Well, we have pulled off another DIY birthday party - this time with the 80's theme. And thanks to my "cheapskate" inner being, total decor, cake and drinks was around $35.00.
I downloaded various 80's images from the internet of arcade games and screens and printed them off to have laying around. I used my Cricut to cut out pacman and ghost shapes, as well as a few 80's slang phrases. I scrounged up some old cassette tapes and spray painted them red and yellow and had some on the cake table, and other places. I cut out two guitar shapes from corrugated cardboard and painted them and had my dad draw the strings and frets on them. The cake was pacman. I made a sheet cake and cut it into a circle, then removed a pie-shaped wedge for the mouth. The cupcakes are to look like the "food" pacman ate on the arcade game. A little yellow icing and a single black candy melt, and voila!
For the tablecloth, I used a Dollar Store black disposable tablecloth, and purchased square napkins in bright colors and used glue dots to adhere to the front for a rubix cube look. Since I am no good at writing with icig, I printed a sign to display behind the cake with the "Happy Birthday" on it.
I used beads from leftover projects to create several really gaudy necklaces for the girls to wear. I scored 144 jelly bracelets off ebay for like $2.00. A package of hideous blue sparkly eye shadow completed the ensembles! And I also got two disco light bulbs from ebay for around $6 each to add to the ambiance. I managed to find submersible, battery-operated lights (again from ebay) and added them to our punch!
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
Friday, September 25, 2015
More DIY Halloween Decor Potion Bottle
So, here is latest creation! I love these because they can be done with nearly any type of bottle or jar, and they are super-cheap to make!
This was made with a glass bottle, although I think I would prefer plastic. You can use an empty alcohol bottle, vitamin bottle, etc. I drew my letters and designs on the bottle with marker, then traced with a hot glue gun. Once cooled, I painted the entire thing black with acrylic paint, being sure to get into all the crevices of the letters and designs. After that, it's whatever floats your boat in colors. I had some brown, orange and tan acrylic paint I just dobbed around to give it an old look. Then I used a light tan/yellow to highlight the raised parts of the glue design. Once dry, I covered with a coat of Modpodge and hot-glued a little jute around the top.
Cool, one-of-a-kind decor at hardly any cost to me!
This was made with a glass bottle, although I think I would prefer plastic. You can use an empty alcohol bottle, vitamin bottle, etc. I drew my letters and designs on the bottle with marker, then traced with a hot glue gun. Once cooled, I painted the entire thing black with acrylic paint, being sure to get into all the crevices of the letters and designs. After that, it's whatever floats your boat in colors. I had some brown, orange and tan acrylic paint I just dobbed around to give it an old look. Then I used a light tan/yellow to highlight the raised parts of the glue design. Once dry, I covered with a coat of Modpodge and hot-glued a little jute around the top.
Cool, one-of-a-kind decor at hardly any cost to me!
Thursday, September 24, 2015
DIY Fun Halloween Decor
Two simple and fun Halloween projects: Witchy Potion Jars, and Witchy Spell Books
Witchy Potion Jars I made from various old jars I had sitting around, and I used different shapes and sizes. I downloaded some free printables and printed them on tissue paper. Grabbed my Modpodge and applied to the jars. I then took some lengths of jute and hot-glued in different places for one-of-a-kind jars. These look cute as-is, or you could fill with fall potpourri or colored liquid!
For the Spell Books, I used some yard-sale finds. You can usually pick up hard-back books for anywhere from .25 to $1.00. I guessed at the center of the book and opened and kind of smashed it to stay in the open position. Again, downloaded a few free printables and printed on tissue paper. I tore the images rather than have a straight cut, and decoupaged them onto both open pages, as well as the front and back cover and binding. I used a brown scrapbook stamp pad to "scruff" some age around the edges of the pages,and curled the corners of a few pages either side of the center of the book. Once I was happy with the look, I put on like 3-4 coats of Modpodge to every surface, so it would hold the book in an open position. These look great laying down, or in an easel. These probably took the most time, because I had to wait for each coat to dry, but they look very unique!
Witchy Potion Jars I made from various old jars I had sitting around, and I used different shapes and sizes. I downloaded some free printables and printed them on tissue paper. Grabbed my Modpodge and applied to the jars. I then took some lengths of jute and hot-glued in different places for one-of-a-kind jars. These look cute as-is, or you could fill with fall potpourri or colored liquid!
For the Spell Books, I used some yard-sale finds. You can usually pick up hard-back books for anywhere from .25 to $1.00. I guessed at the center of the book and opened and kind of smashed it to stay in the open position. Again, downloaded a few free printables and printed on tissue paper. I tore the images rather than have a straight cut, and decoupaged them onto both open pages, as well as the front and back cover and binding. I used a brown scrapbook stamp pad to "scruff" some age around the edges of the pages,and curled the corners of a few pages either side of the center of the book. Once I was happy with the look, I put on like 3-4 coats of Modpodge to every surface, so it would hold the book in an open position. These look great laying down, or in an easel. These probably took the most time, because I had to wait for each coat to dry, but they look very unique!
Monday, September 14, 2015
Another DIY Birthday Party - Dinosaurs!!!
This was my grandson's 2nd birthday party. His mom chose dinosaurs for the theme, so we all put our heads together to make it happen. And thanks to the internet and Pinterest, we were able to do most things ourselves!
This is the coolest! We saw this on the internet and knew we needed it! My mom and dad cut this out of cardboard and painted it,and then attached a couple of pieces of wood to the back so it would stand up. We used it for a ball toss, and then had kids stick their heads in the hole for a neat picture.
We had the cake made by a local bakery, and I made the cupcakes - frosted with chocolate icing and sprinkled with crushed chocolate cookies, topped with dinosaurs and a couple of jelly beans for "dinosaur nests".
We had pretzels for "dinosaur bones" and bugles for "dinosaur toenails". Our green punch was called "swamp water".
We had a roll of painter's paper that we scrunched up and wrapped ivy garland around and used for hanging decor as well as table centerpieces.
And the hit of the party, the "Dino Dig"! We lined a small plastic pool with a brown sheet and filled with sand. Then buried toy dinosaur skeletons and bones for the kids to dig up. Of course, they got to take their buckets and "findings" home with them.
I made dinosaur soap to put in their treat bags. Melted a little glycerin soap base, added a dash of fragrance and set the dinosaurs in!
All in all, it was a great success!
This is the coolest! We saw this on the internet and knew we needed it! My mom and dad cut this out of cardboard and painted it,and then attached a couple of pieces of wood to the back so it would stand up. We used it for a ball toss, and then had kids stick their heads in the hole for a neat picture.
We had the cake made by a local bakery, and I made the cupcakes - frosted with chocolate icing and sprinkled with crushed chocolate cookies, topped with dinosaurs and a couple of jelly beans for "dinosaur nests".
We had pretzels for "dinosaur bones" and bugles for "dinosaur toenails". Our green punch was called "swamp water".
We had a roll of painter's paper that we scrunched up and wrapped ivy garland around and used for hanging decor as well as table centerpieces.
And the hit of the party, the "Dino Dig"! We lined a small plastic pool with a brown sheet and filled with sand. Then buried toy dinosaur skeletons and bones for the kids to dig up. Of course, they got to take their buckets and "findings" home with them.
I made dinosaur soap to put in their treat bags. Melted a little glycerin soap base, added a dash of fragrance and set the dinosaurs in!
All in all, it was a great success!
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
It's A Girl!!!! Baby Shower
Well, thanks to my need to pinch pennies on everything I do, we pulled off a baby shower for my son & daughter-in-law without spending a bunch! And thanks to Pinterest, every cheapskate's bible, we did most everything ourselves.
Our shower was sheep-themed. I printed book binding titles that were sheep-related on card stock and wrapped around old books for a display. I made a diaper cake - these are surprisingly easy to make - and used hats, headbands, washcloths and socks rolled into flowers for accents. Then my daughter and I tried our hand at dipping marshmallows into candy melts and then into sprinkles, and they turned out great! We strung a clothesline and hung outfits from it. Instead of a guest book, I cut out onesie shapes with my Cricut Explore and suspended on some string in an empty picture frame with tiny clothespins. One game we played was "The Price Is Right", where guests had to match prices with baby products ( I even managed to record the theme song on my phone for an authentic feel while guests played!) And due to all the chaos that goes with being pregnant, I went ahead and printed thank you cards we handed out to guests as their gift was opened. I made a cute sign from some scrap 1x12 pine. Painted pink, and again, using my Cricut, I cut out letters from vinyl and removed the letters so I was left with a sticky "stencil" and painted the words on. I found some cute vintage sheep pictures and printed them out on tissue paper and decoupaged them on. We also had guests write funny sayings on diapers for those "middle-of-the-night" diaper changes!
And the kids wanted big letters with the baby's name for her room, so I went ahead and purchased and painted them and used for decoration - very cute! I purchased the big letters from Hobby Lobby and painted white, then glued sawtooth hangers on each letter. The name "taylor" I purchased from woodenletters.net for a very reasonable price, and painted pink.
Nearly all the decorations were usable items - diapers, washcloths, outfits, bath products, etc. All in all, I'd say it was a total success!
Our shower was sheep-themed. I printed book binding titles that were sheep-related on card stock and wrapped around old books for a display. I made a diaper cake - these are surprisingly easy to make - and used hats, headbands, washcloths and socks rolled into flowers for accents. Then my daughter and I tried our hand at dipping marshmallows into candy melts and then into sprinkles, and they turned out great! We strung a clothesline and hung outfits from it. Instead of a guest book, I cut out onesie shapes with my Cricut Explore and suspended on some string in an empty picture frame with tiny clothespins. One game we played was "The Price Is Right", where guests had to match prices with baby products ( I even managed to record the theme song on my phone for an authentic feel while guests played!) And due to all the chaos that goes with being pregnant, I went ahead and printed thank you cards we handed out to guests as their gift was opened. I made a cute sign from some scrap 1x12 pine. Painted pink, and again, using my Cricut, I cut out letters from vinyl and removed the letters so I was left with a sticky "stencil" and painted the words on. I found some cute vintage sheep pictures and printed them out on tissue paper and decoupaged them on. We also had guests write funny sayings on diapers for those "middle-of-the-night" diaper changes!
And the kids wanted big letters with the baby's name for her room, so I went ahead and purchased and painted them and used for decoration - very cute! I purchased the big letters from Hobby Lobby and painted white, then glued sawtooth hangers on each letter. The name "taylor" I purchased from woodenletters.net for a very reasonable price, and painted pink.
Nearly all the decorations were usable items - diapers, washcloths, outfits, bath products, etc. All in all, I'd say it was a total success!
Friday, January 16, 2015
Shabby Memo Boards
These were so fun to make! I scrounged up a couple of picture frames with ugly pictures and only kept the frames. I painted them fun colors, and stapled chicken wire on the back side. Then I painted some wooden clothes pins in coordinating colors. These are great for notes, photos, jewelry, or whatever!
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