Thursday, October 25, 2012

Baby Shower Gifts

My cousin's baby shower was this past weekend. I had decided to get more creative and found a fun presentation and packaging for some of the registered items.
 
Thanks to the directions on Little Birdie Secrets blog, I made cupcakes out of receiving blankets and burp cloths. 
I packaged them in a cake box with a window.

  I turned diaper cloths, washcloths, and socks into tiny babies.  Thanks to the blog entry by pharMa that showed how to make these cuties.

 I put these in a cake box too and then stacked the boxes and wrapped twine around them.

They seemed to be a hit at the baby shower.  It did take me several hours to make all these so being creative can be time consuming!

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Coordinating cards, envelopes, and postage stamps

I enjoy making greeting cards.  When I saw that the US Post Office was coming out with a bicycle stamp, an idea for a coordinating card popped into my head.  After that I checked the USPS website for other postage stamps that I could coordinate with my rubber stamps.  

Below are the cards I made.  The bicycle set even has an envelope seal that matches.  Two were birthday cards and one was a thank you card I sent to my aunt & uncle who gave me a wonderful manual typewriter (Yeah!).  

I know a postcard that has coordinating front image, postage stamp, and cancellation stamp is called a maximum postcard or maxicard.  I don't know if there is a term for a greeting card / envelope version.  I have no idea how to get coordinating cancellation stamps in the USA for postcards or envelopes or if the USPS even gives an option unless it is a special event of a first issue or something.









Monday, October 15, 2012

Glass Blown Pumpkin



 

A week ago I took a glass blowing class at Glass Axis (through the UA Parks & Rec).  We made pumpkins!  I had to wait 5 days to pick it up since the items have to cool down slowly.  There was a paper weight class at the same time and we all used the same "cool down vat" (don't know the proper name for it) and solid glass sculptures takes a lot longer to cool down than blown glass.  

Since this was my first glass blowing class, I had LOTS of help.  I am sensitive to heat so the thousands of degrees coming out the the gathering vat was rather intimidating.  Plus when working with glass, constant rotating of the rod is important. Below are some pictures I took during class.  I lost a few photos when I downloaded my camera to the computer so there aren't any of the glass being rolled, in the mold or being blown [I am bummed about that].

Some of the color selection
The rods preheating on the left and the big heating kiln / vat with the glowing hole and a heat shield (metal board with the writing on it).
  
 Some of the shaping tools.  Notice the wooden tool have to stay wet and the long tongs have beeswax applied regularly.
 
The molds: the big and medium one for the pumpkin and the small one for the stem.
 
Adding the stem and preparing to mold it around a pipe.  All colors look brown when heated to such extreme temperatures.