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Posted in Carving, Crafts, Family Crafts, Halloween, Holidays, Patterns, Pumpkins, Reach Out/Charity
There’s nothing like Autumn in New England. Nightfall comes earlier each day, and the cool, crisp air gently rustles red and orange leaves that crunch under your feet. The roadside farmstands sell Indian Corn and squash and apple cider.
And pumpkins. Lots of pumpkins. Every house must have at least one, and come Halloween, jack o’ lanterns will glare and wink out from every doorway at wary trick-or-treaters.
Pumpkin carving is a fun and creative craft for the whole family. Whether you make your own designs or use patterns to create frightening faces, vampire visages or whimsical welcomers, carving your pumpkin can become a family tradition.
When picking out your pumpkins, remember that lighter color pumpkins are softer and are easiest to carve. Whether small or large, choose a pumpkin with a shape that will accomodate your design well.
Before carving, wash any dirt off the pumpkin and let dry.
Prepare for carving by cleaning out the inside of the pumpkin. Cut the top of the pumpkin in a circle around the stem and pull the top off using the stem as your handle. Then remove the soft guts and seeds using a strong-handled spoon or an ice cream scoop. Leave the inside wall of the pumpkin smooth and not too thick. You can save the seeds to roast for a hot treat or to dry and plant next year for your own pumpkin patch.
Purchasing a carving tool set will make the project a lot easier than trying to use kitchen knives. Also available is a battery powered carving tool that will make carving quicker and easier.
Little ones can draw a face on their own small pumpkins that you can carve out for them. Another cool way for them to make their own pumpkin faces is with special facial feature stickers that let them create funny or spooky faces. Never let young children use the carving tools.
If you are an accomplished pumpkin carver, try using a carving design pattern. I found great patterns available for free at (where else?) Pumpkin Master. Download free designs and get tips for creating your pumpkin masterpiece.
Here are some other sites with free carving patterns
SpookMaster
Fabulous Foods
Rock N Roll Heaven Collection
The Pumpkin Wizard
And don’t forget the tea light candles!
Posted in Community Projects, Craft Supplies, Easy Crafts, Floral Crafts, Gifts, Holidays, Kid's Crafts, Painting & Drawing, Paper Crafts, Reach Out/Charity, Recycled Crafts, Scrapbooking, Techniques, The Environment, Vacation Bible School
Now this is a great idea! I wish I had thought of it. If you buy CD’s and don’t leave them in the original case, but put them in a larger binder or whatever, you probably have wondered what you could do with all of those cases. They seem like a craft just needing to happen. I keep my CD’s in a big leather binder and I have often wondered that but unfortunately didn’t keep them! Now I see what could have been done with them. Get the family, Girl Scout Troop, class, Sunday school members, or whoever together to turn these CD cases into photo frames!
This is a wonderful craft for kids. It is also a fun one for adults. It is quick, easy, inexpensive, and would be so enjoyed by so many. Kids could make these for grandparents or people who reside in nursing homes to remind them they are not forgotten. A graduating class of elementary school kids could make these with a collage of their friend’s pictures. And what a great gift for a teacher that would be! No excuse for the lack of a Mother’s Day present now! Make a little nature scene out of things you find on the beach or on a hike.
There are so many ideas for this that I am sure you will come up with even more. What is best is that this is essentially a free craft; the CD case probably would have been thrown out and all of the trims and paints you will already have. Instead you will be recycling something into a meaningful and quite charming gift.
Posted in Communities for Crafters, Craft Supplies, Floral Crafts, Gifts, Glass Crafts, Holidays, Jewelry, Knit/Crochet, Needle Felting, Painting & Drawing, Paper Crafts, Patterns, Quilting, Reach Out/Charity, Scrapbooking, Sewing, Woodworking Projects
There is a risk in crafting. Any kind of crafting. The risk is addiction. Actually it is not an addiction in the strictest definition of the term, but it might as well be because of the effect it has on crafters. I can’t even count the number of resolutions I have heard on New Year’s Eve that go something like this: “I promise I will finish my unfinished _____ (fill in the blank - knitting, crocheting, beadwork, whatever craft you like) before I buy any more projects.” That is a resolution that lasts about a week, if that long. Crafters are addicted, compulsive about, or just plain nuts about starting new crafting projects.
It is a self-defeating behavior but one that almost all of us are guilty of doing. Much of it is because of how much we love what we do. Another thing that can cause a huge WIP (work in progress) supply, is the explosion of imagination. Once you start one thing and get going on it, other ideas begin to germinate. One thing leads to another and pretty soon you have a dozen projects with a dozen more sets of supplies to start others. They call it a yarn stash, or a bead stash for a reason!
I have a few hints that have helped me get my “stash” and WIP list a little more under control. I have recently made some changes that have caused a temporary swelling of the WIPs, but it will “cure” itself in a few months and then the WIP should diminish until I have a static and manageable amount of things I am working on.
- Don’t feel you should only have one project at a time going. That is unrealistic. You will want different projects to work on depending on your mood, whether you need a gift, degree of complexity, how portable it is, and so on. But just a few different ones should satisfy the need for variety without overwhelming you. And it is nice to finish something once in awhile!
- Pick one, two or three crafts that you really enjoy and are really good at. Also give yourself room to grow. Choose those crafts you continually can improve at. Becoming really good at a couple things is much more satisfying than doing a lot of things just fairly.
- When you shop for supplies, keep in mind what crafts you have chosen to pursue(based on hint #2). If you can use it within those crafts, it won’t be a waste of money or start you on another wild goose chase.
- Organize yourself. File your patterns in notebooks, file folders, plastic bins or whatever works for you. Categorize them so that when you want something, you can find it.
- Store supplies in an organized system. Put yarns together and subdivide them; sock yarns should be stored with sock yarns and bulky yarns should be stored together. Make it so that you can get to what you need quickly.
- Get small plastic storage bins and put one project in each bin. Label the outside of the bin. Keep something by the sofa or chair where you watch television or movies and work on that project there. Keep one by your bed; when a sleepless night arrives, an hour of crocheting or knitting can do wonders. If you work on crafts that are difficult to work on in certain environments, keep books around to read about improving your skills or admiring the galleries of other people’s work.
- Reward yourself. When you complete a project, you get to do something you really want - a trip to the bookstore? An afternoon at the movies? There are many ways we can motivate ourselves.
- Keep a craft journal. There are journals made for many kinds of crafting and seeing your progess and completed work is a lot of fun. After a few years, you will see how your skills have grown.
- Give back a little. Get involved in a charity project that utilizes your crafting skills. Consider a swap of knitted or crocheted squares - there are swaps all over the Internet for every craft. It is a lot of fun to meet people and exchange crafting projects. I am involved in several swaps right now and they have been good for me in terms of keeping me focused.
- Keep a blog. It will keep you honest. If you are posting photos of your work and you talk about it, your readers will expect to see that progress and to see a finished project. As a benefit, you will meet a lot of people and make some very special friends.
You will never get over craft addiction completely. Who wants to? Part of the fun is knowing all of the wonderful things you have waiting to be made. Keeping it under control, however, will help your budget, your stress level, and your sense of pride all at the same time. And that’s a pretty crafty idea!
Posted in Artists, Photography, Reach Out/Charity
The words craft and crafting are open to interpretation. One person’s craft may not be another’s. That’s okay though, because here at Craftmodo, we believe that anything you create, and apply yourself to and into, is a craft. Photography, particularly photography with a message is a wonderful craft that is often overlooked in the arts and crafts community.

The Self Portrait Challenge is probably one of the most unusual ideas I have seen on the Internet in awhile. It involves some real no-strings-attached honesty. Cameras tell no lies, and how the artist, or photographer, interprets those images say much about his or her view of the world.
Never is that more true than in a self-portrait.
This site is fascinating. I think some amazing things will be showing over the next four weeks.
Self Portrait Challenge
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