Thursday, August 30, 2012

Thank you, Mrs. Mary Jane!

I have been sorely neeeding to lose weight.  The more I sit around crafting, the "wider my horizons expand."  And I am not talking about the field of crafts, if you know what I mean.  My doctor told me I had better lose close to 50 pounds.  I have just not been motivated.

My sister started  this 90 Day Challenge weight loss program.  I began to notice how much she had lost and she talked me into trying it. Honestly, I tried it just to shut her up.  :)  But, wow, two days on it and I was sleeping better, thus feeling better.  

I went to the doctor 3 weeks ago today (8/16).  I weighed too much when the nurse made me get on those hateful scales.. Let's leave it at that. I started this program on the following Monday (8/20).  I went to the doctor, just to weigh on the same scales, on Thursday (8/23). I had lost 4 pounds!!!!!   This morning I dropped by just to weigh again (today is Thursday) and I lost 3 more pounds!  7 pounds in 14 days....only 11 days on the program.  So....I am excited.

I decided to sell the product.  I am loving it!  It has been fun to share the product and encourage others to join me in getting healthier. A friend of mine who begged to get on the product after she borrowed some and used it for a couple of days, is having a Shake Tasting Party tonight and inviting her friends. (By the way, my friend also decided to sell it).  She had so many people wanting to come, that she had to ask her Mother in law to host it because she has a lot of room.

So, I thought I would do something for a thank you to her MIL.  I saw this pretty little pot and decided to put some herbs in it so she could have an herb garden. I thought it turned out kind of cute!  I used cinnamon sticks for plant markers.

Ask me about my product!  You have nothing to lose............or do you?  It's for weight loss, control, energy, muscle toning, etc.  Two shakes a day. I know folks who have been able to stop taking Metformin and blood pressure meds after they were on it a few weeks.  Under doctor's approval!  Love to share more with you but right now I just want to show you the herb garden.  And remind you that you need to enter the contest to win a Michael's gift card and/or a Starbucks gift card.  Contest ends soon!  Stove Eyes Craft and Caption Contest


Rosemary, Oregano, Basil, Thyme
no parsley or sage. :(

Enter those contests!

Monday, August 27, 2012

Stove Eyes or, The Eyes Have It

Yesterday, instead of a nice hamburger and french fries lunch, we had a kitchen fire.  I burned up my stove and a few other small things. But, the house is still standing, other than burned wiring causing me to have miles of extension cords to plug in my router and modem, and some nasty blisters on my hand, all is well. Or will be when the wiring is fixed and I can cook again, and when I get a new stove. 

Anyway, I noticed how interesting the display now looks on my stove. What used to look like this:

Now looks like this:
Creepy, funny. Kind of shines a new light on the meaning of "stove eyes".
 
One of my Round Robin Art Journal friends suggested I use that in one of the journals.  That made me think what fun it would be to get your take on these cute little "stove eyes".



So, there will be a 2 category contest!

First category will be the Funniest Caption.  Post a comment below with your caption.  One rule: you MUST begin your comment with "CAPTION" in all caps.  Last day for entries is Thursday at noon. My top 3 favorites will be posted on my Facebook page on Friday and everyone can vote for their favorite from the top 3 through Sunday at midnight. The winner will be announced on Monday and will receive a $10 Starbucks card.
 
First category will be the Best Craft Idea.  Post a comment below with your suggestions for a craft using this picture (scrapbook, journal, greeting card, decoration, party supplies, the only limit is your imagination).  One rule: you MUST begin your comment with "CRAFT IDEA" in all caps.  Last day for entries is Thursday at noon. My top 3 favorites will be posted on my Facebook page on Friday and everyone can vote for their favorite from the top 3 through Sunday at midnight. The winner will be announced on Monday and will receive a $10 Starbucks card.

So, put your thinking caps on!  You have until noon Thursday to post your comment (contest entry) at the bottom of this post!!! You can enter as many times as you wish, just make each suggestion as a separate comment.  Be sure your email address is included or linked. 

There is going to be a latte crafting going on!  :)






Friday, August 24, 2012

Don't you love the $1 bins just inside Target?

Oh, I do!  On many trips to Target, that is as far as I go!  I love those bins.  It's a crafter's treasure chest!  Read on and find out what you can make from the dollar bin.

As I am having a lull on the Round Robin art journal project (not sure how I got ahead!), I have been trying to make some journals for a craft show fundraising project our home school co-op will be participating in later this year. 

I am not a journaler, particularly an art journaler, except for the Round Robin project, but I like to make them for gifts, especially for ladies and teen girls.  I remember as a pre-teen and teenager I kept a diary; I saved pictures from magazines and I doodled.  The "diaries" are different now. They were tiny little things with a lock, which was half the fascination with keeping a diary....the fact that you had something so secret you had to LOCK it!

My mother is a journaler. She writes down everything. She writes in books she has read, in magazines. We have a monthly family dinner and she writes down who was there and things that were said and done.  As I get older, I am beginning to wonder is she doing that as a memento or as a memory booster?  I am getting to the point I can't remember from month to the next who hosted the dinner! 

My rubber stamping mentor (Shawn) showed me a little notebook she got at a craft swap and one she made at a craft camp.  Since I was holding Teacher Planning Day Craft Camps I needed all the ideas I could gather and I knew my little craft camp girls would love these!  So, here are pictures of some.  The two small ones are samples that Shawn gave me.  

Made from a plain little notebook that was 2 for a $1 in Target's bargain shelves, these little journals are so cute.  You can use any embellishment to suit your need.  I am going to make some Red Hat journals and some Visalus Promoter journals (for my fellow promoters to keep up with their customers and parties, shopping lists, etc) and Visalus Challenge journals (for my fellow 90 Day Challengers to keep shopping lists, recipes, weight and stats updates).  See how small they are? Fit nicely into your purse, with your phone.


Now, this one I really love, too.  It is great for any notes and little sketches, address book, personal bookkeeping.  This is made from a miniature composition book. I always loved when school shopping started because I loved getting those black and white composition books. Still love them!

The little tiny composition books can be bought at Target or any dollar store, in some places they are 3 for a dollar, some places you can get lucky and get 5 for a dollar. (please forgive my blurry pictures...I have gremlins in my camera today. Probably the humidity)


And finally, the most popular.  These are the regular size composition books. I just decorate them to fit the personality or need of the journaler. These are very popular gift items.  
This is just a composition book covered with coordinating fabrics and decorated with scrapbook paper, ribbon, lace, and anything else you want to use. Your name goes on the pink ribbon across the bottom of the cover.
You can't see the black tab across the bottom on the right because it has the name of the person who is receiving this book (and she doesn't know it yet). 
A page to put your favorite photo(s) and a little intro about yourself.
Many of the pages are decorated with some sort of stamped image. Not all of the pages, though, so you have room for your own sketches and drawings!


"What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the Master calls a butterfly"


Want me to make one for you, or your favorite journaler?  Or visit Target's bargain bins and find things you can take home and recycle and make your own!

Thank you, Shawn, for turning me onto Target's bargain bins!

Happy Friday everyone!

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Bell Bottom Blues

I never get rid of old jeans, no matter how worn or stained they are. There are so many things you can do with them.

When my son was small (was that just yesterday?) his room theme was "farm".  I bought red and white check tablecoths and used them for bedspreads on his twin beds, used denim for the curtains and bandanas for the tie backs. Hung the curtains with clothespins. So cute!  I took old jeans and made a bag to hang on his headboard to hold favorite books, remote control, pencils and crayons, and Game Boy. I attached an old suspender of his dad's to it and that is what straps the bag to the headboard (or chair). It was really cute. And actually, he is still using it. I took a pair of jeans and made a shoe holder by just putting a seam across each leg at 4 levels and cut slits above the seam, just high enough that a shoe could be slipped into the opening.  It was very cute.  My husband said I should have trademarked it!  LOL He has such faith in me. 


Anyway, I have this plastic tub full of jeans and was looking for ideas for using them to make a quilt and dust ruffle (hate to use that term for a boy's room) and I came across a lot of cute ideas for jean uses.  Thought I would share them with you.

Reuse Recycle Repurpose Denim has some great ideas. I especially love the denim pots that come from My Recycled Bags.
Rennie Hunt Henry has a Pinterest page of all things denim, with so many cool ideas!  You need to check it out.  I could wander around it all day.

Here is something like what I am planning, but I want to incorporate his favorite old t-shirts into it as well. (The t-shirts could make up the "dust ruffle" maybe???)  This is from Haute Nature .  I would like to use the pockets on pillows. 
Please share any denim quilting ideas you might have, or other ideas to recycle old jeans!  I welcome suggestions and shares!!!!

Sitting here, wondering what my old friend and roommate did with the most awesome pair of jeans I have ever seen. A friend of hers embroidered the legs (back in the 70s) and I always wanted those jeans, but was never small enough to fit into them!  Wonder what she did with them. They would make a beautiful recycling project....or exhibit in a museum!

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Wrap it up!

Don't you love giving gifts? You make someone smile and that makes you smile.  But do you sometimes give a gift that you just don't really feel is worthy of the giftee (recipient) or the occasion? Maybe you really wanted to give something a little nicer or more expensive, but you just couldn't. Dress it up!

I have a friend and former co-worker who always came to work looking like she just stepped out of the pages of a fashion magazine.  Perfectly groomed and impeccably dressed.  One day we were talking and I remarked about what a fashionista she was.  She laughed and said she bought every single piece of clothing she had at a discount clothing chain.  I was shocked!  I was certain she was buying her clothes at an expensive boutique or high-end clothing chain.  She just took inexpensive clothes and dressed them up so beautifully, that she looked like a million dollars. Gifts are the same way.

If you are taking dollar store coloring books and a box of crayons to a child who is sick or incapacitated, put them in a pretty bag with colorful tissue paper and a huge ribbon and that child's eyes will light up brightly!  Sometimes it is the package that really matters, not the gift!  

Imagine this--you are feeling down. You lost your job and you have been to one interview after another. Bills are piling up, you have a headache, and you just want to go to bed and stay there.  A friend comes over and says, let me make you some tea to go with some fresh cookies she brought you.  She brings your tea in a mug you got as a promotional item at a grand opening somewhere with the business logo on it. You give a weak half-smile as you say "thank you" and you hold the tea and sip it and nibble on the cookie absentmindedly but you are sitting there thinking about all the things you are stressing over. Do you feel better?  Not really. 

Now, imagine that scene this way--you are still at home wallowing in your pity party.  Your friend comes over and offers to make that tea. to go with her cookies.  When she comes back in the room, she is carrying your silver tray that you forgot you had. On that tray is the one un-stained cloth from the very back of your kitchen linen drawer and your fine china, including your grandmother's tea pot. Even though she couldn't find your linen napkins (because even you don't know where you put them), the paper napkins are fine.  You look up and have a genuine smile as you admire the lovely vignette she has created. You actually stop and think about how pretty it is, how thoughtful she was to go to the trouble to make something look nice for you.  As you munch, instead of nibble, on that cookie and you drink instead of sip your tea, you talk to her about how pretty the china is and about how your grandmother loved that teapot. Then you start to remember things about your grandmother and.....for a little while, you have some great girl talk and forget all about your troubles. 

So, that is just an example of how dressing something simple up can make that something more special.  And doing it with gift wrapping doesn't have to be expensive!  You can buy a package of plain gift bags at a dollar store for less than $5, for several bags (plain white bags or colored bags).  Take those bags and be creative. Use it like a scrapbook, make a collage on it, applique it, use it for a canvas and draw on it.  Imagination, people!!!!!  Stuff it with newspaper.  If it's a wedding gift (a shower gift of wooden spoons or some small something you feel isn't much of a gift), stuff the bag with the engagement and wedding section of the newspaper.  If the giftee is a sports fan, stuff it with the sports section.  For a cook, use pages from an old recipe book or a food magazine. Use pages from one of those magazines you have stacked under the coffee table! Put a pretty bow on it...doesn't have to be a conventional bow or ribbon.  Shred the newspaper or magazine pages to make ribbon. For a kitchen gift, tie one of those copper scrubbers onto the bag handle with a ribbon and make it look like a bow or flower.  If you are buying for a seamstress, use an old measuring tape for ribbon.  Use your imagination!

And don't forget the card!  Take a simple card and make it special. A recipe card, a business card, tiny calendar, old fishing license, anything can be dressed up or altered to fit the occasion.  Details make the difference.

Here is an example of how a bag that costs less about a dollar can be dressed up for someone who is a musician.  I was fortunate to learn how to make these at craft camp sponsored by Shawn Gordon and her Stampin' Up team several years ago. One of my favorite projects!
I splattered ink randomly (which is really hard for someone who is OCD, let me just tell you), then added a cellophane bag to hold a matching card.
Two colors of card stock, to match the ink, were cut slightly wider than the cellophane bag. The bag adheres to the back of the card stock.  The card stock is attached to the bag with brads.



The card is made of card stock in glossy white and two shades of blue.  A gold card stock is also used and a little mulberry paper added just as a little embellishment.  




The music themed rubber stamp set (Stampin' Up) is watermarked on the card. The "Just a note" is stamped in blue, as are the instruments on the inside of the card and the heading on the strip on the bag.














The inside is without words, so I can write a note about how proud I am of her!

I had the ink and the paper on hand. You could use any kind of paper.  If you don't have rubber stamps, cut and paste from magazines or the internet. If you are an artist, draw the pictures. Sharpies, crayons, and colored pencils work fine on cards! A feather, lace, an old guitar pick, anything would have worked in place of the mulberry paper.  
















Here is another example. This bag was one I got a gift in. I couldn't throw it away.  It was plain, had a red bow on it and some beige tissue paper in it.  I re-vamped it to use for a gift for my son. A hole-puncher, some wired ribbon (that was off a Christmas gift I received), and one stamp set were all it took to retool this plain little brown bag!

I stamped the animals onto brown and tan card stock with black ink.  I cut them out and put dimensionals on the back.  I stamped the trees and the pinebough directly onto the bag with green ink.   Placed the animals on the bag in front of the trees and voila!  I punched holes around the top of the bag and ran the ribbon through it. (looks like I need to straighten that bow out, there, doesn't it)  It made a really cute, "manly" bag.

Use your imagination!  Dress up something small and make it be the one they want to open first!!!!

Have fun!

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Hello Kitty, Happy Birthday Kylie

I love kids' birthday parties!  I love planning them, I love going to them.  First birthdays are the best. My great-niece celebrated her first birthday this past weekend and it was a family and friend affair.  She was so cute, not really understanding what was going on except that she was getting lots of attention, and all the things she normally would be in trouble for doing.....was fine to do that day!

Kylie's birthday theme was Hello Kitty. And it was Hello Kitty from invitations to "birthday suit".  Aunt Chee Chee (me)  got to make the goody bags, with the help of her sweet, crafty son.  I think they turned out pretty good.  What do you think?

I took the invitation (from Walmart) and made cut-outs, to match it, from scrapbook paper.  My son made the white balloon with the polka dots on it because we didn't have any white scrapbook paper.  He loves making goody bags, too! (Wonder where that gene came from?)  I added a ribbon bow and shredded black cardstock to make the whiskers.  

It was a day of firsts!  First birthday, my niece's first attempt at making fondant and a theme cake. I think she did a wonderful job! What do you think? (the heat at the park was beginning to soften the fondant when these pictures were taken)


The cake and cupcakes were so cute and very delicious. The bottom and top layers were round yellow cake and the middle layer was square chocolate.  Under the fondant was cream cheese icing.  (We all had to drink an extra Vi shake to make up for that delicious cake!!!!)

Some more shots from the party:


Hello Kitty everywhere!





 


The birthday girl and her great-grandmother (my beautiful mom).  You can see where Kylie gets her beauty genes!

Visit my Party Supplies page to see more goody bags. Bookmark it.....I will be adding to it!

Thanks for stopping by.




Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Party like a Red hat Lady

Red Hats are great themes for party favors!







The little purple "tote" was for a Red Hat Valentine luncheon. The ladies loved them!  The tote was made from purple cardstock which I decorated with a Stampin' Up stamping wheel that had several hats on it.  I just ran the wheel down one side of the box (on front and back).  I used red grosgrain ribbon for the handles, and red cardstock for the band around the top, finished off with black brads.  The little Happy Valentine's Day tag stamp was used on black card stock and heat embossed with silver embossing powder.   Filled with purple tissue paper, purple kisses, and peppermint chews, it was a real hit with the ladies. 

This little box was originally made by my Stampin' mentor, Shawn Southerland Gordon (who is credited by me and blamed by my husband for my rubber stamping addiction).  I made some for the Red Hat ladies out of the little boxes you can buy in a pack in the wedding supplies section of Walmart and most dollar stores. Quite often, you can find a pack of many boxes, envelopes, a variety of containers, for next to nothing.  I (from Shawn's example) cut squares of red, black and glossy white cardstock.  You may not be able to tell from this picture, but all of the black outline is heat embossed with glittery black embossing powder and the lips are filled in with red glitter.  The one I did for the Red Hat ladies has purple and red ribbon instead of the gingham ones in this picture.  And I cut up a purple boa and a red boa and put small pieces of each in the box as a filler, before putting candy in it.
This little mug is perfect for slipping a small Reese's Cup (the little ones that are wrapped, not the tiny unwrapped ones) inside.  This is just cardstock that has been run through a crimper and wrapped around the candy. It was so cute sitting next to their plates.  (Note---missing Reese's Cup. My addictions do not end with rubber stamping....)
Sour cream packets are great little place holders and party favors.  So easy to make and adapt to any occasion or event.  I love doing these in transparencies and vellum and puting colorful candies inside. Skittles, M&M's, Sixlets, Reese's Pieces.....ET would love them!  Just cardstock and a ribbon and candy inside!
One of my favorites!  So simple, but so cute!  Just a plain little cellophane bag. self-sealing.  I had loaned my stamp set out, so I rolled the Hat Stamping Wheel onto a piece of paper, and used the piece of paper to trace the decorations onto the bags with super-thin Sharpie.  Then, used a wider-tip Sharpie to color it in.  Purple and silver Kisses filled it up and each lady had one sitting by her plate.  They all wanted to know where I bought them!  "Why, at Monkey 'n Scooter's, of course!"

Will share some more party favors and goodie bags later.  Today, I have got to get to work on some Hello Kitty goodie bags for my cute little great-niece's party this weekend. 

Happy First Birthday, Kylie Ray S.!




Kylie and her cousin, Mack (my son), in Miami this summer.

Friday, August 10, 2012

Salute the Troops - Operation Write Home

OPERATION WRITE HOME is a really special website (and organization),  It is like a homemade Hallmark shop for deployed troops.  This group encourages crafters to make cards, ship them to OWH, who organizes and packs and ships them to deployed troops.  These cards are given out to the troops for them to send back home...since they aren't usually in a position to run down to the Hallmark store and pick up a birthday card for the kids, an anniversary card for the spouse, a Mother's Day card for Mom. It is the coolest idea I have seen in a long time.  And it has been very successful. 

I encourage you to go to the website. Take some time and click on each page, read it thoroughly so you understand the rules and purposes.  They have weekly challenges to encourage crafters to make a stack of cards (or boxes of cards) and send them in.  This is a project not for the kids.  There is another project for the kids.  These cards need to be top-notch, well crafted cards that won't need to be doctored, altered, or touched up when they get to the shipper, because they have thousands of cards to go through.

There is another project for those who don't think they are up to the challenge of making the greeting cards, and for the kids.  This project is called the AnyHero mail project.  Read about it on the website.  There are coloring pages provided, for the younger set, that can be downloaded, printed and decorated by the children. (NO GLITTER)  Older kids, who might want to make their own cards, can make cards for the troops (not for the troops to send back home).  Keep in mind, though, there are guidelines, which involve safety issues for the troops, which must be followed.

Our homeschool co-op did the AnyHero mail project last year.  It was a lot of fun.  If your family would like to participate with other families, we could  make a challenge out of it.  See which family (or child) can make the most AnyHero letters or cards. 

If any of you crafters are up to the challenge of card-making, I invite you to join me this week in making kids' cards for the troops---cards the soldiers can send back home to their children for birthdays, missing you, congrats on job well done, or even blank inside. 

If you will notice on the website, there are specific requirements for packaging for shipping to the shippers, to save time when they are sorting and re-packing thousands of cards. So, please keep those in mind, if you want to participate.

So....who is up for the challenge?  Who wants to commit to make at least 5 cards for kids, provide the envelopes and get them to me.  If you will make the cards and send them to me, I will stamp the back of them and pack them for the shippers!  And as the website says, the very best fillers, when packing the cards for shipping.....AnyHero mail. So, encourage the kiddies to make our fillers for us!

Who's in?

Thursday, August 9, 2012

The Red Hats are coming, the Red Hats are coming!

My mother and sister-in law are Red Hat ladies.  And, technically, my sister and I are members of their little circle, but we seldom get to go.  The times that I have been, I thoroughly enjoyed it. Those ladies have so much fun and eat really well, too!  I love seeing all the deep purples and bright reds, the pretty hats, the wild and crazy hats, the boas and bags. The ladies love to get new things---anything bearing purple and red hats.  The ladies in this circle love to give each other little gifts...all the time.  So, when Stampin' Up came out with Red Hat stamps, I had to have a set.  I have made sets of notecards and greeting cards for my mother and sister-in-law, as well as sets for them to give to their Secret Pals.  The stamp set has helped me make the cutest table decorations, and party favors, which these party-animal ladies love to have at each and every gathering!

The stationary was fun to make and brought smiles to many faces, but what I really enjoyed was making Red Hat cigar box purses.  I started making these long before the stamp sets came out, so I had to draw the hats (and I am NOT an artist, by any means) that I decoupaged onto the purses.  My mother LOVED the purses and was so excited to take hers to the meeting because she knew it was one of a kind, and no one else would have one.  

Designing the purses was a lot of fun.  Sometimes less is better, but not in the case of Red Hat accessories. For every red bead, it is good to add two purple sequins!  This is one of those projects that easily snowballs....and the Red Hat ladies love an avalanche! I started out just transforming a cigar box into a purse and decorating it, and ended up not only elaborately decorating the inside, but added a pill/lipstick case, a beaded pen, and a compact.  I sold several of them at Mule Day and some more at an antique store in Bainbridge during the holidays and donated a couple for raffles at school carnivals and one for a church bazaar.

I don't know if Stampin' Up still sells the Red Hat stamp sets and rollers, but one of my favorite Stampin' Up demonstrators could tell you. If you are looking for that or any other craft supplies, contact Terri Christiano.



 
            

Aren't they adorable?  I have got to get some more made before Christmas!

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Things I love about Fall.

I love Fall. It is my favorite time of year. I love the way the sun shines, different from the way it shines in the other seasons. I love driving to work, on the same path, every day and noticing how much the leaves change each day.  I love the smell of Fall....the leaves and the fresh, cool, air and the dishes that are made especially in the fall, the candle and potpourri scents the stores use in the fall. I love going to the North Georgia mountains and enjoying the fall festivals with all the fresh apples and other yummy things. And, I love Football season.  I love college football--love going to the games, watching them on TV, guessing early in the season who will have a good season (and often being wrong by October). I especially love AUBURN.  My household is typical of the South. We are a house divided.  My husband and all of his family are avid (rabid) Georgia fans. I, on the other hand, love Auburn.  I had a short stint at Auburn, decided to come home and get married, but my heart remains at Auburn.  I loved the city and the school.  Still do.  Well, my daughter decided to become an Alabama fan (almost heading to Tuscaloosa for college, but changed her mind at the last minute....thank goodness). And, my son has been corrupted by wayward cousins and has decided he is a Gator fan. So, our house is like a zoo: dawgs and elephants and tigers, oh my. And gators, which I try to forget. LOL  

While watching football, sometimes I like to work on craft projects. You can work on a project with paint or glue before the game and half-time comes just as the paint or glue is drying and time for the next layer or step on that project. Isn't it great the way that works?  I bet whomever developed televised football was a crafter and planned it to work out like that!

Anyway, football season also provides great opportunities for craft projects.  

I have been making cigar box purses (you have already seen the little girls' cheerleader purses)for several years and some of my most popular purses have been college-themed purses. They have been sold in stores in Greenville, SC, Tallahassee, FL, and Bainbridge, GA.  I love designing and making them. I love when someone buys one and then their friends call wanting similar ones. I really like when a customer has their own design in mind. Sometimes that can really challenge me, but so far, I have been up for each challenge. 

I am posting the ones most popular in this area.  Hopefully, I will get the others posted today or tomorrow.  Just remember, these have already been sold, and are examples of designs I have made.  Each order is custom made, and can take 2 to 3 weeks to make. So, if you have an idea, or want something similar to what you see here, please let me know.

See my FSU and UGA purses here. 
See my non-FSU or UGA purses here.



Round Robin Art Journal Adventure


A friend in city nearby asked who of her friends would be interested in trying a new craft project. Several of us jumped on board for any crafting adventure! She suggested we each make an art journal, limited only by our own imaginations. They could be purchased, built, altered books, whatever our little hearts desired. They could be themed or not. They could be mini-books or they could be large books. The only stipulations were: it had to have "between friends" on the outside, it had to have a sign-in page, and it had to have room for 9 guest artists to each do a two-page spread.