This month I actually made 2 projects for the Circle's "On the Road Again!" challenge. The first one I am very proud of (not to take anything away from the second project - but more on that later.) It's a 'break the ice' book for my daughter to take to Girl Scout horse camp on Sunday.
I really wanted her to have something that would give her a way to start conversations and share a little bit about herself with her cabin mates. She's seen it, and complimented me on it ;) , but I'm not letting her fill it out until the car ride to camp. She tends to be 'over it already,' so to speak, if I have a 2 part project for her and start the first part too soon. Not in a negative way, of course, she just feels done with it and has already found something new to be excited about. Basically, I've learned to time certain things right.
Anyway, this is the first project:
I used the Yee-Haw Lite cartridge and the Old West cartridge for the main theme of this file folder book since its for a horse riding camp. I was very lucky to find a shape that said "Saddle Up" on the Old West cartridge for my front page since that's the name of the camp she's going to attend! (She's using this shape to make SWAPS for swapping, too.)
I created a personal journaling space on the back. On the inside, I created four tags that insert into the pockets. I asked my daughter to come up with 4 questions she would like to ask her bunk mates in order to get to know them better. She decided on #1 Where are you from? (I cut out shapes from the 50 States cartridge of the states she has lived in), #2 Have you ever been to horse camp before? (Old West cartridge,) #3 Do you have any pets? (shapes of animals from Everyday Paper Dolls), and #4 What are your favorite hobbies? (shapes from Old West and Everyday Paper Dolls.)
I used chipboard in the tags because I wanted a firm writing surface. My daughter is going to fill out her answers on them on the car ride to camp and then ask the others girls to do so at camp. This way, they see what she had to say about herself as well.
My favorite thing about this book is that I adhered to part of the Girl Scout Law when I made it. Part of the Law says to "use resources wisely," and I applied that to my project. I made this book out of my scrap stash. I used 1 extra piece of new white cardstock to complete the tags (they are reversible) because I ran out of white in my stash, but everything else, from the shapes to the twine wrapped around it, are from leftover pieces of other projects. The file folder is made up of recycled paper, too, so it fits right in.
Now that I have finished tooting my own horn, I'll show my second project that actually made it into the Circle challenge. This project came about from a conversation with a fellow Circlet that felt entries to challenges should follow the guidelines more strictly than my first project may have done.
While I felt comfortable with what I designed as fitting the challenge of, "Create a project of your choice that will help you or your kids on that long summer road trip. It can be a travel game, travel activity, organizer, snack holder, whatever!," the introductory paragraph to the project said specifically to gear your project toward use in your car. (It says, "For a lot of us summertime means ROAD TRIP! For this challenge, we want you to create something . . . ANYTHING for your car! It can be a travel game, travel activity, organizer, whatever! Let your imagination run wild.")
For her, the part about creating something specifically for your car was important, as in not something that you can (and probably would usually,) do someplace else. She felt that maybe projects like my Camp Saddle Up book were pushing the limits a tiny bit, I think because projects like mine were meant to have the bulk of them used somewhere else besides n the car. Now, again, I feel my project would have worked because I thought all of it up after reading the challenge and am still going to have my daughter fill it out on the way to camp (plus, read the other girls entries to me on the way home,) but I see her point. And I am very glad she talked with me and planted the seed in my head because otherwise I might not have made this:
A little purse for my Gypsy's car charging cord. Totally stinkin' cute, right? I used a purse shape from Tags, Bags, Boxes and More (cut at a height of 7 inches from my Gypsy,) and a Gypsy emblem from Cricut Everyday. Much simpler that my file folder book but I love it! This way I can grab the right cord instead of fishing through the mangled pile that we usually have on road trips. Now my daughter has something to make her road trip go a little better and, I have something for mine.
So, thank you, fellow Circlet, for pushing me to try harder :)
Friday, June 24, 2011
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Another second place win for me!
I placed second at Signed Sealed Delivered's (in Rogers, Arkansas-my local scrapbooking shop,) monthly sketch contest. I did a 2 page 12x12 layout of my daughter meeting Ariel at Disney in Orlando.
I used the Mickey Font cartridge for my mouse ear shapes and my Gypsy to weld them together to create a couple of borders. Ariel, Flounder and the flowers came from the Disney Dreams Come True cartridge.
My favorite thing about this layout is the mouse ear hat I created that mimics my daughter's hat. I wanted to really highlight it because Ariel talked about it with my daughter and was so charming and funny.
I cut the mouse ear hat shape from the Mickey Font cartridge to use as a base. I then cut a circle (from George & Basic Shapes I think,) a little bigger than the hat. I trimmed about 1/3 off the circle and sprayed it with water then draped it over the top of a can of Magic Sizing to dry. (Note: I did not use the Magic Sizing other than for the shape of the can.) When it was dry, I made a crown with bling to mimic the real hat and glued it in place over the Cricut cut hat. I stuffed a couple of cotton balls in it and then lined the bottom with paper to hold them in.
I used some fancy material from Joann's to create a veil. The result was a pretty cool 3-D hat for my layout.
I used the Mickey Font cartridge for my mouse ear shapes and my Gypsy to weld them together to create a couple of borders. Ariel, Flounder and the flowers came from the Disney Dreams Come True cartridge.
My favorite thing about this layout is the mouse ear hat I created that mimics my daughter's hat. I wanted to really highlight it because Ariel talked about it with my daughter and was so charming and funny.
I cut the mouse ear hat shape from the Mickey Font cartridge to use as a base. I then cut a circle (from George & Basic Shapes I think,) a little bigger than the hat. I trimmed about 1/3 off the circle and sprayed it with water then draped it over the top of a can of Magic Sizing to dry. (Note: I did not use the Magic Sizing other than for the shape of the can.) When it was dry, I made a crown with bling to mimic the real hat and glued it in place over the Cricut cut hat. I stuffed a couple of cotton balls in it and then lined the bottom with paper to hold them in.
I used some fancy material from Joann's to create a veil. The result was a pretty cool 3-D hat for my layout.
Weekly Challenge #34: Father’s Day Card Sketch
This is my entry for the Cricut Circle weekly challenge. The photo doesn't show very many details of the card. I'm having issues with my computer and camera so I took this one on my phone (in bad lighting because I was too lazy to move to another room,) and emailed it to myself to get it on the computer.
My Cricut cuts are from Elegant Edges, which I got at the Cricut Stampede. (It immediately became one of my favorites.) I cut the same shape twice, once at 3 inches and again at 1 1/4 inches, and then layered them together. I added some red bling to the smaller shape to mirror a pattern in the paper of the bigger shape.
I used my Cuttlebug on the background piece in order to add a little texture. The design matches the pattern in the little rectangle that has the yellow bling. It shows up much better in person, thank goodness.
Of course, I used Tim Holtz' Distress Ink in Vintage Photo to ink my edges to make them separate from each other. That's really my 'go-to' ink. Everyone loves that one, don't they? I also pop-dotted my layers on top of my Cuttlebugged background. Doesn't that look just great on a card? I love it. Two simple steps that bring a card to life.
{Grrr, I just checked this posting - the colors are really bad in this photo! They're actually orange, green, and a little blue. I've got to get that computer/camera problem fixed!!
My Cricut cuts are from Elegant Edges, which I got at the Cricut Stampede. (It immediately became one of my favorites.) I cut the same shape twice, once at 3 inches and again at 1 1/4 inches, and then layered them together. I added some red bling to the smaller shape to mirror a pattern in the paper of the bigger shape.
I used my Cuttlebug on the background piece in order to add a little texture. The design matches the pattern in the little rectangle that has the yellow bling. It shows up much better in person, thank goodness.
Of course, I used Tim Holtz' Distress Ink in Vintage Photo to ink my edges to make them separate from each other. That's really my 'go-to' ink. Everyone loves that one, don't they? I also pop-dotted my layers on top of my Cuttlebugged background. Doesn't that look just great on a card? I love it. Two simple steps that bring a card to life.
{Grrr, I just checked this posting - the colors are really bad in this photo! They're actually orange, green, and a little blue. I've got to get that computer/camera problem fixed!!
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