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Homemade Christmas OrnamentsMarnita from Cumming, GA Ideas for making your own Christmas ornaments. Post your ideas below. If you have an ornament that you have made in the past, take a picture of it and submit it to the http://www.thriftyfun.com/photo_contest.ldml. Feedback About This Post:RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsHI, You can find a few Christmas Ornament projects at the FamilyOrnament.com online community http://www.familyornament.com/Community/Community.aspx. I hope that might help. Post By Alex K. (Guest Post) Memory MakersAs a special gift to my aunts and uncles, I took my some of my Mother's recipes and copied them on card stock using my home printer. I scalloped the edges and slid the recipe into a clear magnetic frame. After decorating the edges of the frame with glittery swirls, I allowed them to dry. What a special way to remember a favorite recipe from a favorite loved one! Post By Gina (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas Ornaments
I make glitter balls. I take regular clear ornament balls and use glitter paint. Drop a couple drops of one color in and swirl around. Continue with other colors or the same color until the ball is completely covered inside. Post By LATOSHA (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsI'm looking for ideas using wine corks to make Christmas ornaments. Post By Becky (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsPhoto ornaments are my favorite. I collect 'junk cd's that you get in the mail throughout the year or you can buy them. I take a small drill bit and drill a hole in the cd then run a ribbon or string through it then take a picture of the child, cut it into a circle and glue it on the cd, have the child decorate with stickers and write in permanent marker on the back the year for memory. They are relatively inexpensive to make and the parents love them. Post By Shari. (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsI took foam"paper" in brown and yellow. With the brown I traced each child's foot and with the yellow traced each hand cut them out and glued the hands to look like reindeer antlers. To the foot and added a red pompom to the bottom for the nose, or brown pompom if you want a regular reindeer instead of Rudolph. Post By lauri (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsI am looking for the plastic drinking glass pattern for the outdoors star made years ago. Also 1 cup applesauce plus 1 cup plain cinnamon makes a great non-gingerbread like dough. Just mix, roll out, cutout and dry before using white glue for icing before decorating. alansacres---yahoo.com Post By Alan LUEHMANN (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas Ornaments
In response to "DEESPER", Plaid Ent. makes a turnstyle that I think is what you are looking for. It is called FolkArt ® One Stroke Accessories - Artist Turnstyle Post By laura (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsI went to a craft show and a woman painting ornaments had a plastic type vise that held the ornament while she painted each and every detail on the ornament. I want to purchase that vise and can't find it on the internet. She couldn't remember the name of the company but bought it with a paint kit. Please help and point me in the right direction. Thank you. Post By deesper (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas Ornaments
Martha Stewart- jute string ball & bird ornaments...look here: Post By Amy (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsDoes anyone know how to make the jute ball ornaments that was on Martha Stewart last week? It used a balloon and jute string, watered down Elmer's glue and then when dry you are to insert a small bird or some sort like that. Does anyone know where to find directions for this? Post By Mommy in MI (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas Ornamentsso many nice ideas and such cute crafts to make Post by imaqt1962 RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsMy daughter and I made these by painting peanuts and clothes pins. Very inexpensive and easy. Post by Rhonda R Christmas Decorations
One of the easiest and most beautiful christmas decorations that we have ever made has got to be paper snowflakes. They are easy enough for 4-5 year olds to help with, and they don't even have to follow a set pattern. Post by Nicole O RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsSeveral years ago my mom made the same ornaments that jojo talked about only she used a lot of the styrofoam type balls, put toothpicks all over them an inch or so apart. She then made a cirlce out of the balls (about the size of a plate) and decreased the number of balls as she continued making circles layered on top of the previous one to form a Christmas tree. She then sprayed the whole thing with fake snow and decorated it with garland and small ornaments. It made the cutest table top decoration. Post By Tammy (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsI like to decorate satin balls with beads and pearl pins, but was having trouble finding them year round and in pretty colors. So once I found suppliers who would deal with little ole' me, I started selling them on eBay. My store is www.TheCraftyElephant.com. I sell all kinds of satin covered ornaments, trims, beads, filigrees and pearl head pins. I want to sell sequins next, but eBay keeps raising their fees. It makes it hard to sell low cost items such as this. My Mother does the crochet tops and uses thread with metallic fibers. Very pretty! Post by Work4Pnuts RE: Homemade Christmas Ornaments
here's a link Post by angelsmom10 RE: Homemade Christmas Ornaments
Someone showed me a large plastic ball made of plastic drinking glasses with christmas lights in them, I would love to know how to make one. Post By Richard (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsI could use a recipe for making ginger bread for making a ginger bread house. It can't be too soft. I can be emailed at Vallford @ aol.com (remove spaces) if anyone has a recipe. I posted this but I know I put it in the wrong catagory. Thanks. Val Post by valery RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsI was once given a cute and very easy to make ornament. Use 1/2 walnut shell, yarn and the sewing straight pins with the large ball on the end. You make tiny balls of yarn from the yarn, you might want to split the strands so it's not too thick, glue 3 different color tiny balls of yarn into the shell and put in 2 pins crossed; like you would stick your knitting needles into your yarn ball; add some pretty ribbon or gold string to each side of the shell so you can hang it. It looks like a tiny knitting basket. Good for kids to make if not too young, since you are using straight pins. Val Post by valery RE: Homemade Christmas Ornaments
HI, You can find the Tooth pick project here Post By Enter your name. (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas Ornaments
I recently did a craft I found in a magazine where you take a cinnamon stick approximitly 3 in long and you put a small wooden star on the top (paint it yellow or off white first) and then you take small strips of homespun fabric and tie and knot in it and glue 5 of them down the cinnamon stick, when your all done is resembles a christmas tree. Use jute or any ribbon or yarn to hang it. Here is a similar picture but I cut the fabric shorter and I didn't put mine in a pot I hung it. I have sold many of them though. If you have any more questions e-mail me mom2lindsay @ yahoo.com (remove spaces) Post By Autumn (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsI was given the idea to paint walnuts red, put white polka dots on it. Then get green felt to make little leaves for the top it and add string for hanging. There, you have made strawberries. The texture of the walnut make it really like a strawberry. They are real cute on the tree. Post By Leigh (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsI like to let our foster children make ornaments of their own by just picking up pine cones and letting them dry/cure -- then just use odds and ends to dress them up (glue sequins, buttons, pieces of other old broken ornaments, etc.. spray with paint, "snow", silly string, etc...). Just use your imagination -- then twist a pipe cleaner or a small piece of ribbon or wire to hang them -- Post by brflemmons RE: Homemade Christmas Ornaments
oh this one is really nice too Post By Enter your name. (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas Ornaments
Here is the instructions for this orange and cloves ornament Post By Enter your name. (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas Ornaments
These are easy and smell great. I always had the kids involved and they gave them as Christmas gifts. Post By Mckaysatt (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas Ornaments
I did this last year...great if you have kids. I got brown felt and traced my daughter's hand. The thumb is to be a reindeer's head and the four fingers are the legs. Used a tiny red pom-pom for the nose, hot glued a pipe cleaner (folded into a V) for antlers, you can get black felt and cut small peices to glue on for hooves, eyes (or use googly eyes) and tail. Turned out very cute. On the back we wrote 'Hand' made by Shae.... Post By polarbay (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas Ornamentsyou can make great ornaments out of sculpy clay. you can take clear glass ornaments and marble them with paints in the inside or decopage on the outside. you can take corks and stick wire in them then bead on the wire and twist it into a downward curl then add a place to hang it from the top of the cork. make angels out of a paper cone for the dress and a styrofoam ball for a body and a styrofoam head. for the arms use pipe cleaner. make paper fans for wings. Post By Enter your name. (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsUse 1 inch or 1 1/2 inch terra cotta pots and make bells from them. I just made quite a few and they turned out really cute. I just used acrylic paints and odds and ends I had in my craft drawer (glitter, stencils, rub-ons, tiny pom poms, etc) to decorate. Post by sandietc RE: Homemade Christmas OrnamentsI recently saw a beautiful craft ornament in a woman's magazine. Take a polystyrene ball (the smaller ones looked best when finished) then stick toothpicks all over it. Spray the whole lot white and then spray on fake snow. The result was a beautiful snowflake. In the article they had them perched on top of candle-sticks or hanging up. They'd also look great grouped in a glass vase or grouped on a plate or cake-platter. I'm definitely going to be making these myself, they look quite professional too! Post By jojo (Guest Post) RE: Homemade Christmas Ornaments
You can buy polestyrene balls from craft shops in the UK, which, if you pin sequins all over them or in patterns with ordinary sewing pins look fabulous. Post by Julie UK Ideas for Christmas Ornaments
I recently sent a photo in for the recycled CD ornaments. They have really gone over well here (View this project here: http://www.thriftyfun.com/tf504358.tip.html). I have about 35 to make for Christmas now. Doing them for friends and family. Post by ThriftyFun |
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