Showing posts with label felt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label felt. Show all posts

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Halloween Bat Wreath

Okay, so I use to be completely against wreaths. All I knew of them were the ones with big fake flowers or jingle bells or something that just did not mesh with my style. However, I have been finding tons of tutorials for wreaths that I actually like! Most are yarn-wrapped and have a few embellishments. I like things that are simple and cute, so these have been right up my alley. I was inspired by one in particular that I found and made my own, changing it up a bit.


And here is how you can do it!

Supplies
1. Foam tube from the plumbing department of a hardware store (it comes in five-foot segments or something like that).
2. Duct tape.
3. Scissors.
4. Yarn in two colors, one skein each.
5. Glue gun.
6. Stiffened black felt.
7. Light-colored chalk.
8. One sheet of paper.
9. Wreath hook.

Step One
You are going to use the foam tube and duct tape to make the wreath. It is SO much cheaper than buying a premade foam wreath! Of course, if you want to use a premade one, go ahead. It will make your life easier. Trust me.

Play around with the foam tube until you find a length that will work to make a good-sized wreath for you. I didn't measure mine (sorry), but different people like them to be different sizes. Just know that this won't work for one too small.

Cut it the length you decided on and duct tape the ends together.


Next, thank me for doing this before you so I can tell you the issues I had and how I figured to best deal with them.

My circle was not so... circular. There were two very noticeable kinks. I put some duct tape around them and it stiffened them up so they didn't kink anymore. Problem solved.

I left my wreath alone for about an hour to run an errand and returned to the ends trying to escape from the duct tape. So I wrapped it some more. I put pieces about eight inches long criss-crossed across the two ends so they could pull from opposite directions. Problem solved.

While I was handling the wreath to wrap it, I had to be very careful so I didn't squeeze it anywhere and create more kinks. Next time I make one, I will wrap the entire piece of foam in duct tape to make it sturdier. Future problem solved!

Step Two

Adhere the base-color yarn (mine was the orange) to the back of the wreath. I just used duct tape for this.

Now wrap... and wrap... and wrap... and wrap. This took awhile, but not as long as I expected. Since I was going for a bit of a sloppy look, I just threw the skein inside the wreath and back out the bottom a few time and then pushed those wrappings to meet the others.

Once you wrap it all the way around, adhere the yarn to the back of the wreath with hot glue and cut it once it cools.

Step Three

Adhere the top-color yarn (Mine was the gray) to the back of the wreath with hot glue. Once it cools, begin wrapping again. This part was more tedious since you can't just push it to meet the rest of the yarn. Try to find your own rhythm. I purposefully wrapped bits in all sorts of directions so it looked a little messier, but still neat.


Once you meet the beginning, adhere the yarn to the back with hot glue. Once cool, trim the end off. Lots of yarn left over for other projects!

Step Four

Draw some bats on a sheet of paper. I just did a google image search for clip art bats and traced one I liked. Try to find a few different sizes. Cut out the bats.


Step Five

Use the chalk to outline the bats on the felt. This was a little tricky. I held the paper down at the edges and kind of...drew lines that started on the paper and ended on the felt? I don't know how to word it. Look at the picture and you'll know what I mean.


Looks like the Bat Signal. =)

Now cut 'em out!


Step Six

Arrange the bats on the wreath to figure out how you want them. Make sure there is no chalk visible! Now just hot glue them on, let it cool, and hang it up!


I also wrapped my wreath hook with orange ribbon because the gold was just not jellin'.

I plan on making more like this for other holidays and seasons. Obviously not bats. It will be easy to change up the colors and add some felt roses, felt leaves, or whatever else you can think up.

Happy crafting!

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Felt Roses

So this is one of the easiest things you can craft up yourself. And there are so many uses for it! You can make a bunch and sew them onto scarves, ballet flats, headbands, sweaters, purses. Or glue them on hair clips, picture frames, pretty much anything. I chose to use my first one to prettify up a present.


Supplies:
1. Felt (You can buy sheets at craft stores for about 30 cents each and they come in a variety of colors)
2. Scissors
3. Hot glue gun
4. Permanent marker

Step One

Plug in your glue gun so it heats up. Draw an open swirl on your felt with your permanent marker. The larger the swirl, the larger the flower will be.


Step Two

Draw a scalloped edge attached to the outer edge of your swirl. Keep in mind that you will be cutting this out inside the lines, so leave enough room to be sure you don't make the scallops touch the swirl. When you get to the center, you will need to make a circle that the bottom of the flower will rest on. Since this was my first, I had no idea how big to make the circle, so I made it bigger than I thought I would need and later trimmed it down.


Looking at it now, I didn't even draw a circle. Let me MS Paint up a better version...


Get it? Good.

Step Three

Cut it out. Be careful to stay inside the lines so you don't get permanent marker on the finished product.


See how I still cut it out even though I didn't draw it? Yeah, draw it. It'll help.

Step Four

Starting with the end that doesn't have the circle, begin rolling it up. Try to keep the bottom nice and flat so it all glues down well. Twirl it up until you reach the circle.


Step Five

Put hot glue on the bottom of the flower. Fold the circle over and press it onto the hot glue, making it the base of the flower. Once the glue cools down, you can trim off any excess from the circle. Now you can sew or glue it onto something!