... Fox.
Busy day at work today (ahem) There were no kids at school today, so our department spent the day doing some admin and when it was done I killed time by turning the tinfoil from my lunch into a fox...
You will need;
Some Tinfoil and an imagination!
Friday, 8 February 2013
Wednesday, 30 January 2013
If You Go Down to the Woods Today....
.... Look Out for a Crafty Creatives Craft Tea Time Creation!
So having sat and looked at the beautiful goodies in box again and again, I remembered my box picture frame, which I've been wondering what to do with for a while now. I love all the beads in the box, but I wanted to try and do something a little less obvious than simply make some jewellery from them, and then inspiration struck- I'd make something for my box frame!!
The standard insert to the frame happened to be trees anyway, and after a discussion my boyfriend he thought it would be more interesting to leave the size and details on the background- the idea being people would think it was empty and then on closer inspection discover the contents.
From CC Box 7 I used;
Flower Soft
The felting kit
A mushroom bead
A fox bead
An owl cut from the fabric
Some of the buttons
A birch heart
I also used the wire holding the foxes together to make the flowers.
So having sat and looked at the beautiful goodies in box again and again, I remembered my box picture frame, which I've been wondering what to do with for a while now. I love all the beads in the box, but I wanted to try and do something a little less obvious than simply make some jewellery from them, and then inspiration struck- I'd make something for my box frame!!
The standard insert to the frame happened to be trees anyway, and after a discussion my boyfriend he thought it would be more interesting to leave the size and details on the background- the idea being people would think it was empty and then on closer inspection discover the contents.
From CC Box 7 I used;
Flower Soft
The felting kit
A mushroom bead
A fox bead
An owl cut from the fabric
Some of the buttons
A birch heart
I also used the wire holding the foxes together to make the flowers.
| I | |||||||
| I added some of the flower soft to the tree pictures on the insert to give an autumn feel to the picture. |
| Finally I added some of the buttons and a heart to the outside using a strong glue. |
And there you have it, CC box 7 in a box (frame)!
Labels:
autumn,
box frame,
crafty creatives,
felting,
flower soft,
fox,
mushroom,
woodland
As Light as.....
It's my Grandma's birthday on Feb 6th so I thought I would make her a card using something from my crafty creative box.
I'm not sure where I got the idea to turn one of the leaf skeletons into a peacock ut that's what I decided to do and here's how it went...
You will need;
A blank card
acrylic paints
leaf skeleton
tissue paper
paint brushes
glue
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| First draw around the leaf skeleton onto your blank card. |
![]() | |||||
| Then using your main choice of colour fill in the outline. Before the paint dries completly place the leaf skeleton on the paint. | |||||
![]() |
| Decorate the leaf skeleton- I trace a few of the lines and added some "eyes". I also painted on two legs. |
Tuesday, 22 January 2013
Postman Pat, Postman Pat and his....
...Crafty Creative Box!!
So, this is a little late really as I got my Crafty Creatives Box 7 last week BUT hey it's been snowing (that just seems like the excuse for everything at the moment so it could wash!)
Anyway, the Crafty Creatives box 7, arrived last week and is pretty special I have to say. With a woodland theme, the first thing I laid my eyes on was the gorgeous art card by Lucy Farfort (/www.lucyshappyplace.com/default) Featuring a family of foxes in the autumn weather and I LOVE foxes :)
Also packed into the box were;
2 little fox beads
toadstool beads
leaf hearts
flower soft and glue (never heard of this but am looking forward to giving it a go)
leaf skeletons
an owl charm
some leaf pendants
Owl fabric
a pine cone
some birch hearts
and a felting kit
Not only amazing contents but amazing value I'm sure you'll agree.
The boxes are from Crafty Creatives
(craftycreatives.com)
Subscription is £10 + 2.95p&p and is well worth every penny, not only the excitment of getting some crafty goods every month, but the not knowing what you get and getting to try some crafty goodies I'd never considered or tried before plus the fun lasts all month iwth the logging and tweeting of what people have been doing in their craft-tea-times,
So, this is a little late really as I got my Crafty Creatives Box 7 last week BUT hey it's been snowing (that just seems like the excuse for everything at the moment so it could wash!)
Anyway, the Crafty Creatives box 7, arrived last week and is pretty special I have to say. With a woodland theme, the first thing I laid my eyes on was the gorgeous art card by Lucy Farfort (/www.lucyshappyplace.com/default) Featuring a family of foxes in the autumn weather and I LOVE foxes :)
Also packed into the box were;
2 little fox beads
toadstool beads
leaf hearts
flower soft and glue (never heard of this but am looking forward to giving it a go)
leaf skeletons
an owl charm
some leaf pendants
Owl fabric
a pine cone
some birch hearts
and a felting kit
Not only amazing contents but amazing value I'm sure you'll agree.
The boxes are from Crafty Creatives
(craftycreatives.com)
Subscription is £10 + 2.95p&p and is well worth every penny, not only the excitment of getting some crafty goods every month, but the not knowing what you get and getting to try some crafty goodies I'd never considered or tried before plus the fun lasts all month iwth the logging and tweeting of what people have been doing in their craft-tea-times,
LET'S PUT THE KETTLE ON
Wednesday, 9 January 2013
Do Robots Dream....
.... of Electric Sheep (with electric wool for knitting patterns)?
Here's a little knitting pattern for a robot I drew up a few weeks ago.
If you would like an electronic version of this pattern please e-mail greatandsewn@hotmail.co.uk and I can send you a bigger version.
Here's a little knitting pattern for a robot I drew up a few weeks ago.
If you would like an electronic version of this pattern please e-mail greatandsewn@hotmail.co.uk and I can send you a bigger version.
"I'm the Gin in.....
.... the Gin Soaked Boy."
Neil Hannon, The Divine Comedy, 1999.
This has to be one of my favourite "makes", Gin Liqueur. It's so simple and so delicious.
I first had some of this at my friend's house one afternoon after lunch, when I asked her where she got it from I was amazed when she said she'd made it! I quickly got the instructions and the next day went into production. I'm pleased to say it worked really well and I have since given mini bottles of this as Christmas presents, I have only heard good things from the recipients.
Materials Needed;
Gin or white rum (I have been told vodka isn't a good spirit for this but I have used both of these and they work fine.)
Fruit- it's better if the fruit has a stronger flavour.
Sugar
2 glass bottles
Knife
Sieve
Small glass bottle - if you want to decant into smaller bottles as gifts, otherwise you can our it back into the original bottle.
In these pictures I was making mango, mango & apple and blueberry. But I have also made strawberry & raspberry (using frozen fruit) and orange & ginger (using powdered ginger!) which have both been delicious. The steps are the same, just substitute the fruit.
Here's what to do...
| 1. Cut up the fruit in to small pieces- they need to go into the bottle and come out easily. |
| 2. Put fruit into the bottle until it almost a third full (in all
honesty I think I didn't use enough in the picture shown, but in other
batches I used more) 3. Add about 1-2inches of sugar. |
| 4. Pour spirit into the bottle until it is full, leave about 3cm at the top of the bottle. 5. Give the mixture a good shake. |
| This is a bottle of strawberry & raspberry I had brewing at the time. |
And there you have liqueur, it's lovely after a meal sipped from a shot or sherry glass.
If You Go Down to the Woods Today....
...Beware of the Scary Bear Cushion.
A while ago I said I would have a go at making a Radiohead Scary Bear cushion and then the sieve-brain I am I totally forgot about it. I was reminded over Christmas and here are the results.
Materials Needed;
White material
Various round objects- I found a saucepan lid and a tutterware container were the perfect sizes.
Black and white cotton
Toy Stuffing
Scissors
A pencil
A Sewing Machine
I found that the circle for the eyes was also the right size for the ears.
Once the ouline was drawn, I then added an extra 2.5cm circle around the outside for the seam.
*Remember to cut out pieces for the back of the cushion too- for the head and both ears the same size (including seams allowance) as the outlined pieces.
I then set my sewing machine to a full stitch and set about sewing over the penciled outline.
For the ears I only completed about 3/4 of the circle.

When the entire face was complete I turned it over
and threaded all the loose ends through to the side
with the pencil on, leaving a neat sewn outline without pencil marks on the right side.
With the right sides facing I then tacked the ears to the piece with the sewn face making sure to include a small dart to allow for the curve when sewing together and some stuffing.
Then sew all three sections- ears, sewn face and plain material -together, leaving a small gap on the side somewhere.
Turn Scary Bear right side out and stuff with polyester toy stuffing and hand sew the hole closed.
A while ago I said I would have a go at making a Radiohead Scary Bear cushion and then the sieve-brain I am I totally forgot about it. I was reminded over Christmas and here are the results.
Materials Needed;
White material
Various round objects- I found a saucepan lid and a tutterware container were the perfect sizes.
Black and white cotton
Toy Stuffing
Scissors
A pencil
A Sewing Machine
This is a real Scary Bear...
And this is how I made my Scary Bear...
Using the various round things from the kitchen I drew an outline of Scary Bear's face plus two ears in pencil on the white material.
I found that the circle for the eyes was also the right size for the ears.
Once the ouline was drawn, I then added an extra 2.5cm circle around the outside for the seam.
*Remember to cut out pieces for the back of the cushion too- for the head and both ears the same size (including seams allowance) as the outlined pieces.
I then set my sewing machine to a full stitch and set about sewing over the penciled outline.
For the ears I only completed about 3/4 of the circle.

When the entire face was complete I turned it over
and threaded all the loose ends through to the side
with the pencil on, leaving a neat sewn outline without pencil marks on the right side.
With the right sides facing I then tacked the ears to the piece with the sewn face making sure to include a small dart to allow for the curve when sewing together and some stuffing.
Then sew all three sections- ears, sewn face and plain material -together, leaving a small gap on the side somewhere.
Turn Scary Bear right side out and stuff with polyester toy stuffing and hand sew the hole closed.
And there you have a Scary Bear cushion :)
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