s like to take fifteen minutes just to walk across a room. The fabric tote bags to tie on walkers are such a small contribution. But it’s the little things that make a big difference.

I won’t be there to see the bags tied to the walkers. I won’t see the struggling hands tuck tissues or a pen or prescription into the bag pockets. But that’s ok. I don’t need to stand on tiptoes and reach up. God said I only had to reach down to someone else.

“The King will answer and say to them, ‘Truly I say to you, to the extent that you did it to one of these brothers of Mine, even the least of them, you did it to Me.’ Matthew 25:40
What you do to others, you do unto Me.
If you want to touch the hand of God, reach down to someone else.
It’s not so hard.
15 Saturday Jun 2013
Posted in All Sparkled Up, crafts, Gilded Life, handmade books, journals, tutorial
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All Sparkled Up, bookmaking, crafts, crown, handmade book, handmade journal, journals, lace, paper crafts, tutorial
It’s been a few years since I made a handmade journal so I finally had time to make one a couple months ago. I followed Jeanne Oliver’s video for stitching the signatures together from her wonderful The Journey of Letting Go class online . (I highly recommend the class, not just for the terrific art instruction, but also for the heart-felt inspirational videos. Jeanne, you’re the best!) Jeanne’s stitching process for sewing the pages together was easy and fun.
I didn’t photograph the steps to stitch the text block together but here is how I made the Crown Journal cover if you want to make one. This is an abbreviated tutorial but there’s enough here to give you basic instruction to make the lace crown, which would look great glued to an altered book cover. If you want actual measurements, let me know in the comments and I’ll measure some of the components for you.
It was fun going through my stash of supplies to pull out some pretty options.
The dyed seam binding tape, blue sequin fabric, lace and rhinestone chain were from A Gilded Life.
To make the text block, I cut up a sketch pad.
The linen was purchased from sources online.
Both front and back covers were assembled the same way. Each cover has a piece of ivory linen and natural color linen, one small and one larger piece of chip board (cut from the back of a water color tablet) and a piece of thin cotton batting for padding under the ivory linen.

The materials used to make the book cover: Ivory linen over batting over chip board, which is then glued to a larger piece of chip board covered with natural linen.
The batting is lightly glued to the small chip board square and then the ivory linen is placed over top of the batting. This piece is turned over and the ivory linen is glued to the back of the board, mitering the corners on the back.
The natural color linen is glued to the larger board without any batting.
Once the cover pieces are covered with linen, then you get to do the fun stuff!
I lay loose pieces of lace and rhinestone chain on the top of the book cover to see what I liked before gluing anything down.
I also tried several different lace pieces before making up my mind about the crown.
To glue such fine netting, I spread tacky glue on the flat lid of a plastic bin and then laid the blue lace in the glue… then quickly picked up the lace while still wet and smoothed it in position on the padded ivory linen.
There was just enough glue on the thin lace netting to glue all the tiny pieces down securely, with no edges pulling up and no glue squishing up. I want the lace to be durable because this journal will last me at least a year.

The back of this board shows how the edges of the linen and lace are glued down on the back of the padded ivory board.
To make a lace crown, choose lace pieces that will look like the points of a crown when placed together. I used three different pieces of lace. To curve the lace, cut small slits between the motifs of the lace as shown.

Here you can see where I snip the lace so it will curve better.
Once the lace is ready, glue the pieces together to form the crown.
Tacky glue is thinly spread on a smooth surface and the lace crown is carefully pressed into the glue.
While the glue is still wet, lift the lace crown piece up and carefully position it on the cover and press it down on the ivory linen. It dried fairly fast when I positioned it but I still pressed down in places to make sure it stuck well on all edges.
Cut rhinestone chain to size using jewelry cutters and glue it down with 527 Multi-Use glue or other strong jewelry glue.
I pressed my needle nose pliers into the book cover to make small indentations so rhinestones would set in deeper and more securely. These were glued with the 527 glue also.

If the gems are large, make small indentations so they can be set more securely into the book cover.
The crown is complete.

The front of the book cover is ready for the next step.

While the glue was drying, I made the ribbon rose buds for the journal spine. A length of ribbon was tied to make a loose knotted ribbon rose bud. I made three of these.
To make a knotted rose bud, the ribbon is tied as if about to make a knot, but the ribbon is looped over and over 4 times, not just once like a standard knot. Then when the ribbon is slowly pulled tighter, the layers of wrapped ribbon overlap and form a pretty bud shape. If the ribbon is pulled too tightly, the flower shape disappears and turns into a big knot. So you have to stop pulling while the ribbon is still loose. The ribbon “tails” are folded to the back and then stitched together so the ribbon bud doesn’t come apart. I cut off the excess ribbon and gently fringed the short ribbon tail under the bud.
Three lengths of ribbon were stitched and gathered together.

These longer ribbons were stitched behind the flower buds.
I ruffled a long length of seam binding tape to use on the front cover. Here it is pinned down on the larger natural linen-covered board as I adjust the ruffles to fit. But before gluing down the ruffle, I glued on the decorative top of the cover.

Seam binding tape is gathered down the middle and then pinned to the cover to check for size and adjust ruffles.
I spread tacky glue generously over the back of the ivory cover piece and pressed it down on the larger board.

Tacky glue is squirted on the inside of the top cover piece. After taking this photo, I spread the glue around using an old credit card and made sure the glue extended all the way to the edges and corners. Tacky glue is great because it sets up fast but you have to work quickly.
Some of the glue squished out around the edge but that was good. I used my fingers and a pallet knife to press the folded ruffle into the glue. I used the ruffle folded in half all the way down the length for extra fullness. It was easy to press the center of the ruffled seam binding tape into the glue and it held well. I squeezed more tacky glue into any spaces that didn’t have enough to hold the ruffle well.

The top of the cover is glued on the larger linen-covered board. Then while the glue is still wet, the ruffled seam binding tape is pushed into wet glue between the two boards.
The back cover was different. Instead of a ruffle all the way around, I just pleated the four corners and let the seam binding tape stay flat on the sides. I glued this down before gluing on the back piece.

I cut a small motif from the blue lace and laid it in glue as for the front cover.

The glued motif was positioned and pressed down carefully, especially around the lace edges. Here is the finished back cover.

I glued a piece of decorative paper inside the front and back covers to cover the edges of the linen and lace. The same kind of paper was used to wrap the front and back signatures so they would match.

Each signature was folded inside a piece of vintage wallpaper or decorative paper. Here you can see the gap between two signatures in the journal.

I accidentally placed this piece of wallpaper upside down during construction of the journal. I don’t mind because mistakes like this make me smile and remind me life isn’t perfect.

Once the book was sewn together, I stitched and glued the bundle of ribbon rose buds into the spine.


Here you can see the stitching along the spine.

The bundle of rose buds in the spine doesn’t interfere with the book opening fully.

I used a decorative paper punch to punch the edges of pages in random places.

One of the ribbons is threaded in between two signatures to be used as a ribbon bookmark.

The binding of this book allows it to open fully, even with a ribbon bundle glued and sewn into the spine.
This journal will last me about a year because I tend to write very small. I’ve been using it for two months so far and it has shown no signs of loosening and all the lace and gems are glued down tight, even when I slide the journal between books on a bookshelf.
I have to confess that this is the prettiest journal I’ve had in a long time. It’s quite heavy and the covers are soft and silky to hold. All the prettiness has had an unexpected impact on me. Each night, when I pick it up to write, I noticed that my writings have become more optimistic. I’m really glad about that because I have a couple old journals that are genuine but much too sad to reread. This is the perfect journal for this time in my life, a time of transition and full of good things, all sparkled up.