crafts
Crafts Hacks for makers; a digital vision board with clever tips, ideas, techniques and materials for DIY creations.
Every Cloud Has A Cotton Lining
The beginning of the project This project really began in the winter of 1998. The Spice Girls ‘Goodbye’ was the Christmas number one, an inevitable decline in song quality that would see them usurped in their festive totalitarianism by Westlife’s 'Seasons in the Sun'.
By Argumentative Penguin5 years ago in Lifehack
The Process Is The Passion
Theraputic art especially visual art helps me heal, reduce stress and enjoy more joy, peace and harmony in my life. Collaging helps me increase my creativity, intuition and self expression. I've been using collaging as a tool to envision what's possible and also what's next. When I am cutting images and words out of a magazine to make a collage, I am unlocking the power to wonder. I am willing to exchange old beliefs to curate news ones and process new emotions to release pain and provide clarity.
By Rejjia Camphor5 years ago in Lifehack
Finding Zen in Fuse Beads
During the school year I am a very busy person. I am always working on projects, writing emails, or planning events. So when summer comes around, it can be difficult for me to relax. I decided this summer that I needed to find something to do that didn’t really accomplish anything at all--something that would allow me to be productively unproductive and just unwind. As I was trying to find my “thing,” I also began to prepare myself for my summer job.
By Dylan Steigerwald Art5 years ago in Lifehack
Some Assembly Required
I was the kid with the coveted Crayola 64 pack of crayons, the kind with the built in sharpener on the box. I’ve dabbled in watercolours, oils, acrylics, pastels, charcoal, sculpting. I collect art supplies compulsively. I’m a chronic doodler. The margins of my school notes were always choked with half finished drawings. To this day I become gripped by near obsessive creative phases that eventually fizzle out and leave me with a collection of pieces that get given away or sit quietly in stacks between music scores and cookbooks. I always start these phases feeling like I am drawing my ideas from an endless well. I dip my bucket confidently in, again and again, until I hear it thud against the bottom with a dry echo. Then I put away my supplies, take stock of what I’ve made, and wait for the next phase to strike. I rarely return to whatever had once gripped me, with one notable exception. There’s always been something encouraging about the presence of pre-formed elements. Making art with them is not as daunting as painting on a blank white canvas, or sculpting nothing into something. In fact, it’s art that’s already halfway to existing, with some assembly required.
By Midori Marsh5 years ago in Lifehack
FOUNDATION PAPER PIECING AND HOT AIR BALLOONS
In July 2019 my son turned one. Our close friends travelled three hours up the highway to stay the weekend and celebrate with us and everyone else we'd invited to the party. On the morning of the party my friend, who is a talented knitter, quilter and crafter, gave our son the quilt she had made for him. The quilt was made up of four large blocks featuring paper aeroplanes which had been created using the technique of foundation paper piecing (FPP). This gorgeous quilt now hangs on our son's bedroom wall where we can admire it everyday. When I look at it I can see the hours spent at the sewing machine and iron, carefully stitching it all together.
By Mary Stokes5 years ago in Lifehack
The Dress Form
Working with leather is not my favorite thing to do. My hands are already sore and cracked from years of working on farms, with boats and mixing alcohol. My dad’s hands were worse than mine. I’ve never seen cracked skin like his and I’ve still never seen anyone work as hard with their hands than him.
By Alan Dronek5 years ago in Lifehack
Creating Happiness With A Thunder Of Dragons
Creating My Happiness With A Thunder Of Dragons Once upon a time there were dragons. But this isn’t a story about just any dragons. These dragons are soft and cuddly. With green safety eyes. The first dragon was Dulcimer, Dulci for short. He was big, fluffy and unruly. I knew it was up to me to tame him into the dragon I conceived him to be.
By S. L. Kirby5 years ago in Lifehack
Left-handed Scissors in a Right-handed World
In my youth in the 1950s, wooden elementary school chairs had built-in armrests, which were uniformly on the right side. This left my scrawny little arm dangling off precariously, as my left hand strained in the effort to execute the lovely cursive writing that I strove for.
By Tess Nottebohm 5 years ago in Lifehack










