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Happy Camper Blog // craft

Posts Tagged ‘craft’

DIY Yarn Snowflakes

14Dec

Today I’d like to show you my very own first DIY!

It was super fun to make and so I thought that I should show you all. So here we go, my first DIY: Yarn Snowflakes!

Ok, I have to admit, I did not come up with this idea out of thin air. One afternoon, I was shopping at West Elm and they had a display of something similar. And I thought, wow, this is something that I can actually make myself. So I did.

Here are the materials needed:

1. Yarn. One package is plenty, but it depends how many snowflakes you make. I used an off-white alpaca yarn that is super-fuzzy for that ‘rustic’ ‘crafty’ look. I was really close to getting metallic yarn though which would also look super snazzy.

2. Dowel rods. I used 12″ long ones that came in a pack from ACMoore. I cut some down to make smaller sizes as well. You need three rods to make one snowflake.

3. Glue. Elmer’s glue specifically. I just used the spray glue for reinforcement but it’s not necessary.

4. Scissors. And fishing line and thumbtacks (to hang).

Step 1:

Take three dowel rods of the same size and lie them in a snowflake pattern as above.

Step 2:

Without cutting the yarn, start wrapping the yarn around the center of the dowel rods in a “over” “under” “over” “under” pattern until the dowel rods are loosely holding together. Then reinforce it by looping the yarn around one time on a rod then move to the next rod and loop the yarn around it. Basically you just need to get the rods to not slip out of their “snowflake” shape.

Step 3:

You should get to this point where it’s secure but that the dowel rods may shift back and forth for adjusting (just keep them all even).

Step 4:

Now start wrapping the yarn up around one dowel rod — make sure the wrapping has some spacing in between (you’ll fill those in on the way down)

Step 5:

Once the yarn reaches the top of the dowel rod, add a tab of glue at the top and cover the glued area with yarn. Hold glued area with your finger so the yarn sticks and holds as you start to wrap back down. I found that after you cover the glued area, it’s easier to also hold the yarn about quarter of an inch down the rod and wrap the yarn around the top part.

Step 6:

Now wrap the yarn back down, filling in the gaps along the way.

Step 7:

Now the yarn should be back at the center where you can continue onto the next rod and repeat steps 4-6 until each rod has been “yarned” (yep, just made that up).

Step 8:

Ta-da! Once all rods have been “yarned”, your yarn string will back at the center where you can cut it off and tuck it in at the center to hide the end. No need to knot or anything, just tucking it in with the yarn at the center will be fine.

Now I made various sizes of snowflakes but it’s up to you! Now you can hang them or just have them arranged in a vignette around your home.

To hang them, you’ll use fishing line and thumbtacks. This is what you’ll need to do:

Step 9:

Loop fishing line under a strand of yarn near the top of one snowflake point. Then double knot the fishing line (double knot seems to be the trick for fishing line) and take a thumbtack (I have white ones — for my white ceiling) with the other end of the fishing line, fasten together and tack it up on the ceiling. Yes, you’ll have tiny holes then in your ceiling. However, thumbtacks are much tinier than a nail hole or anything else. I bet a strong tape would work as well.

I used varying heights and location of my snowflakes to create some depth. I apologize, my dining room gets no natural light (it’s also the room where we haven’t done anything to it. looks pretty sparse.) so it was tricky to show you guys a good photo…but here are they are hanging:

Voila! There you have it. Lots you can do with them. And, if you get tired of them, you just unwind the yarn and reuse it!

I’d love to hear if anyone tries this out! (And if there are any gaps in my instructions… it’s my first DIY… so let me know if you need more details.)

Today I’m inspired by…

22Sep

Van Gogh’s sunflowers…

Broad brushstrokes, bright yellow and wild form. There’s a reason why these are famous sunflowers.

I see Van Gogh’s sunflowers…

Fig. 1: Rosette pillow from CB2

Fig. 2: Botanical Notebooks from Rifle Paper

Fig. 3: Hand-painted porcelain sauce dishes

Fig. 4: Screen-printed fabric brushstrokes

Sketchy tape

16Feb

I love the Japanese washi tape with all of its colors and patterns. But check out Korean decorative tape:

I absolutely love the sketched drawings. Definitely in the “want” pile.

Also, for all those Manhattanites, there’s also the subway map tape which is also really cool. Imagine wrapping up a gift with that!

You can purchase them here at Essentials along with all of their other fantastic goodies.

Fuzzy

25Feb

I know, I know, quit posting about cute animals! — well, I’ll stop for a bit after this post, I promise.

Awhile back my friend and I were browsing at a bookstore and we came across this book, Little Felted Animals by Marie-Noelle Horvath where for a good 20 seconds or so, I thought the kitten on the front was real! It was created by a process called needle-felting.

b9b169b1f7ae5952aa8078dd980cd7a1_w600_h600_scaledThe characters that she made are so realistic! The body postures of each animal are so intricately perfect.

Felt3ms1Felt4The best part is that she teaches you in the book how to make your own animal character. I never really knew of this process before so it not only amazed me but surprised me how many others are doing this process so beautifully!

I wish there were more photos to show you because her book is absolutely beautiful with theĀ  characters + photography so go find it in the bookstore or buy it online and take a look yourself.

Coaster creative

15Feb

Annoyed when your guests forget to put a coaster underneath their wineglass? Worried that it’ll leave ring marks on your antique table? Well no more with these coasters found on Fey Handmade!

slip-on-coasters_largecolorfull-coasters_largeHow clever is that? Handmade from wool and rayon. Additionally, you’ll never forget which glass is yours ( I’ll take the orange one)!

Studios of Etsy

22Jan

Found this really fun Etsy Flickr group that highlights Etsy user’s studio spaces. These are a few that I’d be a happy camper in:

etsy-studio-spaces-flickretsy studio space flickr2etsy studio flickretsy studio space flickr

not your grandma’s needlepoint

07Dec

My friend and I played a lot of backgammon while we were in Greece and Turkey so my eyes perked up when I saw this set:

jonathan adler backgammonjonathan adler backgammon2It’s new from Jonathan Adler and it’s a needlepoint backgammon set. How cool is that?

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