Showing posts with label ornaments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ornaments. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

As the season comes to a close

Hi everyone!  I hope you all have had a wonderful Christmas season.  Ours has been busy and so wonderful, filled with family and friends.  Tonight we'll gather with a few close friends at our house to spend New Year's Eve quietly.  It's a tradition we all look forward to.  Some of you have asked to see pictures of our tree.  It's a very special part of Christmas to me and my family. It's filled with ornaments that I've made over the course of 41 years.  But, it also has memories of friends and travels.  Now my daughter has started the tradition of making her own gift tags that are beautiful little works of art.  I gather them all up after the packages are unwrapped and hang them on the tree.  They've become a memorable addition to the other decoration.  So, this will be a post with several photos but not much talk.  I'll be back tomorrow with the first of two tags for the finale of the 12 Tags of Christmas Funkie Junkie style. 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Happy New Year's Eve!  See you tomorrow!


Thursday, January 3, 2013

The last Christmas projects

 
 
Making these lovely little beaded icicles became addictive.  I started making them the week after Thanksgiving and I ended up making eight of them!  I gave two as gifts and the rest graced our tree.  I've mentioned before that I've made the majority of the ornaments on our family tree over the last 40 years.  Decorating the tree is like a trip down memory lane, and I have to say it's my favorite thing to do.  These icicles are a variation of spiral rope, which for me is an addictive stitch anyway.  I really love doing it.  They use size 8's for the core and 11's and 3mm fire polished crystals for the spiral.  I used the column pendant bead from Swarovski as the drop.  I then made hangers for them out of 18 gauge artistic wire.  If I had colored artistic wire to match I wrapped some around the hanger. 
 
 
Close up of the hanger with the wire wrapping.
 
 
 
Another project that I finished in time for gift giving was a box that I wanted to make for my dear friend Kathy.  Last year I had made myself a cigar box covered with beautiful seasonal papers.  I knew Kathy loved the boxes and so I wanted to make her one.  Here is the box I made.
 
 
 
 
I had so much fun making this box.  I started with a gift box that I had.  It was a sturdy box and it was easy to cover with seasonal papers.  I used die cuts and paper embellishments on the top and painted wooden balls for feet.  I'm happy to say that she was pleased, and loved opening it to find it full of Lindt chocolate truffles!  We both love chocolate! 
 
 
I'll end this post with some close ups of the box.  Thanks for stopping by. 
 
inside  bottom.
side and feet.
 
the top.



 





Sunday, December 20, 2009

Christmas Memories



Well, for the first time in memory we may actually have a white Christmas.  It snowed for 24 hours here yesterday and we ended up with about 20 inches of snow.  For December that's a record and it looks like its going to stick around for the week!  What fun!  Family and snow for Christmas!
My daughter and I spent the afternoon decorating the tree, listening to Christmas carols on the CD player and taking breaks to marvel at all the snow!  I love decorating the tree because all the ornaments have memories.  I used to make most of the ornaments for our tree.  I rarely make ornaments now, but I'm seriously thinking of trying to make at least one ornament a year once again.  I enjoy opening the boxes and seeing them, and remembering where we were or what was happening in our lives when I was making a particular ornament.   Many friends have given us ornaments over the years, and that brings those special people to mind.  Some of those dear friends are not with us anymore and seeing their gift brings them into our lives and our home at this special time of year once again. 

Of course, I have my favorites.  This cube is stitched on perforated paper.  Each side is a different color embroidery floss.  My son and daughter love this ornament and, when they were younger,  they would take turns putting it on the tree, very carefully, so it would hang  perfectly, and out of reach, so no one could grab it and accidentally crush it.



These are some of the other favorites.  The hot air balloon saying "Cheer" is one of the early ornaments, made when my husband and I were living in Jacksonville, Florida.  I can still remember sitting in our apartment watching TV in the evenings and stitching this balloon.  I loved it because I love hot air balloons!  The coral bargello ball was stitched a few years later, when we lived in Maine.  It was made in segments, each stitched with the same pattern, then carefully cut out of the canvas leaving a 1/8" margin.  Each segment was glued to a styrofoam ball and ribbon was glued down to cover the seams.  I made loops of ribbon and a finial out of a bead and pearl and pinned it to the top and bottom of the ball.  I liked this one so much I made another, in blue and silver!  The snowman peeking into the photo was one of my very first ornaments, a painted canvas I found in a needlepoint shop in Atlanta, Georgia back in the '70's.  Yes, some of these ornaments are over 30 years old!   So many memories.  There other needlepoint ornaments in this picture.  The red and green one, a yellow one stitched with a special overdyed floss that I loved, a flat bargello ornament peeking in at the side.  I have a lot of flat bargello ornaments.  They were great for "car projects" when we were traveling.  I would pick a color family of Paternayan yarn and either gold or silver metallic embroidery thread and put them together as kits to take along. I would decide on a bargello motif and stitch it on canvas.  When I was finished I would cut them out and glue or stitch them to matching felt. I would then edge them with the metallic thread.  One year I stitched about 10 of them and even did a workshop in bargello ornaments for my Southern Maine EGA chapter. 


Once needlepoint canvas became available in colors new possibilites opened up!  And, my techniques improved!    I used the lavendar canvas for this ornament.  I mounted it on a piece of cardboard covered with purple lame which glimmers through the open canvas.  I then coverd another piece of cardboard with lame and glued the front and back together.  I stitched a beaded looped fringe to the bottom with a small purple bead hanging from the point. 

And then there are the ornaments from home.  My mother bought this little elf at a craft fair many years ago.  She has a little brother who is dressed all in white.  My daughter has always loved these little charmers and she always puts them on the tree in a place of honor where they can be seen right away. 

Decorating the tree is always a special time for us.  My husband puts the tree up and gets it ready for us to perform magic on it, as he says.  This year it was a little more magical than usual because of the snow.  Another memory to add to the many we already have.  We'll take the decorations out next year and say, "Remember last year, all that snow"!  Christmas is so special for so many reasons, but mostly because of the memories it conjures up of wonderful Christmases past.  I hope you all have a most wonderful and blessed Christmas!