Friday, September 30, 2016

Leather Kindle Cover


Something outside of paper today, a case for my kindle!
Working with leather at school has its upsides, especially when I get free time to do some personal projects. So I started with a pieces of leather (probably about 14" x 8", but I cut it down from that so it's not very important). I originally picked up a pack of leather remnants from hobby lobby for a different project but it had a lot of good, large pieces in it so it was really worth the $9 compared to leather shop prices.

Price breakdown: (technically free because all things were purchased for a different project, but here goes anyway)

  • $5.40 leather*
  • $1.50 elastic chord*
  • the thread was actually free, it's been a fixture in my mom's sewing stuff for years
  • $4.99 string of beads
      *The elastic chord was on sale from $3, and I used a hobby lobby 40% coupon for the $9 leather.
     
      = $11.89 (it's worth mentioning I think this is the 4th thing I've made out of all these items)


I made a paper rectangle the size of my kindle (4 5/8" x 6 5/8") and used that to cut out the leather. That being said, it's a very tight squeeze and even though I left some wiggle room it was not quite enough. I used a heat gun and warmed it up to stretch it a little and that helped a lot.


I trimmed the leather to 7 1/2" x 12 1/2", I folded the short side over the paper rectangle and stitched the two lines about 7" apart. Next time they would be about 7 1/4" apart. I hand sewed the elastic and the beads (and extra reinforcement on the top of the machine stitches. I waited until I was finished sewing to trim down the sides. That's how to get stitches so close to the edge on leather very easily.


Saturday, September 24, 2016

Cardmaking kits



So school has just started up again and I'm back to very little free time again! But as usual, I'd rather put off cleaning my house for some unwinding in the crafting department. Stress relief come in many flavors and since wine at 11 am is socially unacceptable, I do arts and crafts!

I am going to be doing a big move in a year or so and my lovely fiance pointed out that I have a lot of "craft crap". I downsized a while ago but it just turned into an excuse to buy newer and better stuff. And while I told him to mind his business and worry about downsizing his own stuff, I unfortunately realized he's right. So the solution is kits!




Have you ever bought a pack of absolutely BEAUTIFUL card stock on sale and realized that while you love every page (or don't, in some cases) you just don't need repeats of each page that seem to make the whole stack weight about 3 lbs.

I also usually work small. Mini books, traveler's notebooks, cards, etc. So a full 12x12 scrapbook page goes a long way for me. So for gifts for my crafty friends (and etsy, working on getting that set up. It's coming soon!) I decided scrapbooking/card kits are the way to go!


Project ideas and examples for what's included in the kit.

It also really clears up my scrap pile. As any crafty person knows even the tiniest shape of paper can be used for something, it's part of being a hoarder creative. Cutting them into little squares and finally saying goodbye is the first step to recovery. And by recovery I of course mean clearing space for new hobby lobby sale finds.

Texture is probably my favorite thing in the world. If I find a print with shiny/embossed/metallic aspects I want it!

Woodland set

Black and White set