First, I finished up a couple Christmas presents...
For Madyson (14 yrs old), I bought a little wooden drawer thingy at Michael's. Her room is painted hot pink and neon green, so those are the colors I painted it. Around the polka dots and on the neon green knobs, I painted on some glow-in-the-dark paint. :)
(oh, and sorry about the color variation in the pictures, I used two different settings on my camera when taking these. but the true colors are the bottom picture with the flash.)
For Jake, a very adventurous kid who loves playing with Lego's and creating his own little worlds, I bought a wooden castle thing from Michael's and painted it. I love the treasure chest and the skeleton bones on the back. :)
gold dubloons! |
I also made a T-shirt for Jake. My friend Cathy and I tried this technique last summer on a few black t shirts and tank tops.
Here is a quickie tutorial for you:
Materials:
T-Shirt (dark colored)
Bleach-water (you can dilute it however you like, the best solution I've found is about 70% bleach 30% water. This time, however, I used a much more diluted mixture that wasn't nearly as potent.)
duct tape
spray bottle
cardboard
A WELL-VENTILATED AREA
Start with a dark-colored shirt, preferably black or navy blue.
I bought this navy blue shirt from Target.
Tape off whatever design you like on the front and/or back with duct tape.
After taping it off, you will want to tape something like cardboard to the hanger the shirt is on so the bleach won't seep through to the other side.
Spray your t-shirt (in a well-ventilated area!) with the bleach-water, and see the colors change right before your eyes!
(using some pics from last summer, since I forgot to take a few this time!)
Cathy spraying her tank top. |
after being sprayed. you can see the result of my t-shirt after the duct tape was removed! |
went from navy blue to gray! |
Shane's mom has also been making Christmas ornaments, and of course I had to help glitterize them! ;)
sparklyyyyy. |
Take cotton string (looks similar to hemp) and cover it in either Elmer's Glue, Mod Podge, or starch. This one, I believe, was done with Elmer's. Wrap the string repetitively around the balloon,to your liking. tuck the end of your string into the top at a secure enough spot and let it dry.
When it is finished drying, pop the balloon, and take care of any leftover glue that may have stuck onto the string.
Once it looks clean, use spray adhesive (or mod podge could work too) and cover the string in it.
Then, glitter it up!! Let it hang to dry overnight.
Enjoy, and have a Merry Christmas, crafters!!
<3 Meagan.
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