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Wednesday, December 27, 2017

Sunday School Craft - New Year - "This is the year that the Lord has made" Party Stuff!

So if you are like me, you were planning all this stuff for Christmas and COMPLETELY FORGOT about New Years! So. . .here is a craft for the procrastinators and overly-busy!



First step, go to Dollar Tree and buy some party hats and blowouts.



Next, print out my template (at the end).




Then, glue the 2018 sign. . . 



And stick it to a hat!



Now, let your kids run around and be sure to give them a lot of sugar before you send them back with their parents! ;)

Happy New Year!


Template:


The End!













Thursday, December 7, 2017

Sunday School Craft - Wise Men "Follow the Star" Crown



Okay. . .let's be honest here. . .

The MOST IMPORTANT reason for little kids to do crafts is so that adults can be equally as entertained.

This is one such craft!


You need: metallic bulletin board boarder strips (15pk at Dollar Tree), tree tinsel garland (10yds at Dollar Tree), star ornaments (6pk at Dollar Tree), pipe cleaners, paper, stapler, and a glue stick.



You can also improvise with whatever you can find. For instance, you don't need the garland. You could use construction paper to make the crown. And you could just cut out stars to hang. Anyways, this post should at least give you some ideas. The main thing is to make a crown and attach a star with a pipe cleaner for the child to "follow."


The first step is to cut the garland to the length of the boarder (This one is 18").




Then, cut out the verses in the template I've provided at the end of this post.



Then, staple the boarder onto the bottom of each boarder. (I used four staples per.)



Then, staple the pipe cleaner in two places from the back. (I also turned up the "tail" of the pipe cleaner to make sure it wouldn't pull out easily, but I didn't take a picture of that step.)




Next, glue the verse to the front of the crown.



Then, take a star ornament off the card and pull off the twisty-tie.



Insert the pipe cleaner through the top hole of the star. . .



And bend that tip down.



Final step: staple the back of the crown together in two places so it makes a hat!



My head is too big, but you get the idea. . .







Cute! Can you imagine a bunch of little kids running around with these on their heads at your church??? 

Adults will lose their ever-lovin' minds!



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Sunday School Craft - Christmas Shepherd



This one is VERY easy, and it includes candy!

You need: candy canes, crayons, cardstock, and an Exacto-Knife (or hole punch).


Okay, so I found my little shepherd on Google, deleted his prior shepherd staff, and added the verse (as is my wont). After you print these out, all you have to do is take an Exacto-Knife and cut a candy cane-sized slit above and below his hand. I used a hole punch (which you can see in the picture), but now I wish I'd just used an Exacto-Knife because the hole punch hole is smaller than the candy cane and you almost have to tear the paper to get the candy into the paper. If I'd just cut slits, this would all have been much easier.



Anyways, make however many shepherds you need and have them pre-cut so the kids can just color them and you can shove the canes in just before they go back to their parents!



Despite the obstacles. . .he's still cute!




Template:



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Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Chanel Parody Christmas Shirt - How to do a Simple Embroidery Machine Applique

So. . .I had this spare black long-sleeved shirt, and I was trying to think of something to do with it.

I got this idea the other day to do a Chanel parody but with a Christmas theme. 

So. . .Chanel just, like, within the past year, created a new fragrance called "Gabrielle" after it's namesake, Gabrielle Chanel (aka: Coco). Well, that got me started thinking about Gabriel the angel. . .



Then, I started thinking about how most historians believe that Jesus was born sometime between 5B.C. and 1A.D., so. . .I started thinking about the classic Chanel frangrance "Chanel No.5."



Okay, so. . .it's kind of a strange combination, granted, but. . .I kinda like it! It's nerdy, it's Christmas, it's Biblical, it's historical, and. . .it's fashion!



Okay, but this post isn't really about the parody itself. I just wanted to show you how to do an applique with your embroidery machine. They give you instructions online and on YouTube and stuff, but. . .I've discovered a few tricks that I wanted to share.

First of all, (and. . .sorry. . .I don't have pictures of this part. . .but) I chose a square shape, that was pre-loaded on my machine, and blew it up as large as it would go. Then, I ironed a piece of fusible interfacing onto the back of a piece of shiny white satin. Then, I put the fabric into my machine and embroidered a white square using a simple straight stitch. THIS IS REALLY IMPORTANT! You may think you would want to embroider a black square on the white fabric, but I have learned that you get a better finish if you stick with thread the same color as the fabric. Anyway, keep this in mind, because it will make more sense later.

Okay, after I made the white square, I changed out my thread for black and carefully stitched out the words and numbers that I wanted. This part took a very long time because I am limited in my designs to what will fit in a 4"x4" square, plus, I had to embroider all the words and numbers separately. I had to eyeball where each word would go, and. . .actually, what you see above is my second attempt because the first time didn't work like I wanted. Very laborious. About two hours on this part.

If you are using a pre-made design as your applique, your process will go much faster!


Okay, so. . .then, I took my shirt and turned it inside out and measured the exact middle in two places and then drew a line connecting the two.



Then, I took a piece of tear-away stabilizer and folded in half.



Then, I placed the fold onto the line I drew.




Then, I ironed it in place.



I turned the shirt back right-side out and drew a line down the middle, the same way as before. Then, I took a ruler and held it from armpit to armpit and drew a line across.



Using these lines as guides, I centered the embroidery hoop over them.




Then, using BLACK thread, I stitched the same sized square on the black shirt. (Again, matching the thread to the fabric color is better! Why is it better? Because it makes everything look more professional.)



Then, I cut around the white square leaving about 2mm around the outside. Don't cut right on the line! If you cut too closely to the line or even over the line, you will make your fabric too small for the machine to pick up during the satin stitch step and you will have a gaping hole on the outer edge!



Next, I sprayed the back of the emblem with spray adhesive.



Then, taking the shirt out of the machine, but leaving the shirt in the hoop (really important! Don't unhoop your second square!!!), I matched up the two stitched squares and stuck the emblem on the shirt.



I put the whole thing back into the machine, chose the same sized square, only this time instead of choosing a simple stitch, I chose the thicker satin stitch.



The finished shirt.




Okay, close up like this, you can see why I chose white thread for the white fabric. If I'd chosen black for the original square, that line would have shown through the satin stitch. Also, keeping the satin stitch white helped just in case some of the white fabric decided to stick out from under the stitching. Remember when I did that "reverse applique"? Well, anyway, click that link I just gave you, because I want to show you something. . .Are you there yet?. . .Okay. . .so now scroll down to the second to the last picture. . .See how the red fabric is peeking through the white satin stitching around the circumference of the heart? If I had chosen red thread, you would not have noticed all that mess. So. . .let that be a lesson to you! Do your satin stitch in the same color as your TOP fabric if you want your project to look as professional as possible!




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Thursday, November 16, 2017

Sunday School Craft: Noah's Ark Easy Finger Puppets



Yet ANOTHER Noah's ark craft!

You need: Cardstock, crayons, scissors, and hole punch (optional).


First, print out the templates at the end. I found them on Google, but I have doubled each animal (two-by-two, you know) and sized them so that they will fit little fingers perfectly. Just expand each template into a landscape mode.


After you print them out, you can cut them out like I have below (or you can cut them out more precisely, if you like. I was just in a hurry.)



Then, take scissors and cut out the holes. It's a lot easier to do this if you use a hole punch first.




Then combine the matches. You can either give each child in your Sunday school one or two pairs of animals, (or. . .if you are homeschooling, you can give them all to your kid!) If they are old enough, your kids can do all this cutting stuff, otherwise, just let them color. At the end of class, you could let the kids line up and walk their animals two-by-two into an "ark." Be creative!





Templates:




The End!