Showing posts with label Spring Tree. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spring Tree. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Spring Tree (3 of 4)

Here's another blown egg project that turned out pretty cute:  Spring Flower Baskets
The materials I used were
colored eggshells 'cup-shaped'

leftover deconstructed spring 'silk' flowers and soft reindeer moss

raffia + my rope-making tool from quilting days
You can make rope from anything--embroidery floss, pearl cotton, raffia, ribbon . . . sky's the limit.  The half-shells that I used were too petite to use heavy rope, so I found some strands of raffia and used the rope maker to twist up some petite rope to match.  Knotted the lengths I needed before cutting, and then hot glued them in place.

See the rope handle--twisted raffia, knotted, cut, and glued in place


My friend Rita gave me the coolest tie-dyed eggs several years ago, and I'm fascinated with the way they look and the process used to make them.



These are blown eggs that have been died by a transfer process.  I'm not sure about the actual process, but the patterns come from old silk ties that were wrapped around the eggs.  Pretty cool!



This is my favorite one--the color and pattern are so pretty.












They've been sitting in a bowl every year, but this year, I decided to use my trusty Dremmel to install a hanger so they could grace the Spring Tree.  I found shank buttons from Mama's button box and lengths of leftover ribbon. With a little fear and caution, I very carefully drilled out and enlarged one of the holes already in each egg.  A dab of hot glue and each ribbon loop was secured with a shank button to finish.

Now there were new treasures to hang on the tree!

The transfered patterns of each silk tie are fascinating to me

One day a couple of years ago, my friend Jo introduced me to a great shop in the Houston Heights.  I purchased some friendship bracelets to use as napkin rings for a table I would be decorating/hosting at our Women's Ministry's Spring Tea.  As usual, the decorating plan evolved right out of the realm of the friendship bracelets, but I saved them for some unknown special use.


And the Spring Tree was the perfect place to display them.  I used some blown dyed eggs from the early 90's, enlarged one of the holes with the Dremmel (can I repeat that power tools rock?!!!), and hot-glued the looped friendship bracelet there to make a hanger.



Don't you love the delicate flower and leaf beads on these colorful woven friendship bracelet
egg hangers?!









They turned out so nice.
The pastel egg is the background--
the hanger is the star.








What's Spring without nesting birds?
Another friend from Chappell Hill (Texas, near Brenham) where we used to live gifted me a shoebox with half a dozen beautiful bird's nests harvested from her yard.  I found a perfect little cardinal's nest.  Don't you love seeing all the materials they used to make it?  Cardinals make tight little neat bowls for their babies.

    I rummaged through Mama's button box once again and found the perfect button 'eggs.'

  Three pearl 'eggs' in the nest, and one on the side.
 
 
The nest fits nicely in the crook of the Spring Tree.

nest is on the left in a crook of the Spring Tree



you can see the nest with butterfly garland fluttering above

So, here are some pix of the finished Spring Tree.  Happy Spring!

 

hand painted ceramic eggs from the BlueBird Circle Houston share the base of the tree with reindeer moss and silk flowers




Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Spring Tree (1 of 4)

Such fun!  Too much time on my hands, maybe.  But I was in need of a Spring Break vacation, and who in their right mind would leave Texas this time of year?!  Working with my hands in some (creative) way takes me to a Happy Place.

 Got the Spring tote down from its storage spot and found some old friends:  sparkly blown eggs from, oh, I don't know, maybe the early '90's;  tie dyed blown eggs from my friend Rita; hand-painted ceramic eggs from my Mom and the BlueBird Circle in Houston (circa 1970 +); and an old dear wooden duck ornament from the 50's.


I arranged them in their normal bowls and baskets (yawn), but when I brought home the bare-branched white 'tree' that I had decorated with Valentines and left in the Dining Hall at my 92 year-old Dad's skilled nursing facility where he's receiving therapy for a broken femur, the idea started to sprout.

Stripped of its February decorations, this was just begging to be a Spring/Easter tree.








Off to Pier One to buy some birthday gifts because (a) I love the store, and (b) I have a sizeable store credit.  Of course, the store was busting with Spring and Easter decor.  Cute little ($$$) feather trees and adorable ($$!) ornaments just challenged me to create my own Spring Tree with things I already had at home.

While Hunting and Gathering in Pier One, I found this sweet note card that became my inspiration for the Spring Tree.  Its pink and white vellum overlay and bright printed paper flower with button center called my name.  Store credit meant I didn't actually spend any money, right?  Of course, I deconstructed it (thanks to Alton Brown/Iron Chef America for the term!) to get all the mileage I could from its parts.  Even the envelope was a floral print.  The flower's button center inspired me to get out Mama's button box.  The vellum sent me Googling for butterfly garland how-to's.  See Spring Tree blog (2 of 4) for garland pix and tips.
I was onboard the Happy Train and leaving the station!

Ever made blown eggs?  It's been years; again I Googled.  Salmonella!! was not even on the horizon of thought back in the day when I poked 2 holes in each raw egg, set my mouth on the shell to blow out the goop.

Google the directions for this part of the project.  Just wanted you to see the cool Dremel tool that I used to drill the holes in the shells.  The tapered bit (in the drill) worked really well, but easy does it!  It doesn't hurt to practice; see my big slip on the trial shell?


Also, probably a good idea to go outside for eggshell cutting/drilling.
There's dust involved and, oh,
it smells like when the dentist drills on your tooth!


Then I used the Dremel (power tools rock!) with the cutting wheel to cut them in half.  Again, go easy and slow.  Some were cut like devilled eggs and some just the normal way you crack an egg.  I marked the shell by putting a rubber band around and tracing a pencil line there.




Using nitrile gloves and a pearlescent color kit (which I won't use again--the colors wind up on the fingers even weeks later), I colored the blown shells.  The colors are pretty vibrant and pearly; guess I could have sealed them.

Torn gift tissue and thinned school glue were used to line the shells with papier mache.  Planning to put little candies in them when they hang on the tree.


The handles on these boat-shaped eggshell baskets are nothing more than old deconstructed 'silk flower' leaves.







Don't they make cute little egg boats?!

It's easiest to attach one side of the handle and let the hot glue set up before attaching the other side.
You can see the pearly marbelized green, blue and purple here.  Plus the papier mache lining.






Probably time for lunch or a cup of tea by now. 
The Happy Train has definitely left the station!