Friday, November 30, 2012

Teeny Tiny Books of Instagram Photos

I know I'm just one of 3 billion people obsessed with tiny things. Recently it's been tiny confetti and tiny canvases. So when I saw (after reading LPM's post here) that you can print tiny books made of your Instagram photos, I jumped at it. I think I thought it'd make a great Christmas gift, but that was out the window when I overly excitedly opened the package two scant seconds after I heard the FedEx guy drop the envelope at the front door. These are shipped via FedEx from Taiwan. On one hand, I'd totally dig it if they were American made. On the other, it was kind of fun to get a FedEx package directly from Taiwan...

These come in a bundle of three, which is perfect for us. One for me and each girly. These books have teeny tiny magnets inside the covers, so that when you close it, it stays closed. So fancy.

The site interface is easy to use, you just choose your 24 favorite photos and they'll pop 'em in in random order.

The girls each labeled the back of their book with their names and or/scribbles so we all know whose is whose. Though mine is safely out of their reach. I want to DIY a teeny tiny cover.

K's made it to school the next day as her show and tell item-- and then made it home again! I was expecting to be taking a fruitless trip to the lost and found looking for the show and tell, but not this time. Which makes me happier about the $10 price plus $7 shipping. Not crazy expensive, but definitely an indulgence. If you're gifting them less than $6 each for a personalized gift doesn't seem so crazy?

They didn't ask me to post about it or have any idea who I am! Just sharing because you might like the tiny cuteness too. You can find them here. Just be warned that you have to sign for the package. I could live without that part.

Adrianna and I are both still kinda Instagram addicted. She's here and I'm here. Do you have other Instagram tips or goodies to share?

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Christmas Gifts for Squeaky Clean Kids

When I was a kid I was fascinated by fun soap. Well, actually, I should just say I was fascinated with soap in general. I loved hotel soaps, bath soaps and those little shaped soaps that came in 80's colors like Dusty Rose and Williamsburg Blue and Forest Green and sat in a little dish in the guest bath that no one was actually supposed to touch. Soap flakes, soap sheets, liquid soap and ESPECIALLY those squishy round bath marble things filled with oily soap or bubble bath... I was engrossed by the textures and shapes and smells.


When I realized how easy glycerine soap is to work with it, I had to try it myself. How easy is it? SO easy. All you have to do is microwave it and pour it into a mold. It's way easier than candle crafting, because... it's soap. If it drips, it washes off. You can use a pyrex measuring cup from the kitchen without forever sacrificing it to the gods of candlemaking. Wax isn't so fun in that respect. And soap is FAST. Like 30 seconds in the microwave fast.

I decided to make some confetti soaps as gifts for some of our little friends, and a few will likely end up in the girls' stockings.


The full tutorial is available at Crafts Unleashed. If you're a Pinterest follower, you may've already spied this there!

It wasn't until I'd finished these that I realized I have a soap fascination, especially as a holiday gift. I think it's my form + function love at work. Gifts that are both attractive and useful are my favorites. As evidenced by my soap gift crafting last year.

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

One One of Everything Winner!

There's news in crafterhours world. We pooled all 333 entries for the One of Everything crafterhours Giveaway and chose one-- Allyson, who chose to enter via our Facebook page:

Allyson, send us an e-mail so that we can ask you some questions about the items that require color choices!

If you didn't win... duuuude, I'm sorry. Not winning is kind of a bummer. Will free shipping make you feel any better? I sure hope so. Place an order (drawer stickers make great stocking stuffers or small gifts for busy moms. Or kids who are enthusiastic "I-do-it-by-myself"-ers!) between now and Friday with code ISPYFREESHIP and you'll get free shipping on your order. Add a note at checkout if you'd like us to ship something as a gift without an itemized receipt. We'll even add a handwritten note for you.

You don't need a code for Hey June Handmade, because shipping there is always free. (Ha.)

If you're one of the folks who's just stocked up on I Spy sets and are looking for inspiration, I pin from all over on this board. There's plenty there to get you rolling.

There's more crafty fun in the works. Thanks SO much for your enthusiasm for this giveaway and for crafterhours in general. You keep a couple of sewing/crafty girls going!

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Monday, November 26, 2012

Crafty Cyber Monday Sale!

My husband pointed out yesterday that we have an extra week between Thanksgiving and Christmas this year, since Thanksgiving fell so early on the calendar. Initially I thought it was a jedi mind trick on his part, but even if it had been, it worked. I felt more relaxed immediately, and put aside a few other things to start sorting for a quilt that I've been wanting to work on for what feels like forever. 'Cause this is the funnest thing on my list. And sorting fabric is calming anyway. That's my mantra this holiday season. Do what's fun and relax.

on Instagram
So while I'm working on that, I thought I'd point you in the direction of two noteworthy crafterhours items. Noteworthy because neither has happened before or will happen again any time soon!

1. For one day only, take 33% off your total order in the crafterhours shop (enter code MONDAY) or in the hey june handmade shop (price reflected in cart). Greenpoint Cardigan, drawer stickers, union jacks, I Spy sets, all 33% off until midnight PST.

2. Today's the last day to enter the One of Everything crafterhours Giveaway! The winner will be announced here on the blog tomorrow. And if you place an order in either shop today and you win? We'll refund your order!

Have fun cyber-Mondaying. Or just regular Mondaying. Whichever you prefer!

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Friday, November 23, 2012

A One-of-Everything crafterhours GIVEAWAY! [Closed]

Blogging brings the occasional opportunity to give away fun stuff. But this year we've both opened shops, and now we're able to give away our OWN fun stuff! We have much to be thankful for personally, but in crafty world, we're wildly appreciative of the fun of being able to share what we create with the world. So, here it is:

Yes, it's a ONE OF EVERYTHING giveaway! To include:

Adrianna's NEXT soon-to-be-released pattern, which you'll get FIRST! - $12
one of EACH of the Spoonflower I Spy Sets - Eden, Alloy, Alphabet and the Swap 3 Set - $135
(that's 188 different amazing Spoonflower prints!)
one set of Union Jack cuts in your choice of color - $18
your choice of 4 sets of I-know-where-it-goes Drawer Stickers - $24
you choice of Alphabet I Spy Label sets - $8

In all, over $200 in crafterhours craftiness that we'll happily ship to you, anywhere in the world. 
Would you like to enter? There are four ways. We'll choose a winner at random.
You can enter whichever and as many ways you like, up to four entries each way. We love enthusiasm.
  1. Comment on this post
  2. Comment on the corresponding post on Facebook
  3. Tweet this post with hashtag #mycrafterhours
  4. Follow us on Instagram (@crafterhours and @adriannaappl) and tag your own favorite crafty photo with #mycrafterhours
Easy enough, right? We'll announce the winner here on the blog on Tuesday, 11/27. 
No purchase necessary, void where prohibited by law. Have a fantastic weekend!

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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

I Spy a Wrap on Swap 3!

Something I'm thankful for this week: Spoonflower I Spy Swap 3 is finished! All of the participants should have their fabric in-hand now. Or under-presser-foot. Whichever.

There are a handful of picks in this swap that've been chosen in previous swaps. The cameras, kites and alligators, for example. I love the variety of color and subject matter that appear in the swap sets. Even though I myself have combed through thousands of prints available through Spoonflower, there are always new surprises for me in the picks.

I made a few changes to the process this time in an attempt to streamline it. For example, I asked folks to buy a spot for $1 rather than sign up via the comment section, and that helped keep things more organized. The trickiest part, as it has been for the past two swaps and for any swap as far as I can tell, is the part where people have to send their fabric in. The timeline didn't stretch as much as the first two, so I'll call that a "win". There were three people who fell off of the face of the earth, but fortunately there were some last-minute heroes. The biggest happy part of the whole scenario is that these were on their way back to swappers before Thanksgiving! HOOOOOORAY! If you'd like to read more about the past swaps, you'll find the wrap-ups here and here.

If you see a fabric here you must have, you can find the full link list here. And there are exactly five swap sets available in the shop.

Upcoming excitement: On Friday we'll announce the BIGGEST crafterhours giveaway ever! If you're wondering what that could be-- you'll just have to come back and find out! Or feel free to guess. I love guesses. Maybe there's a prize if you're right...

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Saturday, November 17, 2012

Have yourself a Minted little Christmas (card)

It's the most wonderful time of the year!  Well, after the stress of getting my own Christmas cards ordered and distributed is over, that is.  After that, it's all oohing and aaahing over my mailbox everyday. 

I just love Christmas cards.  I save them all.  I have favorites.  I look at them constantly throughout the season and then pull them out the next year and the year after that.  A very privileged one stays on my fridge all year round (holla J&X!)  Living overseas especially, it's important to stay connected to our friends and family and this is such a fun way to do it.  I love seeing everyone's card choices each year and the creative (and sometimes funny) photography.

So, when Minted contacted us to do a little review of their new holiday cards for the season, I was all up on that.

We haven't had our picture taken for our card yet (um, yeah, gotta get that done soon!), so I just threw in some pics of my baby girl nearly a year ago! wahh wahhh.  (Photos are all courtesy of the amazingly talented Jennifer Fitzsimmons.)

Here's what I found when I was playing around on their site (besides our card for this year!):  

1.  Absolutely gorgeous, simple, and unique designs.  I'm featuring a few of my favorites throughout this post, but it was seriously hard to limit myself!


2. Highly customizeable options.  You can change the location of the components on the card, the color, the font size and type, and the words themselves.  Do you prefer a full-blown "Merry Christmas", "Happy Chanukah", or "Merry Festivus" instead of the non-committal and generic "happy holidays"?  Me too.  You can make that happen.



3.  Photography tools.  You can zoom in, zoom out, reposition, make the color sepia or black and white, and rotate.


4.  High quality printing, heavy cardstock, and a matte finish.  No flimsy, shiny, or cheap stuff here.  You'll pay a little extra for the quality, but I always consider Christmas cards to be an investment.  I'll appreciate saving these nice ones to string up into a garland when the kids have all flown the nest, I'm sure.


5.  Details.  You can add a personalized touch to many cards by changing the border to be a rounded square, a scalloped edge, a circle, or other fun shapes.  You can also choose to have additional photos and text on the back of the card, or a nice print.  Choose your envelope type and add a liner.  You can even have them print your return address in the location of your choice to save you a little work.
 

6.  Great customer service.  Your finished card will be proofed by an actual human being for errors and layout issues before printing.  You can chat with a customer service rep online for a quick answer.


7.  And of course, it's not just for holiday cards!  Minted has everything from wedding invitations to business cards for moms.  (and rumor has it that they'll soon be offering party decor too!)


So go check them out!  Yes, I'm being compensated for this post, but all opinions are my own, and I was a big fan before they approached us.  In fact, I chose Minted for my birth announcements for baby J last year and I was very impressed with the quality of their product and service.  Want to see what I chose?

Ok, I'll admit it - between browsing all the gorgeous card designs and seeing the brand new face of my little nugget on them, this was a pretty fun post to write.  I dare you to head over to Minted and not be totally overwhelmed with options.


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Thursday, November 15, 2012

The Lazy Girls' Guide to Making a Ball Gown

My husband and I went to the Marine Corps Ball this year (we're not affiliated with the Marines in any way, but they invite lowly civilians like us, so that's pretty nice.  It's a fun opportunity to get really dressed up and scrape the dried-up layer off the top of your only lipstick and dig under your sink behind all those gigantic post-baby sanitary pads that you still have for some reason in search of your fancy perfume.  Plus there's cake.)

In my brief search online, I soon discovered that the main demographic of formal gown wearers are mothers-of-the-bride or tweens.  Apparently nobody between the ages of 22 and 50 goes to formal events anymore.  So unless I wanted a double breasted mauve lace jacket or an enormous be-sequined tulle skirt, I was stuck making my own.  (Ok, I'll admit it, I didn't look very hard.)  

So, I made my own.  And now I'm here to share all the details with you, in hopes that you'll see what I did, remember my tutorial, and go buy your next fancy gown from Nordstrom like a normal person.

The first five steps are optional but highly recommended:

Step 1: Have a store-bought back-up dress just in case.

Step 2:  Pick a super simple design.  "Fancy nightgown" should not be an inappropriate way to describe it.

Step 3: You're going to need a dress form.  Or not mind pinning fabric to your skin.

Step 4: Stock up on this little miracle.  Reapply often.

Step 5: Don't have boobs.  Seriously, this makes sewing anything for yourself waaaay easier.   

(if you do have boobs, see the dress that Susan made for this same event 3 years ago.  She did a pretty genius pattern/draping hybrid.)

So here's the way I constructed it:  (Note: Don't do it this way.  This way is horribly wrong.  I know just enough about sewing to know that my version of draping is the equivalent of a scrapbooker duct taping pictures onto construction paper and stapling them together.  Seriously, it is SO wrong.  I take no responsibility for any loss of life, limb, or fabric if you choose to follow these directions.)

First pin your fabric to your dress form in the way that you want your final dress to look.  Get creative without cutting - here I used two corners to emulate triangular bust pieces and I folded the fabric in a tuck to pretend there was a waistband.

Then get approximate measurements of each portion of the dress.  For things that need really accurate measuring, like around the empire waist or the straps, I measured my actual person, not the dress form.
 Then take those measurements and use them to cut out your bodice pieces on to a small portion of the 5 (yes five) yards of New York Giants fabric that fabric.com sent you instead of white voile.  Or, you know, use a muslin.

 Take your newly cut pieces and pin them to the dress form, adding tucks and pleats and gathers where desired.  Pin those details in place.


If you see a big gap like the one on my dress form's side boob here, you'll need to add a dart there.  These gaps can occur all over the place with no advance warning.  They're like ninjas.  Be vigilant and mind the gap.

If you're like me and don't want to add a dart because it'll detract from the final design (or you plain don't want to deal with one), move your fabric around until the gap is gone.  Ta-da!  Problem solved.  Or at least mine was.  Yours might not work this nicely, in which case good luck with that.  Cut the now-excess fabric off.  For me, that was the little triangular piece extending down past the diamond trim.

 With your pleats, gathers, and what-not in place, baste your bodice together.  I just did one side and attached it to the waistband.  Try it on your actual body.  If it's good, use those pieces to make a pattern.  If not, take notes and try try again.


Here's my pattern:

And here's what I do when I need to make a small bust adjustment on a top with triangular bust pieces:  Instead of messing with the fit and cut and all that hard stuff, I simply angle the triangles down in the center to eliminate gaping and thus reduce the amount of fabric that needs to be filled up with something.  (in this case, the aforementioned nonexistent boobs).  Make sure the straps are still coming out of the top at a good angle though.  If not, you'll have to re-shape the triangles.

I marked the stitch line with white chalk since my angled triangles were now in the way of my seam allowance guide.

 Oh, did I forget to mention straps?  Yes, you should sew those in while you're sewing the front and lining triangles together.  I made mine skinny using this clever tutorial.  I also used this technique to make the button loops in the back.

After sewing the bodice to the waistband piece and getting the straps all lined up and fitted perfectly, I pinned the waistband lining on, right sides together with the waistband, with the bodice sandwiched in between.  I pinned my button loops to the inside of one end of the waistband and sewed the waist band to the waistband lining on both short ends and at the top, leaving the bottom open.

The skirt is just a big rectangle that I angled in at the top to reduce bulk.  At the top of the back I made a simple notch to allow ease to put the dress on.  I made it shallow enough that it didn't need a closure, and the gathered nature of the skirt kept it shut anyway.  Then I sewed the skirt front and back together, gathered it at the waist, sewed it to the waistband, hemmed it, and sewed on my buttons.  And then I sewed in boobs to make the bodice cups nice and smooth (and make it look like I have boobs.)  When I stitched the bra pieces to the inside of the dress, they did warp the outside fabric a little bit, as you can see in the pictures at the top of the post.  But luckily I noticed this before we left and a little tug was all it took to get things nice and straight again.  I'm thinking this happened because the sides of the triangles are on the bias and were prone to waviness.

And that was it!  In some ways the two gowns I've made have been a lot easier than some of the little girl dresses I've made.  There aren't as many little parts and I'm not as concerned with durability or finishing.  I knew this one was probably going to be one-time-use.  I mean, realistically, the fanciest I usually get is when I'm watching battlestar galactica in my pjs and I've forgotten to take off my make-up.

So what happened to that diamond trim that was supposed to go on the dress?  Well, in the end it just looked too Miss America for my taste, so I wrapped it around my neck and frankensteined the clasp from another necklace onto it with some pliers.  Yes, my entire ensemble was an exercise in defining the word "ghetto".  

Here's me and my man all ready to dance the night away!  (and by dance, I mean me dancing with my girlfriends whilst our husbands sit at the table and talk about work and drink free g&ts.)

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Friday, November 9, 2012

Casual Fridays, Princess-Style

My girls were invited to a Princess birthday party and were encouraged to wear their royal attire.  I knew the party was going to be outdoors, near a playground, and it was likely to be 95 degrees.  So instead of putting them in those stretch velvet polyester numbers, which get torn off within 5 minutes in our air conditioned house, or in one of my handmade dress-ups, that would likely get destroyed, I decided to compromise.



So instead I created some playwear for Princesses!  This is what Snow White and Cinderella wear on their days off, right?

I wanted to hold off on this post until I got better pictures, but I decided these action shots actually better illustrated my reasoning on the whole anti-dress thing.  (plus I didn't feel like it)

My girls loved them and kept them on the whole time, and bonus - now they have dress-ups they can wear outside the house too.


I don't have a tutorial for these, they're really just t-shirts with some added details.  All it took was some knit yardage from the stash, some cut-up shirts from my refashion pile, some ric-rac, and a little bit of math.  I think some of the other princesses would be really fun too, but these were the colors I had on hand.

(The yellow shorts were just a happy coincidence.  You can read about them here.)



And I can't mention this birthday party and not show you a picture of the cake.  My friend (the birthday girl's mom) made it!  I dread planning and executing birthday parties, so the fact that she is not only uhhhmazing at it, but also loves putting together every detail never fails to blow my mind.  It makes me glad that people are so talented at such different things. 
 


Have a great weekend!






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