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Friday, February 13, 2009

Valentine's Day Kool-Aid Pie No-Cook Pie


I made this last night for supper and have posted the how-to at Instructables and entered it into the "Sweet Treats" contest for Valentine' s Day.
If you see it and like it, I hope you vote for it!

Egg holders from lids from liquid laundry product

I am packrat and hate to throw anything that might be useful away, so I have been saving the lids off of liquid detergent and today found a purpose for them - individual egg holders! You could use them while crafting creative ones or holding ones that you have dyed of crafted.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

THUMBPRINT HEART KEY CHAIN

This is one of the hearts made at the same time I made the thumbprint heart necklace. This one is for Kyle's Dad. I know he would never go for anything frou-frou, so I scavanged the ring from my old Tony the Tiger keyring and strung some jewelry wire through the hole and twisted it then attached the keyring. This is the back of the keyring. To make it look more masculine, I used an eagle sticker. If I had more time, I would have had a picture of my son printed at Walgreen and attached instead (would have cost around 20 cents). Keyring scavenged from this keychain. I didn't have the heart to throw Tony away so will have to come up with another project to recycle him on to. Cost: Under 50cents Materials: Same basic materials as heart necklace, except instead of beads and ribbons used: - Keyring (free - scavenged from old keyring) - Jewelry wire (.33 cents 24 yd. roll - was on clearance at JoAnn Fabrics as pkg was damaged) - Eagle sticker (free - came in the mail with some address stickers)

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

HEART THUMB PRINT NECKLACE

Close up of heart (indentation is the thumb print
Close up of back of heart
I made this to be more of kid's project for a child to do for a loved one, but it could be made into a more grown-up version by using jump rings, clasps and a chain instead of ribbon.
The pictures I took really do not do it justice because it looks much better in person and you can easily see the ridges of the finger print.
Cost for each necklace is less than 50 cents each.
************************************************************************ Materials:
- 1 block Fimo Clay - makes 4 hearts (on sale at Michael's .99)
- Hearts ice cube tray ($1.00 from Dollar Tree)
- 18-24 inches of 1/8th inch wide Ribbon (97 cents per spool from Walmart), depending on length preferred
- 2 beads with 1/8th inch opening or pony beads (on hand from broken Dollar store watch) for each necklace
- Straw from bagged juice drink like Capri Sun (free as it was a used one)
- Aluminum pie pan to bake the fimo (free as it was a used one)
Optional: Nodi Nail laquer pink with stars or ($1.00 from Dollar Plus) or any other nail polish
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Works out best to divide the fimo into segments then kneed each piece in your hands for a few minutes to make it more pliabe, then press it into the mold and smooth off the top of it.
Take out of the mold and place in the aluminum pie pan right side up. Have the child press their thumb print into the center of the heart. They will need to press very hard to make an indentation.
You may need to shape the crease in the center of the hear on top up a little as the pressing will flatten it out. Use the side of the straw to press the crease back in the heart.
Use the straw to punch a hole in the upper right hand side of the heart.
Bake the fimo clay in the oven at 275 degrees for 15 mins. Do not overbake.
Use the nail lacquer to paint the heart
Thread ribbon through heart front to back, then tie in a knot at the top.
Close up of bead to show size of opening
Thread one bead on each side of the ribbon.
Tie a knot at the end of the the two pieces of ribbon and you are done!