Saturday, April 22, 2006

Red Hat Crafters

Back in January, my mom's Red Hat group (ladies over 50, not Linux folk, not that the two couldn't intersect) set their monthly outing plans for the year. April was my mom's month to plan and we came up with having a crafting day. We were inspired by a Red Hat scrapbooking book that I found at the library.

The idea evolved into decorating photo frames. It picked up support after I made a couple of samples so the ladies could wrap their brains around the idea.

Mom and I gathered supplies. We charged $10 per participant. Nine signed up, then three of them couldn't make it. But the other six had a great time. I base-coated a few frames for them to get started. One who was nervous about starting made two frames. Others brought more Foofy Doo-Dah to share. No one was on time at 9:00, but we were rolling by 9:45.

They had great ideas. They asked each other for help and ideas as much as they asked me. They were tickled when I reminded them that it was for themselves, not for a grade, not for a contest. If she liked it, then it was right.

I helped them make some bows, like the one in this first photo.

The one with the 6 and 4 is my birthday card for me my mom, who turned 64 this week. I wrote inside that I still need her and will still feed her, and gave her $3 worth of Dairy Queen gift certificates.

I taught them how to add a second layer to make an item pop when two pieces were too close in color, such a as the pink and lavender tissue papers on the tall purple frame. The words on the sticker weren't showing on just the lavender.

The partially hidden frame was my demo frame, made with Mod Podge glue and lots of collaging. Today's ladies were more interested in just using hot glue, which I agreed with. Quicker results. Notice that a few ladies took some of the larger papers and put them in the frames, either for now or for always.

Since the ladies were tending to themselves enough, I started crafting, too (which was my secret ulterior motive). I made frames for the ladies who had wished to come but were absent. I made the RED HOT frame for a lady born in Mexico. Thus the chili pepper. It was clear-red plastic, too dark on the purple, so I backed it with white. The paper cut-out hat had feathers, so I hot-glued on more and bigger feathers over them. This lady likes beadwork and makes her own jewelry. I left space for her to add more if she wishes.

In the Tall purple frame, the upper left corner has a piece of fabric that was "like a shawl." I told them that it was a shawl. When Ganoush and Skunk were four, they could not unknot a tassled scarf of mine, so they cut off the knot. Argh.

The center frame was another of mine, for a lady who loves to dress for holidays and often has glitter hair accents and glitter highlights on face, neck, and skin. I used sparkly papers and one lady's die-cut machine to make flowers, then added lots of glitter glue.

I also made the frame on the left. That recipient is much quieter in her style and lies Americana. I started the red frame for the Glitter Lady, but most of my papers were red-toned, so they needed a purple frame. I had already put the big sticker on the red frame, so I was able to add just a couple more quiet elements and call it done.

The Red Hat Ladies were so good, they were even careful to ask about which scraps were big enough to keep. And since they all helped clean up nicely and stuff my mom had sorted stayed sorted, I'll have an easier time putting all back into the basement (where I'm headed right after I post) and finding the stuff again next time.

Monday, April 17, 2006

Sketches and art

I've spent all of my computer turn learning about my new scanner and cropping them for the blog. I'll write the text tomorrow. Here are the pictures. Click any to see a larger version.

Sketches from my current journal.










Paint / collage from my 2005 Round Robin Art Journal. The beads were added by Cait. I don't know if she added the sax man or if someone else did.





Monday, April 10, 2006

Lego Cake / Checkers Cake

Our Cub Scout Pack has a cake auction every spring. In past years, we have made ordinary cakes and went wild with icing/frosting decoration.

This year, I wanted more of a themed cake. We went to a cool cake web site from Family Fun magazine (a product of Disney). Their Lego cake makes one large brick. CHG made 8x8 cakes for Gonzo and me. We each made a Lego cake with studs made from half-high large marshmallows. They compress a little when I log-roll them with the knife to bisect them. That helps with the spacing. The white studs didn't need extra frosting added. Tee hee hee.

Ganoush and I made the checkeboard cake, again not quite the one in the magazine. That's just for inspiration. She frosted the white, I laid out the lines with a bread knife andfilled in the squares with cookie crumbles. She added the marshmallow checkers.

(The round cake is by someone else; one of the nifty new ones that let you make a tunnel in the cake.)

We bought Ganoush's back at auction for $8.00 and Gonzo didn't desire any of the cakes. We will make a fresh Lego cake for his birthday party, when we schedule it. Other cakes included a castle, Ziggy, a bunny head, a treasure chest, and some very chocolate cakes. Seventeen cakes brought in $300 for the pack.