Archive for the ‘Paper’ Category

Albums.

Saturday, January 10th, 2009

So, it’s been a little while since I posted a project. I was working on a pretty big one that I couldn’t mention because it was my Christmas gift to my grandparents. My grandmother occasionally looks at this little site, so I couldn’t post about it until after they received it.

All that genealogy work I did? I put it in an album. I cross-stitched the cover, and I scrapbooked the pictures and censuses and everything that I found:


Now that was a big project. It took quite some time to finish, but it sure turned out… well… pretty amazing. I found so much information and actually finished an album. In time for Christmas, too!

Now, I’m working on a new album. This one’s geekier. This one’s just for me.

A certain somebody who I’ve known to like cheese for a very long time brought a cheese plate to a holiday dinner at our house. I told her I wanted to do that all the time, just for myself. She kind of chuckled and said, “Yeah, me too.” But, I’m actually doing it. Fancy cheeses! Yeah!

So, in order to keep track of all the fancy schmancy cheese I eat, I’m putting pictures, descriptions, and other notes in a little journal to keep all to myself. I’ve had about seven new cheeses just since the new year, and I haven’t scratched the surface. Cheese hobby!

Another miscellaneous and strewn collection

Monday, August 11th, 2008

I need to go back to posting regularly about one topic, huh? This is another post like the last… LET ME UPDATE QUICK AND INCLUDE EVERYTHING!

Well, I think that everyone should have gotten Miss Amy’s wedding invitation by now, so I’m finally going to post a picture of it.

Ferris Wheeless!Inside

The part inside with the invitation wording is a little pouch. The RSVP cards and a little slip directing people to their wedding website is tucked behind it. They turned out pretty nice. I actually don’t have a spare RSVP card because I gave them all to Amy, including mailing back the one that she mailed me. Yeah, I RSVP’d to a wedding in which I’m the Matron of Honor… so?

Neeeeext… I made another pattern. My mother wants to reupholster her living room furniture, and she’s going to incorporate a patch of contrasting natural fabric that will have some sort of design on it (of my making). She was leaning toward something sort of old-fashioned, or something stained glass looking. This isn’t the one that’s going on her furniture, but it was my practicing and playing with stained glass patterns. It was just the first one that I made that was appealing to look at, but I have more practicing to do before it becomes something that goes on furniture. Anyway, this is a nice little piece that would be good for my tote bag collection:

As usual, it lines up better when I take my time in the printing. This was just a test run. Yeah, I still love carving.

Onto the bugs! Well, just one. We recently went to visit Lindel’s family, bringing back a lovely assortment of plants from the nursery. We waited about a week to re-pot them because we knew it would take a pretty big chunk of time. As we got into it, more and more bugs started appearing. There was a spit-bug (we couldn’t actually see him through all his little spit-bubbles), many many crickets, two spiders (one especially creepy one), some sort of burrowing bug, and a bunch of baby caterpillars. I’m going to try a little harder to find out what kind of butterfly the caterpillars will become (there were two different kinds) before I post those pictures, but I just wanted to share a cricket nymph:

Jiminy!

Based on the larger ones that were on the same plant, this is a nymph of some sort of bush cricket. I believe it was a loud-singing bush cricket, but even the larger one was still in some sort of nymph phase. We didn’t have a full grown one to identify.

When we first moved into this apartment, we had a baby cricket infestation. Let me tell you, that’s the cutest infestation ever. Once they get to chirping age, you can see them move their little shields on their back to make that noise. I don’t know the technical terms, but I do know that they don’t make noise by rubbing their legs together as everyone believes. I was sitting at my computer one evening during cricket season, and all of the sudden I heard an echoing chirp coming from the bathroom. I followed and watched him for some time before he finally got tired of me and hid in the closet.

Moving on…

My list of things to do today include sewing the straps on my bridesmaid dress, finishing the Frazetta piece, and possibly making something with that newest pattern. Off I go.

Stab binding and album

Tuesday, February 5th, 2008

So, on Sunday I showed of my puffer print, and I also I said I had an idea for what I would do with it. This is not a project for those who hate scrapbooking, and I know there are many, many crafters who simply do not accept the pastime as a valid form of art. I used to not, myself. I began scrapbooking projects to document my wedding. I started out doing cutesy things like everyone hates, but I (think I) have learned to use it as more of a design to accent nice photography or artwork. Anyway, here is a little do-it-yourself album, but not the cutesy stamps and all that. (Except for the puffer print.)

Materials:

If you’re anything like me, you have a gigantic bucket of scrap paper. You’ll need that.

Chipboard or non-corrugated cardboard

Binding material (I used embroidery floss, but you could probably use just about anything)

Sewing needle

Get started!

1. The cover.

For this cover, I used pre-cut chipboard, but you can use anything that’s sturdy. I have made other books (and boxes) by using the backing of empty legal pads. I do love recycle-crafting, after all.

chipboard
Decorate the cover however you want. I used my puffer print and several pieces of scraps from my big ole bucket. You could draw on it, paint on it, decoupage, or if you really wanted to, you could leave it completely blank and make your very own Kraft cover book.
Front coverFront and back
I used a glue-tape runner like this to stick the stuff to the cover. These things are great for making cards or gluing paper to paper, but they run out of tape pretty fast. Another option (that I wish I had done on this book) would be to actually decoupage the stuff to the cover. (Decoupage = gluing stuff down with a glue like “Mod Podge,” waiting for it to dry, and then painting several layers of glue on top to seal it.)

2. The pages.

This step is super easy. Just cut a nice little stack of paper, but make them all slightly smaller than the cover. If you’re making an album, you can use any paper you want because it will be covered up anyway. Old magazines, old schoolwork… Recycle to your heart’s content. But, if you’re making a journal or a sketchbook, use plain paper. Of course.

Pages
3. Prepare for binding.

You’ll have to punch holes through everything. This is where the Crop-a-Dile from the last post comes in handy. It’s so heavy duty, it will punch through chipboard (or… as the package claims… METAL.) without breaking your hand or your regular old hole punch. I always take a scrap and make a template for the punches, because otherwise I (without fail) make one punch that is completely out of line with the rest. See?

Do Not Punch
But once you’ve gotten the holes right on the template, the rest of your book will be perfect.

Crop-a-DileAll Punched
At the last minute, I decided to put eyelets in the holes. I can tell myself this step was for hole reinforcement, but really it was just another thing that the crop-a-dile does, and I just had to use it.

4. Binding the book.

Thread your binding material (embroidery floss, or another fancy word: “string”) through the needle. Pick a hole to start with, making sure the string goes through all of the layers.

hole1
Leave about two inches hanging loose. You’ll tie that piece off at the end.

end piece
Now go back through the next hole, basically weaving until you get to the end.
hole2.jpg
When you get to the end, you can repeat the exact same process going back toward the first hole, or you can wrap the string around the binding for a prettier (and sturdier) look.
Going back
Once you get back to first hole where you left the two-inch tail, you can tie the pieces together and trim it down.

This is the most basic of stab binding, but there are all sorts of ways to make them very pretty. For example, Transient Books has quite a large display of decorative bindings. I’ve done a few small journals that were fancier.

But here is the finished edge of my puffer book:

Fini!
Now I’m going to use it as a little tiny album to have a place (besides the computer) for all of our really cool aquarium photos.
Like…

These:

SnailyShrimpy (Look closely)
So, that wasn’t too scrapbook-ish, was it? I mean, it was a book made of scraps, but there was no ribbon or glitter or cutesy puns involved.

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