25 October, 2019

Kiwi love

Have you ever reached the "I'm sharing this amazing chocolate that my sister has brought me from New Zealand"-level of friendship? 
I can't tell which lucky coincidence has brought my colleague into my life, but since this girl marched right into her 30s recently, I started to look for a little something to sweeten up the process of getting older more experienced. 
It's been a while since I've created paper boxes, but I thought I might give it a try to create a chocolate bar envelope using a beautiful orange scrapbook paper. I like the way it has a different pattern on each side and thought it would be a quick and easy project to create a box and decorate it with some paper flowers and a birthday message. But as always, things come different in the end. 
The box did go easy indeed, and I felt confident enough to work around the chocolate bar itself, without any major markings and pre-cuts. However, there seemed to be too much orange halfway through, so I decided to cover the front lid with a beige embossed paper strip. 
Before I glued everything together, I used a small corner punch to round up the edges of the lid. Once that was done, I started to play around with the main motif. I wanted to stick to the idea of paper flowers, however, I decided to change the birthday greeting for the age, which I created by using golden stickers on a pair of punched paper leftovers. 
Since the punched ornament still seemed to be quite small, I expanded it by adding golden swirls and pearls, as well as three small orange-ish flowers. 
To make sure the box closes properly, I added a tiny orange ribbon, which also adds something "extra" on all the yawning blank that would be there otherwise.
The colour scheme of the box seems random, but is in fact matched with what's hiding inside: a chocolate bar from a land far, far away that survived not only the flight, but also the meticulous dividing done by my sister, who made sure each of us would get the most of all the different flavours she brought home.  
I did get some other pieces, too, but this one seemed to be the perfect giveaway for the occasion - not only for the matching outfit but for the fact that the birthday girl is very fond of spicy things. 
On the other hand, one must admit the wrapping itself is wonderful, too, and probably wouldn't need to be covered up at all - I can almost see myself using every tiny bit of the patterned paper in some of my recycling projects! 
But then again, life is full of surprises, and if only they were all as sweet and spicy as ginger & mandarin...
Only when I was done, however, I realized that I have entirely covered up the beautiful pattern that made me pick that particular paper in the first place. Entirely? Not exactly - even though there is no trace of it on the front lid, it's still pretty much on display all across the back of the box, which doesn't need the least of an embellishment thanks to the honeycomb print.
A little contribution to the October collection of Create in Austria - artwork created by Austrians and/or in Austria.

challenges: 
krafty chicks: ATG with optional twist "gift packing/tags"
613 avenue create: ATG
a bit more time to craft: ATG
allsorts challengeblog: add gold/silver
as you like it: favourite papers (among all the different papers I have in my stash, I regularly find myself using BoBunny products, or even grabbing a bunch of random papers in the store only to realize later that they have a BoBunny's logo somewhere on the side. Why? Because they come in beautiful soft colours, and their patterns can be used in so many different ways, and overall the BoBunny style just seems to match with my current style of paper crafting)
brown sugar: ATG
C.R.A.F.T.: Halloween/Thanksgiving
cardz4guyz: food/drink
crafting with an attitude: ATG
crafty calendar: autumn
crafty catz: ATG with optional twist "colours of autumn"
crafty gals corner: Halloween colours
crafty sentiments: ATG
craftyhazelnutspatternedpaper
creative inspirations: autumn/Halloween
creative moments: ATG with optional twist "girls"
cute card thursday: sparkles
friendship challenge: autumn
kreativtanten: ATG
love to craft: ATG 
moving along with the times: autumn colours
pennys papertake: ATG
scrapping4fun: ATG
through the craftroom door: ATG
wortartwednesday: ATG
worldwide open design team challenge: ATG

14 October, 2019

Boo!

Slowly but surely, I feel like I'm repeating myself over and over again, but I just can't help: everything that emerges my crafting corner recently seems to go by the "recycle/upcycle" theme - either I'm digging out long-forgotten treasures from my stash, or I intentionally decide to use things a normal person would throw away. 
Long story short, I've planned on upcycling beermats for ages, mainly because I think their size could be handy for some kind of ornament or else, while the cardboard itself gives a pretty solid base to work with. The problem is: I don't really like beer, meaning I don't drink it at all. However, I sneaked a couple of beermats with me on my last visit to Prague, and they've been hiding in my drawer ever since. I planned to create something with a beermat as a base, I just couldn't come up with the exact idea of what I wanted.
Until I recently found an anti-trash ad in one of the city magazines. What looks like a cute little ghost at first, is, in fact, a trashed plastic bag (presumably floating somewhere in the ocean?), accompanied by the slogan "Waste is scarier than you think".  
And something in my head began spinning... Take out the beermat, check whether the little fella would fit on its surface, cut the ad out and think some more. After assembling matching blue colours from my paper stash, I began to arrange the cutouts: according to my plan, one side of the beermat would be covered by the plastic demon...
... the edge was to be lined with a light blue ribbon... 
... and after some more thinking, I figured what to do with the backside, too. Even though I originally planned to just place the sentiment all over the surface to create a decorative hanger, I later changed my mind to create something practical. 
And so, the rear has a story of its own. Trying to avoid unnecessary trash when shopping, I recently began to visit Ljubljana's first plastic-free grocery store. I'm far from being an environmental saint and still do buy too many wrapped things because honestly they often come handy, but I do try to completely avoid packaging especially when it comes to vegetables or things I happen to buy regularly. I got used to always bring my cloth bag with me and can't help feeling more and more awkward when I see how carelessly people will fill their shopping carts with millions of things wrapped in plastic. Congratulations on tearing off 10 plastic bags from the roll as soon as you enter the shop, Mr. & Mrs. Retiree! Now if you'd keep in mind that you're going to leave the planet in a couple of years (no offense, just a biological fact) while I'll have to live another couple of decades with your trash in my soil and water, would you understand why I'm giving you the stinky look?
Anyhow, since you can bring your own containers to the zero-waste store and weigh them before you fill them up, I thought I wouldn't need to weight my tins over and over again if I just save one barcode for each size, label it properly and bring it with me each time I stop by to fill up my food supplies. With this in mind, I created a paper slit for the barcode tags, trimmed the ad sentiment to the right size and voilá: my new zero-waste shopping gadget.
And while the rear seems ok just the way it turned out, I added a tiny silver sticker to line the trash ghost image because I just have to add little embellishments here and there ;) 
A little contribution to the October collection of Create in Austria - artwork created by Austrians and/or in Austria.

A blue and white combination I can approve: beautiful Vrbsko jezero/Wörthersee on a beautiful autumn afternoon...
... alongside with the only white thing that is more than welcome to float in the water. 

challenges: 
krafty chicks: ATG
613 avenue create: ATG
brown sugar: ATG
cardz4guyz: spooky
crafting with an attitude: ATG
crafty calendar: Halloween
crafty catz: ATG with optional twist "witching hour"
creative inspirations: Halloween, masculine
creative moments: ATG with optional twist "spooky"
cute card thursday: Halloween
everybody art: ribbon/twine
fabnfunky: Halloween
kreativtanten: ATG
little red wagon: cut it out
love to craft: ATG 
morgans artworld: ATG
path of positivity: courage (I'll probably stretch the "courage" thing quite a bit here and say that courage doesn't need to be something loud and big - rather, it can be a comparatively small step out of your comfort zone, a quick reality check on whether we really need everything we think we need, and a small change of habits towards a more sustainable future. And it might as well turn out that in order to change things, one doesn't need to have an immense courage at all - just use the tiny bit you have and be amazed at what you can accomplish with it. Change doesn't need to be a scary thing at all, and the courage you have, however small, is more that enough to overcome the fears that are in your way.)
pennys papertake: ATG
male room: CAS
through the craftroom door: ATG
tuesday throwdown: ATG
wortartwednesday: ATG

08 October, 2019

Black magic

As we're well into October already, it's time for a short post to introduce a new task over at our Fadengrafik challenge: we're looking for your "Halloween" projects this month, so feel free to show us any of your stitched projects that include some kind of spookiness. 
Not knowing what to create, I went for a universally usable border embroidery, thinking I'd spook it up with a Halloween themed image. 
I stitched the ornament with silver shimmering yarn and decorated it with tiny white pearls. 
Once that was done, I placed the embroidered paper on black cardboard and glued it onto a silver-ish background. It originally comes from a set of Christmas papers, but since there are no winter/Christmas motifs on it, I figured the shimmering splashes might as well represent fog in the night skies or pieces of a spiderweb.
For the central motif, I was once again saved by the Graphics Fairy with this beautiful, not too scary vintage Halloween print. You just have to love the adorable dancing mice and the cat fiddler! The image itself sticks to the stitched paper with 3D pads to create some sort of layering. 
Still, I'm not all too happy with the result as such. I'm not sure what is bothering me exactly, I guess it might be just that it's not your typical orange/purple Halloween stuff, or maybe that I'm not really into Halloween altogether? 
A little contribution to the October collection of Create in Austria - artwork created by Austrians and/or in Austria.
A little contribution to the collection of hand-stitching at made with Blümchen.

challenges: 
krafty chicks: ATG
613 avenue create: ATG
a bit more time to craft: ATG
brown sugar: ATG
cardz4guyz: spooky
crafting with an attitude: ATG
crafty calendar: Halloween
crafty catz: ATG
crafty sentiments: Halloween
craftyhazelnutspatternedpaper
creative inspirations: Halloween
creative moments: ATG with optional twist "spooky"
cute card thursday: ATG
kreativtanten: ATG
love to craft: ATG 
morgans artworld: ATG
through the craftroom door: ATG
wortartwednesday: ATG
worldwide open design team challenge: ATG