Monday, September 15, 2014

Teachers of Good Things Craft Day

At my church (shout out to Walridge Baptist Church!) we have a monthly Ladies Meeting for our women's ministry, Teachers of Good Things. Up until now it's consisted of a potluck/Bible study combo, which has been wonderful (and tasty!). But recently we have decided to change things up a bit. We're going in cycles each quarter, with one month being focused on missions, one month a prayer meeting, and one month...a CRAFT DAY!!!


I may have been a little excited about it. Our first craft day was this past Saturday, and I was really nervous about it because Leah, our pastor's wife (who is also my sister-in-law and married to my brother Toby, er, our pastor) asked me to head it up. We decided to do cards this month, and Leah and I went on several crazy, madcap supply runs that may have involved various milkshakes and some total geeking out over craft tools.

I was up till I-don't-want-to-share-this-info-with-my-husband o'clock the night before, slicing cardstock, die cutting circles, and embossing all the things I could reach. Here's what we ended up doing:

First of all, Christmas tags. These were crazy simple. To make them, I first used my Sizzix to die cut a crap-load (that's just for Toby, who teases me because I recently stood up to give my testimony in church and managed to include the word "crap" in it twice, because I'm way classy), anyway, a crap-load of circles from cardstock. The circles were about 1.5 inches, and I used various colors of cardstock, including some pretty shimmery red and white that we got at Tuesday Morning, 25 sheets for $1.99. All of these I embossed with winter/Christmas designs using my Sizzix Big Kick and various embossing folders. I also cut scalloped circles the same size from plain cardstock. To assemble, the ladies just used Elmer's Glue-All to glue a scalloped circle to the back of an embossed circle, punched a hole through both layers using a hole punch, and attached either jute twine, baker's twine, or ribbon.






Next, we did note cards, both a Christmas version and an everyday use version. This is where all my paper slicing came in. Leah and I found tons of gorgeous cardstock stacks at Tuesday Morning, Joann, and AC Moore. The stacks were all 12x12 or 6x6, and we needed the cards to measure 4x6 before they were folded. So I cut the 12x12 sheets down into six 4x6 pieces each, and just sliced 2 inches off one side of the 6x6 sheets. Those 2 inch remnants were put to use as well, which I'll tell you about in a minute.


We folded the cards in half, then punched the front edge with Marvy Uchida Border Punches, like I did for Nick's grandmother here. I love my border punch system, and I got one for my friend Amy for her birthday last month. She was kind enough to let us borrow it for the craft day, and Leah and I found another for the church on one of our trips to Tuesday Morning. Then I found two more on another day and snatched them up for an early Christmas gift for Leah and a birthday gift for Nick's sister Rachael. So we had 5 to go around, but honestly we could have used twice that many.




We had all 8 different cartridges on hand, but most ladies chose the ribbon stitch one, and they had so much fun choosing pretty ribbon to weave through the slots.

The border punch does 2 inches at a time, so a four inch card was perfect. Also perfect about that size is the fact that an envelope made with a 6x6 inch sheet will fit it perfectly. We had several 6x6 stacks that we used for some of the envelopes, and I cut down a couple of 12x12 stacks for the rest. We had three of the WRMK Envelope Punch Boards on hand, and I wish we'd had more of those too. But several ladies said they planned on getting one of their own, so perhaps next time we'll have more. :)

The other project we did was to turn some of those 2 inch cardstock remnants into gorgeous bookmarks using the border punches and more ribbon.




I was really afraid that it wouldn't go well, that maybe I had too many projects planned and maybe the border punch and the envelope punch board might seem overwhelming to some. But every lady there picked right up on it within a few minutes, and the mistake pile was surprisingly small. I was also afraid that maybe they just wouldn't enjoy it, but most of them stayed over an hour past the scheduled end time!

I'm so excited it all went so well, and I can't wait for next quarter!

2 comments:

  1. I had a blast!!! Thanks to you and Leah for all your hard work. You didn't need to be nervous because it was a huge success. By the way, I've been to two Tuesday Morning stores and have not found that punch thingamajiggy. LOL!

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  2. Lol, I'm so glad you had fun! Keep an eye out for that border punch system, They've gotten some in several times over the last few months. :)

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