Tag Archives: creativity

Day 5: Shrinky Dink Rings

UPDATE: Sad to say these rings, made with offbrand shrink plastic, didn’t work!  The ink rubbed off and the rings were too brittle and broke.  Boo.  I have since done a project with the real deal: Shrinky Dinks.  It is thicker and seems to be stronger and less brittle.  Once the 30 Days of Creativity project is over, I’ll revisit this creation and if I’m happy with them, I’ll post it.

These rings are fun to make!  I saw this incredible tutorial by June Gilbank and decided it was my creation for Day 5 of 30. I used Stampin’ Up’s version of shrink plastic and as June pointed out in her tutorial, each brand of shrink plastic is different, so if you want to make them, you’ll have to do some trial runs to get the sizing right.

You need to use alcohol-based permanent ink with rubber-stamps which I didn’t have but you can also draw your design on with a fine-tipped Sharpie.  I did one design of flowers freehand and for another ring I traced words from a rubber stamp using a Sharpie. <<UPDATE: I wore one of my rings today and the ink came off onto my finger!  Some of the colored pencil came off too.  Again, I wasn’t using name brand shrinky dinks and used a Sharpie, not alcohol-based permanent ink.  I hope to do more experiments in the future with shrink plastic and will note my findings!>>  Some shrink plastic has one rough or frosted side which takes the ink well and can also be colored with colored pencils.  Mine was not but I used a fine sanding block to rough up one side and it took the color perfectly.

Another option is to skip the ink entirely and color one side with colored pencil.  That side will be matte and the other side is shiny.  Decide which side you want out – I like the color showing through the shiny side, but I also like the matte side out as in my “coral” ring.

The trickiest part is shaping the ring.  Once you heat the plastic and shrink it, you have to move really quickly to shape it around something before it cools and you probably have about 10 seconds or less.  But you can reheat it and reshape it.  You’ll need to take a ring that fits and find something in your house that your ring will fit snugly over – I’ve got big fingers and was able to find a cork that worked great.  You might use the wooden handle of a spoon or a tube of lip balm.

I roll the hot plastic on the cork as fast as possible, and then hold it in place with a towel.  I got a few scorched fingertips and had to reheat most of the rings to get a nice round shape.  I also had one ring snap and break. The strip of plastic started around half an inch wide – the one that snapped was a quarter inch before shrinking.  Instead of using the toaster oven to heat the shrink plastic, I used my heat tool and wooden chopsticks to hold the plastic in place.  It curls up and looks like it is going to get stuck in an odd shape, but it flattens out.

If you’ve got some shrink plastic in a craft cupboard or desk drawer, why not  pull it out and create a ring or three for yourself or a friend?  Thanks for checking out Day 5 of 30 Days of Creativity.

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Day 4: Pizza Bites

Bites of dough made from scratch, stuffed with warm, melt-y mozzarella cheese and spicy bits of pepperoni.  Rem and I made Pizza Bites for dinner and though we enjoyed them, we didn’t love them as we expected to.  Maybe because I adjusted the recipe to make it a little healthier (1/4 wheat flour in the dough, part skim mozzarella cheese and in my half of the batch, turkey pepperoni) but these were more doughy and less yummy than we’d hoped.

I found the recipe on Annie’s Eats (click on the title to go to her blog and see her recipe) and made the changes mentioned above.  We don’t have a stand mixer so I mixed and kneaded the dough by hand.  These are good and kind of fun but I don’t know if we would make them again.

I don’t like all the tomato sauce on most pizza but I love the crust.  Because these little balls of dough are put up against each other in the pan before baking they aren’t very crusty.  Perhaps baking them in a larger pan and more spread out would make them more like I imagined.  Of course using whole milk mozzarella and some cooked Italian sausage might win me over too.  I dipped some in marinara and could imagine them slathered in butter.

Paprika marked the ones filled with turkey pepperoni

Making pizza dough and baking Pizza Bites on a rainy day with your sweetheart isn’t a bad thing and we’ll use the other half of the dough for pizza dinner on another night. That is my creation for today, day 4 of 30 Days of Creativity.

UPDATE: Leftovers, warmed in the microwave for about 20 seconds than toasted in the toaster oven were really good, especially with a bit of butter.

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Day 3: Security Envelope Flower Cards

These cute cards are made by punching flower shapes from security lined envelopes which I was able to find in my basket of mail. Recycling is always a good idea and with 27 days of creating to go, I figure the more projects I can do without buying a bunch of new supplies, the better!

Look at all these great patterns and colors.  Yes, you say, but what about the buttons? True, I have purchased buttons from the craft store to embellish projects.  In keeping with this idea, I came up with another resource.

You probably have buttons like these in a drawer or jewelry box.  Perhaps buttons for an item of clothing that no longer lives in your closet.  I don’t know if I’ve ever used these any buttons from these little packets, but I saved them!

You can see where I got this idea here at Mel’s Designs.  She embellished her cards with sewing machine stitching and some sparkly gems. Once you’ve assembled th flowers it is quick work to make a few greeting cards.

These cards make me happy.  I’m looking forward to creating something new tomorrow. Thanks for stopping by!

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Day 2: Embossed Tins

This was a fun project that I shared with some colleagues during lunch: embossed tins.  We used thin metal duct tape to cover the lids of  little candy tins then embossed designs into the tape using pencils.

The aluminum duct tape is sold at the hardware store and we used small tins that most of us dug out of drawers.  The tape is used to cover the lid, a craft knife trims the edges and a plastic spoon smooth everything flat and burnishes the edges.  Stamping designs onto paper or printing them off the computer was simple. Tape the paper to the tin and trace the design with a pencil, remove the paper, go over the lines and add more detail.  The results are really quite impressive!

I found the instructions here at CraftStylish in an article by Diane Gilleland.  She is the new editor of the online craft magazine CRAFT and also writes CraftyPod a blog about making stuff which is loaded with great craft information. Thank you, Diane, for showing me how to emboss a tin box.

And thank you to Monica, Candice, Sherry, Becky and Kait for your enthusiasm, creativity and humor.  I wonder what I’ll make tomorrow?

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Starting tomorrow…

30 Days of Creativity!  I have pledged to create something everyday for the month of June.  In a burst of pre-creative-project creativity I’ve made several cards, tried out a new craft medium for a future project and together with Rem, made a checkerboard cake.  I’ve made a list of ideas for recipes to try, crafts to include, blogs to check out and stuff I might make. I will post pictures of everything I create for my 30 Days of Creativity.

In the meantime I’m featuring two wonderful, local works of art: this Cyclisk, an obelisk made entirely from bike parts in the town of Santa Rosa, CA, created by Petaluma-based artists Mark Grieve and Ilana Spector.  It is 60 feet tall and and weighs 10,000 lbs.  Follow the link for more information.

The photos at the start of this post are yarn bombs, knitted “sleeves” stitched onto street signs and bike racks.  These are in front of Dharma Trading Co. in San Rafael, a fiber art supplies shop.  The artist, Streetcolor, has a blog, here,and she writes about her yarn bombing.  I LOVE both of these art works and the creativity behind them.

I’m looking forward to (and a little nervous about) working my creative muscles over the next month!

Stay tuned!

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