Handmade Buttons to Transform Jacket

First of all, welcome to all of our new readers who are joining us because you read my guest blog post on Julie Fei-Fan Balzer’s blog, Balzer Designs. I shared a technique using polymer clay, alcohol ink, and her stencils to make some pendants and had so much fun experimenting with it. In case you have not seen that post, you can read it here. Thank you Julie for letting me share with your readers! Here’s a sneak peak.Clay Pendants

I picked up this cute jacket at a Yard sale for fifty cents for my granddaughter, My Princess, who is outgrowing all of her clothes.

Yard Sale Jacket

The fabric was in good condition, however, the embellishments were looking a little sad. I decided it needed a creative transformation.Yard Sale Jacket

My first step was removing the ribbon and the sequins that had not fallen off yet. The ones that were already missing had left a mark on the fabric. I also took out the decorative stitching. I machine stitched a new ribbon (from my stash) and hand embroidered my own swirling lines across the ribbon. I used polymer clay to make my own custom buttons for the button holes as well as replacements for the sequins. The process I used for making the button design was to make a cane the width needed to fit the buttonhole and then reduced the cane to a smaller size for the tiny buttons.

Handmade ButtonsThey are not perfectly matching, but then if I wanted buttons that looked perfectly manufactured, I would have bought some at the store! I like the handmade look.Handmade ButtonMy Princess was so excited to put the jacket on. It is still slightly big on her, but that means she can wear it a little longer.

Transformed Jacket

I still needed to shorten the sleeves for her, but that did not stop her from wearing it to pick vegetables from the garden. She loves cherry tomatoes!

Picking tomatoes

With the clay that was left over I made an assortment of beads and put together a necklace and bracelet for My Princess to wear. She was thrilled!

Clay Bead NecklaceClay Bead Bracelet

Custom making buttons was so much fun! I may start pulling buttons off all kinds of clothing and make new ones just to give some old clothes of mine a new look!

 

Recycled Jeans to Art Smocks

Two special little girls in my life just celebrated their first birthday. I wanted to get them started on their creative journey by giving them their first art supplies and decided they needed art smocks. I cut off the lower part of each leg on a pair of jeans and cut open the seam on one side. Folding the denim in half lengthwise, I cut out a section for the arms. See the photo for dimensions I used. Depending on the height of the child, you could make the length longer or shorter. I wanted to make sure they could use them for a few years.Jean Pantlegs

I turned under 1/4″ of denim twice on each side of the smock (the 10″ section on picture above) and top stitched to finish the sides.

I cut strips of print fabric to use for the ruffles, ties, and neck edge of the smocks in the following dimensions.

For each smock:
Cut one 3″ X 30″ piece for ruffle.
Cut two 3″ X 40″ pieces for ties.
Cut one 3″ X 6″ piece for neck edge.

Art Smocks

I folded the ties and neck edge fabric pieces like double fold bias tape (my strips were not cut on the bias though) by folding in half lengthwise right side out and pressing. Then I opened that strip up and pressed both raw edges to the center and folded the strip again in the center (original pressed fold) and pressed. I tucked the raw edge of the smock neck into the middle of the neck edge double fold tape and pinned in place. Then I top stitched near the inside edge to hold the strip in place front and back.

For the ties, I turned the ends of the strips to the inside a quarter of an inch and refolded the double fold tape and pressed to give a nice finished end. I positioned the tie strip tapes into the raw armhole portion of each side of the denim just like I did on the neck tape leaving about 12″ for the neck ties and the rest for the waist ties. I pinned in place and top stitched close to the inside edge of the tape from one end to the other.

The lower edge of my jeans were quite raveled so I did not leave the original hem of the jeans as the bottom edge. I serged the bottom edge of the smock before sewing on the ruffle. For the ruffle on both the top and bottom edges, I turned under 1/4″ twice for a finished hem and top stitched. I had intended to gather the ruffle and sew it on, but the fabric I used for the ruffle was stiff so I made pleats instead, tucking the ends around to the backside of the smock and top stitching in place.

The smocks were cute and would have worked fine for art smocks at this point, but I decided to take it a step further and add applique and embroidery. As I was working on this, my eyes noticed a spray can I have had for a long time called Quilt Basting Spray. It temporarily bonds fabric and can be repositioned, and I wondered why I had not thought of using it for appliques before now! It worked great and was much faster to use than cutting and ironing fusible webbing to the back of appliques.Ladybug AppliquesAnd here are the finished smocks ready for fun messy creativeness!Ladybug Art Smocks

 

Documented Life Project- Week 37

The art challenge for week 37 of the Documented Life Project was to: “Use white pen prominently on your page.”

Jan:
A few weeks ago my husband discovered a new vine with amazing flowers growing on our property. Neither of us had ever seen it before. It looked like something that would be in a Dr. Suess book illustration– quite whimsical. Passion FlowerPassion-Flower-Side-View

Of course, I had to look it up to see what it was.  The official name of the flower is passiflora incarnata, or a couple of the more common names are maypop and purple passion flower. It’s a common wildflower– I just had never seen it before. I decided to use this flower for my inspiration for this challenge. I used watercolor for the leaves and flower base and a couple different white pens on top. The leaf veins seemed too stark so I toned them down with a yellow watercolor wash.

DLP-Week-37-J

 

Melinda:

After doing the last weeks page, I wanted to try something like that again for this challenge. I thought the dots on this picture would be cool to try.

Pinned-Photo

However, I did not like how it turned out…White-Pen-1

So I added a bunch more dots…White-Pen-2Then added a quote to sum up this pages unsuccessfulness. I used clear photo corners so I could still see the page if I wanted a reminder about how mistakes are ok to make.White-Pen-3

Lessons From Derwent Academy

If you are looking for a place for free art lessons, Derwent Academy offers 6 video online lessons. You just watch the video, complete the assignment, take a photo, or scan your project and upload the picture to Derwent. They view your work, give helpful critique and then unlock the next lesson for you to take. When you complete the lessons, they will mail you a certificate and a tin of Derwent pencils.  I just finished the lessons and Melinda is starting them. You don’t have to have the Derwent brand of materials used in the lessons to be able to do them. I don’t, but I just used what I have on hand. However, I could tell watching the videos that Derwent products are much nicer than the cheap supplies I have and I hope to eventually buy more of their products to use in my art.

Thought I’d show you the projects I turned in. I had fun and learned some things and I encourage you to give it a try.

Pencil Shading SketchPerspectivePencil Point SketchColored Pencil Bird SketchWatercolor treesOil Pastel Cats

Documented Life Project- Week 36

The Documented Life Project challenge for week 36 was simply: “Black and white.”

Jan:
When I did this post on using leaves for gelli printing, I played around with using just black and white paint. I really liked how some of the prints turned out and thought I would just use one of those for this challenge. In that post I mentioned not throwing away prints that did not turn out quite like you wanted because you could always use parts of those prints for other projects in collage, card making, and so on. So instead of just using one of the prints I liked, I cut parts of leaves out of the prints that did not turn out as well overall. I then collaged those pieces together on card stock. I cut thin strips of black and white paper to frame the seams of the papers in the collage. Because the leaf print pieces came from different gelli prints, it gave a nice variation.

Black White Leaf Collage

Melinda:
I searched “black and white” on Pinterest and came across this black and white photograph. I can’t seem to find the original source, so if you know what it is please let me know so I can credit it.
Pinned-Photo

I used the new white pen I got for the next weeks challenge and did my own version.

DLP-Week-36-M

Creativity Workshop- Stamp Making

Last week Melinda and I opened up our creative play time to some other ladies who were longing to do something creative. We first read through our Declaration of Creativity to get in the right mindset for creating. Our activity for the evening was making stamps with craft foam. We showed them the basic steps and let them play. Melinda’s sweet baby supervised. We plan to regularly share workshops with others to inspire creativity. Would you like to join us?

Stamp Making Workshop Stamp Making Workshop Stamp Making Workshop

Documented Life Project- Week 35

The art challenge in week 35 of the Documented Life Project was to: “Draw, sketch, paint, doodle a face or cut and alter one from a book or magazine.”

Jan:
In spite of my desire to keep drawing faces regularly after conquering my mental block (you can read about that here), I let a few weeks go by without drawing one. So I was excited to do this challenge. I chose to draw the face of my granddaughter. DLP-Week-35-J

Melinda:

I searched through Pinterest for a smiling face to draw and came across this beautiful woman from Mai An Hoa’s Flickr.Pinned-Photo

I haven’t drawn many faces and have had a few issues like mom has shared in the past. I drew an eye a few months ago though, so I felt confident that I could at least get that part right. If I look just at my page, I think it looks like it could be a real person. However, when I compare, I am not happy with the nose and mouth. I am proud of myself for trying though. I know that with more practice I could do better next time. This just gives me a place to see my progress as I keep practicing drawing faces. (I also used a regular school pencil to draw this. I recently purchased some actual drawing pencils and realized how much easier drawing can be with the right tools!)DLP-Week-35-M

Documented Life Project- Week 34

Week 34 of the Documented Life Project’s art challenge was: “Fill the page with numbers that relate to your week (4 trips to the grocery store etc.)”

Jan:
This challenge was not inspiring me with ideas. So I just sat down and started playing with drawing numbers in various shapes and sizes using the ten single digits. It actually turned out to be fun. I didn’t really follow the challenge by making the numbers relate to my week, but in the same way you can make any word with the twenty six letters of the alphabet, I can make any number with the ten single digits.DLP-Week-34-J

 

Melinda:

Like mom, I was not inspired by this prompt either. This week just happens to be My Princess’ 5th birthday! I used scrapbook paper for the background and the “5.” I bought some new drawing pencils the other day, so I wanted to sketch her face. I didn’t spend a lot of time on it because I wanted it to be a rough, cartoonish girl. Ninja Boy saw it and told me it looked like My Princess, so I felt like it was an acceptable drawing.
DLP-Week-34-M

Documented Life Project- Week 33

The art challenge for week 33 for the Documented Life Project was to use your “under paper” in a creative way. Under paper refers to the paper you have under your art projects that get the extra paint, spills, splatters, brush, brayer and stamp cleaning, etc.

Jan:
For my background I took a paper that I had used for rolling off the extra paint from my brayer and texture tools when gelli printing. Using black and white pens I filled the page with practice doodles and sayings related to creativity.DLP-Week-33-J

 

Melinda:

I used some gelli printing papers that I used up leftover stencil paint on for my page. I cut out the book, chair, and lamp from the paper. I used scrapbook paper and cut outs from magazines for the rest. The girl happened to be holding Uno cards in her hand that I cut out and made her hold the book instead.

DLP-Week-33-M