Showing posts with label glue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label glue. Show all posts

Thursday, January 25, 2018

Sunday School Craft - Baby Moses in the Bulrushes



Today, we are going to make a cute little tiny craft: Baby Moses in the Bulrushes!

You need: paper, cupcake cups, green tissue paper, scissors, and glue (crayons optional)


First, print out my template at the end. Then, cut out as many Baby Moseses as you need.




Color the baby.




Get some green tissue paper.




Hopefully, you will be able to find your scissors. I looked all over the craft cabinet at church and couldn't find any. So. . .if you can't find scissors, carefully tear your paper into strips.



Here's a trick for a fast and clean tear: put down a hard plastic straight-edge on top of your paper and rip along the edge.



Take one strip of paper and put glue in the center.




Then, add another paper strip on top of it and perpendicular.




Add more glue to the top of this.




Stick a cupcake cup on top.




Add some glue on top of this.




Stick your baby on top. Done!





Template:


The End!















Thursday, October 19, 2017

Sunday School Craft - Burning Bush (Moses)

I tend to use tissue paper and glue sticks a lot. That's because we already have them in the craft closet, so I try to use what we got! 

Today, the lesson is about Moses and the Burning Bush.



You need: cardstock (or regular paper), tissue paper, scissors, glue sticks, and crayons.



First, print out the template at the end (which I totally ripped off from Google). Then, let the kids color everything except the leaves of the bush.



Then, glue over the "leaves."



Then, attach cut up pieces of tissue paper. (It looks best if you crumple the pieces and kind of push them together on the glue-y surface.)




Pushing the pieces together creates a 3D effect.



Done!



Template:


The End!










Tuesday, June 6, 2017

Sunday School Craft - 7 Days of Creation Wheel

Yet ANOTHER creation craft! Our little kids all learn these stories at different intervals, and I don't feel like doing the same one for each group. . .hence a NEW creation craft!

Again, I compiled all these from Google searches.



You need: cardstock (I chose yellow because we had a lot of yellow), crayons (optional), glue or gluesticks, and regular paper.

First I printed the "wheel" part on cardstock. I printed the "days" on regular paper.

Then, I cut out all the days on a paper cutter.



Then, I just glued each day down where they belonged!




Templates:





The End!









Friday, February 26, 2016

Refashioning: Adding Graphics to a Sweater

You may or may not remember this post, where I merged a gorgeous tiger graphic from an old ratty crop top to the front of a dress. Anyways, I had taken the pictures with my phone and wasn't able to comment in between the pictures, so I've been kinda feeling like I needed to re-blog this method. That, and the fact that I really like this method and have done it a few times since that last post, I decided to re-show this same process using different clothing items.


Here is a black sweatshirt that I really like, but I have lots of black shirts, so I was willing to let it get embellished. (Disregard the clothing hanging behind it. These are not the droids you are looking for...)



I found this super cute sequin heart smiley face off the dollar rack, but as you can see. . .it's on a shirt I would NEVER wear.



Harvest time! (3/4" seam around it).



I ironed it on the wrong side to make sure it was flat.



Then, I folded the sweatshirt in half and put pins down the fold to delineate the middle.




Then, I lined up the points of the heart with the pins, folded one side of the heart over and sprayed the back with adhesive spray.



I repeated the spraying on the other half of the heart.


The purpose of spraying the graphic with spray adhesive is so that the graphic will stay in place. You could also use fusible iron-on backing. . .in which case, you may not even have to sew anything once the graphic has been ironed on. . .but I HAVE a sewing machine and spray adhesive, so. . .Why buy something extra?

Even though the graphic was stuck on, I still pinned it in place, because sometimes the fabric stretches funny and pins help that problem.



If you are doing the sewing method, this is where things may get tricky in your head, because if a shirt is already sewn together, how are you going to get the machine inside the shirt so the graphic can get sewn on properly? Like. . .it would be super easy if the shirt weren't sewn together yet. You would just sew the graphic onto the front piece of the shirt and then sew the shirt together. However, you can't do that when the shirt is already sewn together, unless you take it apart. 

Don't worry. . .it's going to take a little finagling. . .but don't worry. You don't have to take anything apart. This is why spray adhesive is so helpful: The graphic will stick to the clothing all during this squishing and pushing process so you don't have to worry too much.

Remember, you have two holes to work with: the neck hole and the bottom seam. 

Set your machine to a zig-zag stitch and put your machine as far back through the neck hole as you can manage. Then sew forward around your graphic, removing pins as you go, as far forward as you can. Cut your threads and remove your shirt from the machine.




Then, put your machine through the bottom hem as far back as you can go. (You should meet up with the last stitches you had made through the neck hole). Continue sewing forward until you meet up with the first stitches you made through the neck hole. Cut your threads and you're done!



You can see that all the seams of the actual sweatshirt are raw and unfinished, so I didn't even bother trimming the excess off around the heart.








Here is another project I did the same way. I took an adorable sequin heart off a nasty T-shirt and sewed it onto a nice, black sweater!




If you are worried about the graphic pillowing out from your garment (because the spray adhesive is going to wash out eventually), you can take a needle and thread and tack it down somewhere in the middle. Only one or two stitches are needed.



The seams on this sweater are all finished, so I did trim around the outer part of the heart, just to clean it up a bit.




The End!