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The holidays are expensive enough without wrapping up a fortune on Christmas decorations. You can make all of your decorations yourself this year and save a bundle. The best part is, you¡¯ll have lots of fun making the decorations, and kids can help, too.
Use a section of 4"X4" post to make a front porch snowman. The post doesn't have to be new and an old, worn piece makes the project look antique. Paint the post with white primer, then white paint. Now add a coat of white sparkle or glitter. Glue on craft eyes, a rubber or ceramic carrot and paint a mouth. Fashion a hat by making a wide cone shape from fleece. Glue the hat on, letting the point of the cone fall down to one side, then glue on a small bell or pom-pom. Tie a piece of fleece around the neck area of the snowman, then glue on black buttons.
Make a centerpiece for the kitchen table by placing pine branches, real or artificial, on a plate. Arrange apples, pine cones and candy canes amongst the pine branches. Or put the branches in a large basket, and scatter around fruit, nuts and candies. Most anything can be used for the base - a pie pan, deli tray, casserole dish or serving tray.
Cut a piece of fabric into a very large circle. A round kitchen table is the perfect size and shape. Cut the center of the circle away - about 6" in diameter. Make a slit from the center circle to the edge of the large circle. Use fabric glue to attach lace around the outer edge for a homemade tree skirt.
Shape a coat hanger into a circle, or purchase a wire circle to make a unique wreath. Using sandwich bags, clip the fold of the bag to where it can fold up, then fold the sandwich bag in half, lengthways and in half again. Tie the bag onto the circle and separate the layers. Tie the next bag and separate, and so on, until the bags are all tied onto the hanger. Make sure all the layers are separated from each other, and fluffed out. Now make a bow and tie it to the wreath using a tinsel stick or pipe cleaner. You can glue novelties or ornaments on the wreath, spray it with canned snow, or just dribble glitter glue all over it.
Use a tall soda cup, like those found at a drive-through restaurant to make a little Christmas tree. Turn the cup upside-down and wrap pine branches or garland around and around the cup. Glue them in place. Twist a small branch or small piece of garland tightly and glue to the top, to make the point of the tree. Now glue on strings of beads, tiny ornaments or use things from around the house to decorate the tree, like bows or pendants. You can buy an inexpensive star for the tree topper at a craft department or use a star-shaped button. Place the tree on a wooden stand or a round mirror. Make or buy little presents to put around the tree.
Purchase a round wooden base and a round glass globe. Arrange miniatures on the wooden base, like a tiny tree with presents, or a horse and buggy in front of a small village. Sprinkle artificial snowflakes around, then place the globe over the top. The globes can be found in various sizes at a hardware store where they sell globes for assorted light fixtures.
Ornaments can be made in dozens of different ways with little expense. Buy tinsel sticks, which come in 12" sections and cut them in half. Shape each piece like a candy cane and then thread red and white beads onto the sticks. Cut the tinsel sticks in 3" sections, glue two sections together at the middle, then glue the other two in the middle. Now glue one section on top of the other until you have a tinsel piece that has 8 points. Cut every other end down a half-inch, then thread white or clear beads to make a snowflake. For the hanger, fold a small piece of thread in half and insert it in the hole of the last bead. Glue into place, then slip the last bead into place and glue. For a cross ornament, cut one 4" piece of tinsel, and one 2.5" piece. Glue them into a cross shape and add beads. Use a large, pretty bead in the center. To make a sun catcher instead of an ornament, make the cross, then hang it in the window with a suction cup.
Another unique ornament can be made from a bathroom tissue roll. When it¡¯s empty, cut the cardboard, following the grooves on the roll. Cut along the grooves until the roll is separated into two pieces. Stretch the pieces out some, by pulling on both ends at the same time. This should give you a long, twisted ornament shape. Now cover the roll in glue, then glitter. Do the inside of the roll first, let dry, then do the outside. Now glue strings of beads to the edges of the roll and glue a hanger on top. Cover the glued hanger by tying a ribbon into a pretty bow, letting the ends of the bow hang long, and gluing it where the hanger meets the ornament.
Cut a piece of reindeer fabric, or another holiday design and glue it to a jar lid. Wrap the jar lid in red, white or green velvet, then brush the inside of the lid with glue, then glitter. Make tiny ones by using soda pop lids for the ornament.
The 12" tinsel sticks can be glued together then arranged into sayings like ¡°Happy Holidays¡±. They bend and shape easily and can then be taped to the fireplace mantel or front door. Buy inexpensive coasters then glue on tinsel, garland or pine branches. Place little red artificial berries on the pine branches or tiny bells on the garland. Do the same thing to any picture frame, candy dish, or catch-all basket. Use red foil to cover the front door, then gold foil to make a bow for the package. You can do windows in the same manner.
You¡¯ll enjoy the holidays so much more when you begin receiving compliments on your beautiful handmade Christmas decorations. |
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