About Me:
Every artist wants to seize motion and hold it fixed so that a hundred years later when a stranger looks at it, it moves again.
Recent Activity
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Clipped to Decor Ideas
Crafts: My 1st Craft Fair Booth!
Does anyone have any do's or don'ts? Or something that you like to see there to purchase? What draws you to a booth?
THanks!!
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CommentedHave a L@@K here http://www.artsbusinessinstitute.org/blog/10... ...»
What Would You Do With This Built-in Piece?
I purchased this house in south Florida recently. It was nautical / Key West themed but I am going to stay along the lines of tropical / beachy. I am still figuring out all of my paint colors in the house but I am struggling what to do with this fishing rod cabinet that is built in to the wall on the right side as soon as you walk through my front door (glass french doors). Any suggestions? I thought of the obvious ones (curio...don't need another, shelves, etc) but looking for something more creative! Thanks
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Commentedsaw this on Google ~ http://indulgy.com/post/c4eZMY22A1/wine-clos...
STAINED GLASS so easy
Do you absolutely love Stained Glass? It's very expensive and permanent. What happens if you grow tired of it? Here's a splendid way to bring Stained Glass into your home by using
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CHIHULY Inspired Sun Catcher Made From Recycled Plastic Drinking Cups
Preheat the oven to 300 degrees. I use a regular cookie sheet lined with parchment to put the plastic on for melting/shrinking in the oven. The shrinking only takes 2-3 minutes, so stay close. Use sharp scissors to cut plastic cups into different shapes (or leave whole). BEFORE you melt/shrink it, punch a hole in the plastic (it will be too hard after). The more variation in the plastic cups (bumps, ridges, etc.) the more interesting the piece will be. You can bend a piece after it is
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How very colorful. It would make a great kids craft with the kids doing the cutting and a ...»
Recycling turn Trash into Treasures
~ what do you do with an empty cereal box and beer carton RECYLE them ~ Make a 'base' from cereal boxes etc and crumbled newspapers, once base is ready, prepare the paste. (Browse through internet for paper mache paste options and choose the one that works best for you.) Tear newspaper into 1-2" strips. Dip one piece of newspaper at a time into the paper mache paste. Hold the saturated strip over the paste bowl and run it through your fingers to squeeze off any excess paste. Stick the
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