Thursday, May 07, 2020
Birthday card featuring a fun cupcake with a star and some ribbon flags
A fun card for one of my grandaughter's birthday which is coming up soon!!! I started with a large envelope and created an off white card to fit inside. I cut the piece of polka dot red paper for my background and decided to embellish it. With a black Sharpie I added some hand drawn circles and three dots in all the large circles and put a single dot in the each small circle. Next, I coloured all the circles in with yellow. Finally, I used the open end of a nerf bullet to stamp red circles in between all the other ones. The result adds some pizzazz!! I adhered it to my card front. I laser printed the cute little cupcake (Melonheadz) after adding the birthday greeting, trimmed it to size and then watercoloured it using shimmery paint on the icing and a clear glitter gel pen on the dots and the swirl at the top. I ran my tracing wheel on three edges and just below the greeting on the bottom. I punched the bottom with a scallop punch (SU) and then added four shimmery embellishments in the four full scallops. I layered it with red cardstock and added seven little red checkered ribbon flags on the right hand side. To finish off my card I used 3D foam tape to adhere this focal element to my card front. I like how the star echos the little yellow circles in my decorative paper. Therese
Slow Stitching - my first house is finished
I have finished slow stitching my first house in my new Slow Stitching project!! I have changed my daily routine in order to add a daily walk outside so slow stitching has moved to the evening but I don't always get to it so this project may take a little longer than I expected but it is summer time and there are other tasks that will need to be a priority. No problem, this is a relaxing activity and I will do it as often as I can.
I pinned the house body - a 5" square - and then added the windows and the door which I cut from scraps. I used a 7" hoop to stabilize the area and then started stitching. I did the perimeter of the house body with three rows of running stitch using a light yellow floss. I stitched the windows in place using running stitch and dark brown floss. I went around twice filling in the spaces on my first row on my second go around. I like how that works!! I added some bright yellow running stitches on the corners of all the panes to create a highlight. I stitched the door using purple floss and then added a half round window and a door handle in light yellow floss. I removed the hoop, pinned the roof in place and then flipped the top edge and put the chimney in place and stitching it down with several rows of running stitch in dark brown. I replaced the roof and stitched it into place using dark maroon floss using three rows of running stitch all the way around. I added some small black stab stitches in each little black line in the roof to give it a bit of texture. Pretty happy with how it worked out!! I am hoping to give all my little houses their own unique look so we shall see what the next one will look like. I will consider adding foliage and flowers in between and possibly in front of the houses once they are all stitched in place. We shall see!! Therese
Labels:
fabric,
floss,
hand stitching,
quilting,
slow stitching
An all occasion card featuring TH wild flower die cut in purple, a strip of serendipity and a layer textured with my tracing wheel
For Mother's Day I created this card for my youngest daughter. I features a TH wildflowere die cut in dark purple which I layered onto a strip of coordinating serendipity paper which I punched on the bottom using a label punch (SU). I inserted it from the back so I only punched the edge. I like the look!! I added a gray ribbon to finish it off. I chose a pink layer and tore the bottom edge then ran my tracing wheel all over it to add some texture. I mounted my serendipity focal element to it using double sided tape. Next, I cut a light purple card to fit in a smaller non standard envelope and mounted my large element to it using double sided tape. After mounting it I decided to add a row of piercings on both sides using my tracing wheel which frames it nicely. Therese
Labels:
diecuts,
punch,
ribbon,
serendipity,
small cards,
SU - StampinUP,
Tim Holtz (TH),
tracing wheel
CAS Thankyou card featuring decorative paper, a font greeting and some tracing wheel texture
Another CAS card that I created with inspiration from some online that left less blank space. I have trouble leaving a lot of blank space. I had the green scraps on my desk from another card I decided to see if I could come up with another card from that stash. I found these scraps and only hand to trim them to length for this card!! I adhered them onto a red card which I created to fit in one of my smaller envelopes. I found the greeting in my stash, added two lines of piercing using my pattern tracing wheel and layered it onto a coordinating piece of green cardstock before adhering it to my card front over the decorative paper. It still needed a bit of something so I added two little red circle punchies which I adhered with my white glue fine tip applicator. I have made this sketch before but not very recently. It was nice to be using designs from the past. Therese
Wednesday, May 06, 2020
All occasion card featuring a serendipity heart, decorative paper flags and a square of green cardstock
This is the card I am sending my Mom for Mother's day. It is my favorite colour combination - green and pink. I chose a small envelope and made a green card for it. I mounted a square of green cardstock and then added two pieces of flagged decorative paper - a pink one with tracing wheel texture and a green and pink one with roses just a little offset from each other. I mounted a coordinating serendipity heart over them and added a little pink fiber bow using a small piece of a glue dot. I have been seeing a lot of double flag cards on Splitcoast Stampers and it is the first time I have made one!! Therese
Labels:
decorative paper,
fiber,
hearts,
serendipity,
small cards,
tracing wheel
CAS Sympathy card featuring three decorative papers, a die cut sprig and a little font greeting
Needed a sympathy card this week and decided to see if I could do Clean and Simple. I admire many of the CAS cards I find on the internet but usually I cannot convince myself to leave so much white space. I did find a few that had a little less white space so I took them as inspiration and got started.
I started with a smaller envelope and made a white card to fit inside. I had my green scraps on my desk and decided to see if I could find three that coordinated enough to make a card. I found these three which worked and so I just adhered them to my white card front. I found the little diecut sprig (TH) in my little stash of leaves and used white glue applied with a fine tip applicator to secure it in place. The little font greeting punchie (SU - Word Window) I found in my stash and adhered with 3D foam tape. I am very happy with the result!! I made a few more which I will be blogging soon!!
Therese
I started with a smaller envelope and made a white card to fit inside. I had my green scraps on my desk and decided to see if I could find three that coordinated enough to make a card. I found these three which worked and so I just adhered them to my white card front. I found the little diecut sprig (TH) in my little stash of leaves and used white glue applied with a fine tip applicator to secure it in place. The little font greeting punchie (SU - Word Window) I found in my stash and adhered with 3D foam tape. I am very happy with the result!! I made a few more which I will be blogging soon!!
Therese
Labels:
CAS,
decorative paper,
diecuts,
fun fonts,
punchies,
small cards,
SU - StampinUP,
Tim Holtz (TH)
Monday, May 04, 2020
Birthday card featuring fabric, buttons and a cute sewing machine
I made this sewing themed card for my youngest daughter who is celebrating a special birthday this year!!!!!! She is the owner of Winnipeg Sews and has been drawn to sewing since high school and is now using her talents to spread the love of sewing and quality handmade clothes that fit. I found this digital sewing machine image online, sized it and added a font greeting before laser printing it. I watercoloured the image to coordinate with my background - a piece of beautiful fabric. It is removable in case she decides to add it to a little something she is making. I trimmed the printed buttons and watercoloured those as well. The fabric is stitched to the brown embossed piece of cardstock with gold thread through the holes in the buttons. After adding some texture with a few strokes from my pattern tracing wheel I added a fabric ribbon and a button to the image and then adhered it to the fabric using four tiny pieces of double sided tape. I adhered this large element to my large ivory card front. Wishing her all that is good on her special day!! Therese
Labels:
digital image,
fabric,
hand stitching,
large cards,
ribbon,
thread,
tracing wheel,
watercolour
A little cowboy quilt
I have been working on and off on this little cowboy quilt which has been made up from two fabric panels I have had in my stash for a while. After a bit of playing around with them to figure out how I could make them into a quilt I discovered if I overlapped them the designs lined up so I stitched them together!! All the fabrics are heavier than the regular so it worked out well. I stitched the two outside strips from precut pieces and they make a really nice border. I added a couple strips of a solid taupe in between to help make a cohesive design. I added fabric as batting and then a heavyweight cotton as the backing. The binding is dark brown polyester cut from a raveled pillow sham. I am please with how it turned out. I will be washing it tomorrow and adding to my little pile of quilts for donation. Therese
Labels:
fabric,
machine stitching,
project linus,
quilting,
thread
Saturday, May 02, 2020
Christmas cards featuring word ornaments and custom decorative backgrounds
A few more Christmas cards!! I cut the ornaments (SX) and words (TH_SX) while I was at it last time I made cards and so I have decided to get a few more made. I dug out my box of Christmas paper to see what I had for backgrounds. I found several and made up a few more.
For the first card, I taped three pieces of this beautiful metallic gift wrap together with regular tape and trimmed it, adhered to a green card front, used gold/green metallic paper to back the ornament and create the topper and added gold cording for the hanger.
For the second card, I created a background by taping together strips of decorative paper together and trimmed it to size and adhered to a green card, used white pearly paper to back the ornament and create the topper and added white cording for the hanger.
For the third card, I layered the green paper over some yellow decorative paper and glued this large element to a red card front, used yellow/orange hand decorated watercoloured paper to back the ornament and create the topper and used twine as the hanger. It needed a bit of something so I added a twine across the bottom and tied on a short length to simulate a bow and added the little layered stamped greeting (Nestibilities). That was better!
For the fourth card, I taped layers of decorative paper together, added green/gold metallic paper strips over the joints and trimmed it to size then adhered it to a green card. I used green/gold metallic paper to back the ornament and create the topper and added a gold embroidery thread for the hanger. Thinking it needed a bit of something I added a coordinating oval punchie font greeting which I sponged with a bit of red before adhering with 3D foam tape.
I am really liking the chance to change up the backgrounds on these cards. I prefer to create one of a kind cards!!!!!!!!!! Therese
Labels:
A2,
cards,
Christmas,
cording,
decorative paper,
diecuts,
gift wrap,
metallic paper,
shimmer paper,
SX - sizzix,
thread,
Tim Holtz (TH)
Friday, May 01, 2020
Christmas cards featuring glittery pinecone backgrounds, die cut ornaments and silver foil accents
Made these Christmas cards using the last of this beautiful glittery pine cone gift wrap which arrived over the holiday season wrapped around one of our gifts. I mounted the backgrounds to red cards. I die cut the ornaments (SX) and then die cut the word (TH) out of the middle section. These are not coordinating dies but they worked out really well. Next, I dug out my oval Nestibilities to see if I would be fortunate enough to find one of them that would cut an oval appropriate for filling in the opening. Yes, there is one that does the job perfectly!!! I cut the ovals from silver foil and also cut the top of the ornament as well. I trimmed the tops and used white glue to adhere them to the ornaments. I used regular tape to adhere the ovals to the back of the the ornaments. I added white thread hangers to them which I secured on the inside of the cards using regular tape as well and then used 3D foam tape to mount the ornaments to the card fronts. Really happy to have a few more cards for my stash! Therese
NOTE: I am staying home as much as I can during the Covid 19 pandemic in hopes of not getting sick. It has been nice to get ahead on Christmas cards during this time.
Labels:
A2,
background,
cards,
Christmas,
die cuts,
gift wrap,
Nestabilities,
reuse,
silver foil,
SX - sizzix,
thread,
Tim Holtz (TH)
Wednesday, April 29, 2020
Slow Stitching - sky, trees and ground fabric collage for my houses


I have been working on my fabric collage which will be the background onto which I will be hand stitching my little houses. I did some research on fabric collages in hopes of finding a way to finish the edges of my fabric pieces in order for them to be solid and secure so this base would be strong enough to hold the houses once this piece is incorporated into a quilt. I did not want to use fusible webbing because generally it creates stiffness and would make the handstitching of the houses more difficult. I found this video tutorial called Edge Colouring Applique from Fourth and Sixth Designs which is a technique they developed to finish off their applique designs for their Full Bloom Block of Month quilt in 2014. It was exactly what I was looking for!!!!! I started with my brown strip. I simply used this method to join my scraps to each other. I had trouble with my tension when I used reverse and so it is a little wonky but I did not want to start over so I have decided to use as it is. Its wonkiness will add to the texture of the background. I did the green layer next and this time I chose to stitch all my scraps to each other using a single line of straight stitch before I used this technique to "colour" the edges of my scraps. This worked better. I also changed sewing machines and used my Bernina 830 which worked much better. The tension was good in both forward and reverse and gave me a good result with this technique. I am really happy with how the green layer worked out. As you can see the blue layer is a single piece of fabric which perfectly simulated a sky which is what I was looking for!!!!
Check the images below for a close up of the stitching which I used to secure the edges of my pieces. I simply laid my scraps over each other and the back and forth stitching of the technique securely attaches them to each other and also blends in the line of straight stitching I used to create the green collage. This technique is a bit like free motion stitching and requires developing a rhythm to get it to go well. Free motion stitching is also a technique they recommend for this "edge colouring" but I was not ready for a steep learning curve so I used this one that uses regular straight stitch instead.


Here is a portion of the finished piece with the three layers of the fabric collage attached in the same way as the scraps pieces were attached for the brown and green strips. The blue is the sky, the green is the landscape/horizon line and the brown strip is the dirt/road in the foreground. I expect this will not be used literally in that the houses will likely overlap all three layers. They have yet to be invented. That is work for another day.
The first photo below is the finished fabric collage and then the bottom one has the bottom edge straightened in that it would be best to have the houses all sitting straight to the edge of the collage and perpendicular to it as well. I would prefer not to have my houses looking like their are off kilter.
So I will be working up pieces of houses next and will get back to slow stitching when they are ready to go. I will be doing slow stitching in the day or evening for the summer to allow me to get a morning walk in every day. Therese
Monday, April 27, 2020
A birthday card with bright colours, decorative paper and a large elaborate greeting (digital)
My oldest grand daughter will be 13 this month and I made her this card. She is growing up and is now taller than I am. She is a crafty person and loves making all sorts of things. She is currently doing a lot of hand sewing - little stuffies and badges mostly. Her large card features a fun pennant piece of scrapbook paper which I cut into two pieces and mounted the other piece with the orange and yellow polka dots pattern showing. My sister has made a donation to me of some of her beautiful double sided paper!!!!!! I created a fun embellishment to cover the joint using a border punch (SU). It punches a scalloped edge and eyelet holes. I trimmed out the middle section between some of the holes and laced some blue satin ribbon through. I mounted my background to a green card and then added my embellishment with double sided tape. I added three little chevrons on the right hand side which I punched from a scrap because the punch faces upward and I wanted them facing downward. Glued them in place using glue stick. I printed the greeting large and watercoloured it to coordinate with the background. I added some glitter using a clear glitter pen. She loves glitter!! I ran my tracing wheel along each edge before I mounted it to my card front using 3D foam tape. The "Happy Birthday" greeting is from Craft Starters. They have some fun images. I downloaded some Kawaii images and printed them off to include in the card!!
Therese
Slow stitched trees are all done!!
I have finally finished stitching my little trees to the bases. I have added two rows of running stitch to all of them using yellow floss. It frames them nicely, echoes the star and securely achours them to the squares. Once I finished the stitching I trimmed all the squares to 6" and they will be used as an accent column in a future quilt. I will have work on what sort of colour scheme will work and then get some fabric together. For now it is on hold in the cabinet and I am working on my next slow stitching project. It will be little houses!!!!!!! I am currently working on the substrate for the houses which involves fabric collage and a new thread colouring technique.
Therese
Therese
Labels:
fabric,
floss,
hand stitching,
quilting,
slow stitching,
thread
Tuesday, April 21, 2020
Jazzed up a reusable bag for a birthday gift

I jazzed up a reusable bag with music fabric and some accent pieces to package my oldest grand daugter's birthday gift. I simply created a strip of fabric using a piece of music note fabric from my stash and a few small strips of coordinating fabric and stitched it to the bag about 3" from the bottom which conveniently covered the words. I did have to open the side seam to accomplish that but it was a relatively easy project and I think it will nicely package her birthday gift. Therese
Sunday, April 19, 2020
Rainbow quilt top featuring my heart rainbow squares
I managed to get my rainbow quilt top made up today. It features my little rainbow heart slow stitched squares which are in a column between the blue strips. Without the strips they blended right in and were not very noticeable. Very happy with the way it turned out. I have a bit of trimming to do at the bottom and then it will be finding batting and a backing.
Therese
Therese
Labels:
fabric,
machine stitching,
quilting,
slow stitching
Saturday, April 18, 2020
Birthday card featuring a vase of flowers (digital), decorative paper and a font greeting
I made this large card for my sister whose birthday is coming up!! I used a piece of scrapbook paper with brown on the left and blue polka dots on the right with stripes in between. I trimmed it and adhered to an ivory card base. The flower and vase image is one I have recently downloaded from Creating Paper Hugs. I laser printed it onto white cardstock, trimmed it out of the letter sized sheet and watercoloured it to coordinate with my background. Once it was dry I ran my pattern tracing wheel on all four edges before adhering it to my card front using 3D foam tape. I found this little laser printed font greeting which I layered onto brown before adding to my card. Voila!! It is fun to be back to making cards!!!
Therese
Therese
Thursday, April 16, 2020
Finished the little heart & star quilt top

This quilt finished at 36" x 46". I used a cotton polyester fabric as a batting and a gray with soft stripes sheet on the back. Glad to have given this little quilt a chance to bless another person in the world. It will be headed to the Linus Project when things get back to "normal". Therese
Labels:
fabric,
hand stitching,
machine stitching,
quilting,
thread
Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Slow Stitching - Trees
I am feeling like there is not enough stitching to keep these little squares attached to the larger one so more stitching will definitely be added. Not yet inspired as to what exactly that will be so I will sleep on it and see what I can come up with tomorrow. Therese
Labels:
fabric,
floss,
hand stitching,
quilting,
slow stitching
Birthday card featuring a watercoloured coffee cup, some hand stitching and embossed velvet paper
I made this card for DH birthday later this week. I found some brown velvet paper in a box of serendipity supplies when I was making this heart in support of front line workers who are out there every day during this health crisis. I embossed it with a coffee bean border from Pink Cat Studio which belongs to a set I bought a while back. I simply laid the rubber stamp on the velvet surface of the paper and passed it through my Big Shot with very little pressure. Worked really well! I adhered this little piece of embossed paper to a piece of mottled watercolour paper which I had stamped with a script stamp (SU) in brown. I added a strip of red cardstock which I border punched with a ribbon/eyelet punch (SU). I added stitching by hand using ivory and gold floss using the holes in the border. I tied another short end to the left hand side before adhering it over where the two paper join. I adhered this large layer to a dark brown card front. For my focal image I chose a large coffee cup (Stamp Barn) which I stamped and gold embossed. I watercoloured the cup and added a bit of colour to the background to make it less stark. I used my distress tool on the edge and then smudged it with a brown stamp pad to help it stand out from the background. I mounted this large image to my card front using 3D foam tape and then trimmed and layered a small font greeting with brown which I tucked under its bottom edge and adhered in place with double sided tape. Therese
Labels:
A2,
birthday,
border punch,
cards,
embossing,
floss,
fun fonts,
hand stitching,
stamping,
SU - StampinUP,
thermal embossing,
velvet paper,
watercolour
Another quilt top
I found this quilt top in my stash when I was sorting through fabric on the weekend. It was square and fortunately I had cut pieces and scraps of the same fabrics as well. I added a strip of the colourful fabric at the top and then a narrow piece of the wrinkly gray fabric and then at the bottom I added a narrow strip of the colourful fabric and then another of the wrinkly gray fabric. Using the scraps I created pieces that were 3.5" wide and then arranged them into piles so I could evenly distribute the colours and textures into the border that I needed to add all the way around to get the quilt top to be about 35" x 45". I stitched the border pieces to each other and then added a length of the border to each side which worked out really well. I think the quilt looks reasonably balanced the large white areas are pretty much centered. I will now have to find some batting and a backer. I will also investigate if I have enough fabric left to actually create a binding for it. It would be really nice if it coordinated. If not, I will see if I can find a piece of dark green which would work very well for the binding. Very happy to be able to give this little quilt top another chance!!!!!!!! Therese
Thursday, April 09, 2020
Exchange cards with embossed backgrounds, die cut leaves and laser printed digital greetings
I have made up these two cards for my partners in this month's Card Exchange. I started with larger envelopes and made ivory cards to fit inside. I cut two quarter sheets of brown cardstock and embossed them using two different embossing folders - TH swirls, SU wood grain. I had to trimmed each of them into two pieces to make them long enough for my cards so I chose long greetings from my stash that would bridge the gap.
For the first card, the greeting is from Beccy's Place. It is a free digital which I sized and laser printed. To coordinate with my card elements I colourwashed it a bit with watercolour in green and brown and then watercoloured the flower in a warm yellow. I adhered my two pieces of brown background to my card leaving the gap in the top section and mounted my greeting over it using double sided tape on each end. I dug through my little stash of leaf die cuts (TH) and found these that worked with my greeting. I applied glue on the back and tucked them behind before pressing them down.
For the second card, I used a laser printed font thank you greeting from my stash. I trimmed both long edges with deckle decorative scissors and then ran my pattern tracing wheel on each edge. I applied double sided tape on the ends and the middle and adhered it over the gap that was created when I adhered the trimmed background to my large ivory card. I embossed two of the same leaf die cuts (TH) one in green and one in muted tones (Hammered Botanicals background) with the Swiss Dots embossing folder. I applied glue to the back of the fronds before applying them to the card front. I tucked the green one behind the greeting and overlapped the muted one over it. These sketches are a little CAS for me but I like them. Therese
For the second card, I used a laser printed font thank you greeting from my stash. I trimmed both long edges with deckle decorative scissors and then ran my pattern tracing wheel on each edge. I applied double sided tape on the ends and the middle and adhered it over the gap that was created when I adhered the trimmed background to my large ivory card. I embossed two of the same leaf die cuts (TH) one in green and one in muted tones (Hammered Botanicals background) with the Swiss Dots embossing folder. I applied glue to the back of the fronds before applying them to the card front. I tucked the green one behind the greeting and overlapped the muted one over it. These sketches are a little CAS for me but I like them. Therese
Sunday, April 05, 2020
Face masks
I decided I would experiment with some patterns for making face masks for going out in public. I went on line to see what I could find for instructions. I found this pattern at USA Today which is very similar to many I have seen on line with very clear and reasonable instructions so I decided to go ahead with this one. For my first one I used a very soft tight weave fabric from a man's shirt and added a layer of flannel inside instead of the fusible interfacing which I do not have on hand. I also made ties because there was no 1/4" elastic in my stash. I found this other tutorial on the Joann Fabric website which can be downloaded as a PDF which explains how to make ties. I simply made the ties and substituted them into the original instructions. I found that with flannel inside it made the sewing of the pleats on the sides quite thick. I made the ties on the this one 18" and they are ample.
For my next attempt, I decided to use quilting cotton and a single layer of white cotton for the inside layer. I dug through my crafting supplies and found twill tape which was way quicker than making ties. I used 14" for these ties which is enough for tying the mask into place over your ears and below your chin to the back of your head. Very adjustable!! It was easier to stitch the pleats on this one as well. In the end, any protection is better than none. I will be sending this one to my Mom this week along with instructions. She is a very experienced sewer and may be inspired to make some for the others in her building who might need them.
Therese
Saturday, April 04, 2020
My second flannel quilt is finished


This method yields a much narrower binding but still very neat and acceptable. My finished quilt measures 36" x 45" and has been ironed and folded. It has joined the other two in waiting to find its way to its final home through the Linus Project. Therese
Christmas cards featuring a large Merry Christmas greeting, ribbon and glittery gift wrap backgrounds
Another set of Christmas cards for my stash using the same glittery pine cone gift wrap as I used for my last set. These ones feature a large greeting I downloaded from Mom Junction which I sized, laser printed onto white cardstock and added a black line all the way around to give it some depth. I watercoloured the greeting and holly and then added some clear glitter in the stars and dots around the top, on the berries and all the way around the edges. I added a strip of double sided tape on the right hand side and added short lengths of coordinating ribbon then flagging their ends. I mounted the trimmed backgrounds - glittery pine cone gift wrap which came wrapped around one of our gifts this past season - to red card fronts and then mounted the greetings to them using 3D foam tape. As you can see I made a few angled a bit and two square and even. I did these cards more assembly line style. I did each step for all of them one at a time. Trimmed all the images, added a black line to all of them, watercoloured them and then added ribbon to all of the greetings. I glued all the backgrounds to the front and then mounted all the greetings to them. It was easier to make them all the same when using this method of assembly. Happy with these and they are headed for the bucket when they are finished being pressed. Therese
Labels:
A2,
background,
cards,
Christmas,
digital images,
gel pen,
gift wrap,
glitter,
laser printing,
ribbon,
sharpie markers,
watercolour
Friday, April 03, 2020
Stained glass art in support of essential workers

To really simulate stained glass I decided to add some lines using a large permanent marker. I just made a pattern of lines. I plugged my griddle in and set it on low, added a layer of foil and then laid my sheet decorated bond paper over it. To decorate the sheet I simply coloured in the pieces using wax crayons which melt immediately when they are in contact with the warm surface below. It is totally fun!!!!!
As you can see from the stained glass sheet on the right the wax dissolved to some degree the permanent marker in the lines and ran into the spaces. I just went with it and kept filling in the spaces until I was done. I think it looks pretty interesting and the running of the colour gives it a bit of an antique feeling. To remove it, I simply lifted a corner and placed it on newspaper until it solidified which only takes a few minutes.

To display them I simply taped them to the front window. Two each on the side panels where they really look great. They will be wonderful when the sun shines through.
I encourage you to make art to display in your windows in support of those who are putting themselves in harm's way to keep us safe.
Get the kids involved and make it an art day!! With very little prompting the kids will come up with art that is meaningful in every way once they know what the cause is!! Therese
Labels:
decorative paper,
hearts,
sharpie markers,
wax crayons
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