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Posts Tagged ‘Hybrid Project’

DIY- Handmade Mini Note Pads

I am always on the look out for cute little note pads I can keep in my handbag for those times I need to jot something down. I decided I wanted to make some of my own.

These are just the right size and can be personalized for a wonderful handmade gift.  I used my new Wild Flower Digital Paper Kit releasing tomorrow.

What you need:

Several Sheets of blank paper- for the notepad
Patterned Paper
Template (can be found on my blog)
Printer
Template
Rubber Cement (or Padding Compound)
Scissors/Craft Knife
Scoring Tool
1/8″ hole punch (I used the We R Memory Keepers Crop-A-Dile)
4.25″ piece of 1/4″ braided elastic
2 Eyelets and a tool for setting them (I used the We R Memory Keepers Crop-A-Dile)
2″ Circle Punch
Brad (optional)

Making the blank notepad:

1. I took 8.5″x11 sheets of paper to my local copy/print store and had them cut them into 1/8 ths. So that I had several 4.25 x 2.75″ sheets of paper to make the blank notepad. You could also cut these yourself.

2. Take the 4.25 x 2.75″ papers and make a stack about 3/8″ thick.

3. Tap the whole stack together on one of the sides so that one side of the stack is completely even.This is the side you will now glue together to form the spine of the notepad. To hold the stack together while gluing you can use clamps or two boards with weights on top (as I did) so that you get a tight spine. Then spread your glue on that even side. I used rubber cement but Padding Compound is probably the best. Padding compound is made especially for making these note pads and can be found online or I also found it at my local Xpedx paper supply store.

4.  Let the pad dry completely.

Making the pad cover:

1. Select and open your favorite digital patterned papers in Photoshop. (I used my new Wild Flower Kit–find it here on Thursday)

2. Open up the .png template in photoshop. (get the template here)

3. Open a new photoshop file sized at 12″x12″, 300dpi and white background. Copy both the paper and template into this new file.

4. With the template as the top most layer, crop your patterned paper layers to bleed just outside the template boundaries for each pad template. If you wish you may also use the circle tag templates included. I used some of the Wild Flower Elements and Wild Flower Alphabets on the tags as well.

5. Print. I printed on Epson double sided 12×12″ Scrapbook paper. I also printed a 12×12″ pattern on the backside so that the inside of the pad cover would have a pattern as well.

6. Cut out the pad cover using the outside rectangular lines as as guides. The two perpendicular inside lines are for scoring the spine, score those and fold inward. Use a 2″ punch or cut the circular tags.

Attaching the elastic to pad cover:

Now it’s time to attach the elastic that will serve as a closure for your pad.

1. Cut a piece of 1/4″ braided elastic to aprox. 4.25 length.

2. Locate the two hole guides on the back flap of the pad cover.

3. Take one end of the elastic and hold it on top of one hole guides. Center it vertically and leave approx. 1/16th of and inch of a tail toward center of the pad horizontally. Using an 1/8″ punch make a hole in in both the elastic and paper. You won’t be able to see the circular hole guide at this point but just approximate it. (it doesn’t have to be perfect).

4. Take your eyelet and insert through the hole you just made. With top of eyelet being on the outside of the pad cover.

5. Set eyelet.

6. Repeat for the other side and attach the other end of the elastic using the other eyelet. Both ends of the elastic should be inward toward the middle of the pad cover. You may need to cut a little bit of the elastic ends off if there is some showing after you set the eyelet.

Finishing up:

1. Add embellishments at this time. I added circular tag to front cover using a brad to attach.

2. Now attach blank pad to cover, by painting rubber cement to blank pad spine then setting it inside spine of pad cover you scored and folded earlier. Be sure to let it dry while applying pressure so that it adheres well.

3. Test out your elastic closure and you are finished!

I love giving these little hand-made, personalized pads to friends and family. I hope you enjoy this little hybrid project!

Personalized Candy Bars

Hello fellow digi and hybrid scrappers! Decorator Jen here to show you how to take chocolate to the next level! Got your attention yet? :) Today’s hybrid blog is making a personalized candy bar label, which would be a perfect gift for any occasion.

I’m making two labels – one for Valentine’s Day and another for a Birthday!

Please note: I’m using PSE 7 for this tutorial.

You’ll need:

* 8.5 x 11 white cover stock sheet

* 2 large chocolate bars (the kind with a label sleeve)

* adhesive tape

* trimmer or scissors

* digital paper and elements  -  I used Karen Funk’s Remember When Kit and Robyn Meierotto’s Cupcake kit

Step One: Take the wrapper off the chocolate bar and measure it.  My measurements where 5.25 x 6.5

Step Two: In PSE I opened an 8.5 x 11 document and cropped each digital paper to the size of 5.25 x 6.5

Step Three: I then added text and digital elements and saved the document as a .jpg

Step Four: print off the .jpg onto the cover stock sheet on highest resolution.

Step Five: Cut out your labels and wrap them snugly around the foiled chocolate bar with adhesive.

That’s it! Now just wrap it up nicely for a gift or make more for favors (wedding, loot bags, baby showers etc.)

Just try not to eat them before they’re given away! :)

How to make a Hybrid Calendar

Every year I create calendars to give as gifts to the grandparents and aunts and uncles separated by the miles.  I scooped up Karla Dudley’s 2011 Calendar templates to whip up a quick and easy hybrid calendar.  I also added a piece of Karla’s Fly Girl Paper and Karla’s Brushes:

  • Open Calendar Template in Photoshop

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

  • Drag picture into template, clip to photo mask (Alt-Click).
  • Repeat process to create each page, save copy to flash drive.

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

  • I opened a patterned paper from Karla’s Fly Girl kit and dragged it under the book plate and date sticker.
  • I also added a circle brush to the paper.

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

  • I added text to the center of the circle brush and then duplicated each item 3 times for each of the calendars I was planning to make.
  • I printed this sheet on plain white cardstock at home.

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

  • I die cut these shapes with spellbinder circles to adhere to the front and back of my calendars.

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

  • I took my flash drive to target and printed each page on 4×6.  Even though the file is square, it just added white bars to the side.
  • I trimmed these to 4.25″x4″.

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

  • I punched holes in the side with my zutter bind it all.

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

  • I cut raw chipboard sheets to the same size and punched those in the bind it all as well.

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

  • I sandwiched the front and back covers together  and all the pages under that
  • I threaded the binding coils in through the back

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

  • slowly squeeze the coils together in the bind it all.

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

  • voila!

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

Hybrid Calendar Tutorial by Joscelyne Cutchens

Thanks for stopping by! Love Love and blog you later,

Joscie, rhymes with bossy! :)

BossyJoscie

Decorating Cookies With Edible Paper – Tutorial

We’ve hit it… twenty days, and twenty fabulous hybrid projects. Gen here, and I’ll be wrapping us up, because (as usual) I’m a huge procrastinator and I’m just finishing up my neighbor gifts in the nick of time. What am I giving? I’m glad you asked!

This year, I decided to go homemade. It’s no secret that I love decorating cakes, and I’m always looking for ways to make them special. (Remember the Monster Jam birthday cake?) However, my love affair with sweets goes beyond just cakes (as my hips can attest!), and cookies seemed a logical Christmas goodie.

The first thing you need to do, unless you’re lucky enough to have your own designated printer for edible ink, is find a local bakery or baking supply store that will print your images. I checked into a few places, and even your neighborhood grocery store probably has the capability to do that. I chose to go with a baker’s supply store, because I wanted someplace that could use a digital file (instead of scanning an image), to preserve the integrity. For one sheet (7.75″x12″) the cost was about $5, and that was enough for 40 cookies in the size I made.

It is totally possible to print your own, and you can find sources online for both edible wafer paper and edible ink cartridges for many different printers. I would not print them in the same printer that you use regular ink in, though. For an occasional hobbyist, I think outsourcing is the more economical option.

My next step was to design my images. The baking supply store I used gave me the paper sizes, and I started out with Jen Allyson’s Vintage Findings line; the Christmas Prints and Christmas Stamps had just what I needed. I really liked one of the stamps she included, but wanted to make it a bit more personal, so I modified it in PS. I also chose three of the patterned papers and cropped them to the dimensions I needed, before I had them printed.

I made gingerbread cookies and cut them out in two-inch squares, plus a few round ones I cut using a cookie cutter. Gingerbread is a nice option for something like this, because they don’t spread while cooking, and they retain their shape. Let the cookies cool completely before moving on.

Next up, making the icing. I used a traditional royal icing, for a few reasons. It hardens nicely, which makes it pack and travel well, it’s bright white, and it has a nice sheen when it dries. It’s not the best flavor, though, so I add a bit of almond emulsion (or extract) to mine. It takes a while to mix, about ten minutes on low in my KitchenAid, so while it’s mixing I get the rest of my supplies ready:

Spread out the cookies on parchment paper. Give yourself plenty of room to work, but you also need to be able to move from one cookie to the next without having a lot of area to cover.


Because royal icing hardens quickly, it helps to have a damp cloth nearby to wipe the tip. I’m using a size 3 round tip in a disposable bag, but you could just as easily use a zippered plastic bag and snip a corner. This doesn’t need to be very precise.

We’ll be doing a technique called flooding, so you need a fairly thin frosting. It should take ten full seconds for it to level out after you drop some from a spoon or the beater, or drag a knife through it. Just keep adding water, a few drops at a time, until you reach that consistency. You also want to keep your mixer on low, because we don’t want air bubbles.

Pour the icing into your bag (I’m using a cup to hold it, since I only have two hands) and tightly twist the top.

Outline the area you want to cover, and fill it in. You want to frost an area about the same size as your papers will cover. You don’t need to be super precise, we’ll be covering the edges. Also, if you miss a few spots, the frosting will level out and should fill it in. If you need to, go back in with a toothpick or sucker stick and push it around while it’s still wet.

Feel free to recruit some help (Aww. Isn’t my husband sweet?) until you get them all finished. Notice, they’re not perfect. It really doesn’t matter. Now, we just need to let them harden, for at least a couple of hours. You want the frosting to not just crust, but to harden all the way through. (Note: This is the perfect time to take a nap, if you were up until 4 AM baking the cookies. Just sayin’.)

Our next step is to prep the edible papers. I cut the round labels out very roughly using a pair of kitchen shears. (We’ll be covering up the edges, so it doesn’t have to be neat, but you could also use a round punch if you wanted.) I also trimmed my patterned papers into 1.5″ squares, using my paper trimmer.

To get our edible paper to adhere, we’re pulling out something sticky. I used corn syrup, since it’s clear, and definitely sticky. Remove the edible paper from the backing sheet, and lightly coat the back of it using a foam brush. (A new one, folks, but you knew that, right?)

Flip the edible paper over, and place it on the hardened royal icing. Smooth it down with clean, dry hands. Any moisture will cause the ink to lift, and sticky residue from the corn syrup will make it shiny. Then, flip the cookie over on the parchment paper. This will help keep the edges from curling up, and also absorb any corn syrup leakage. (Now THAT is a phrase I never thought I’d use.) You only need to leave it upside down for about 5 minutes or so, but it won’t hurt to leave it while you move onto the next step, which is another batch of royal icing. This one is normal piping consistency, so don’t make it thin.

Pipe your designs on, using either a star tip (I used 16 and 18) and/or a round tip (3, again.) Again, this doesn’t take a whole lot of skill, my husband helped out with this stage, too. (Bless his heart!) You can vary the borders to keep it interesting, and to keep yourself from falling asleep.

Let them harden a few more hours, overnight is even better, and then package them up. They may not be perfect, but I think they’re pretty darn cool.

We hope you’ve enjoyed our 20 days of Christmas – Hybrid Holiday posts, and we can’t wait to see your takes on our projects. Happy Holidays, to each and every one of you, from all of us here at Design House Digital.

Felt Poinsettia Pin – Hybrid Tutorial

Today I want to show you a super simple way to use my Happy Christmas flower D-cut to make a felt poinsettia. I love to use my Cricut Expression to cut appliques for fabric, but felt is a little different. I haven’t found a way that cuts felt successfully. So I want to show you a trick.

First, what you’ll need is:

  • Freezer Paper
  • Felt
  • Die Cutting machine ( I use my Cricut Expression)
  • Deena Rutter- Happy Christmas Flower D-cut (cut 2 per flower)
  • Scissors
  • Hot glue gun
  • Pin (or hair clip maybe)
  • button
  • needle and thread (optional, you can just glue on the button, I stitched mine.)

First things first, use your Die cutting machine to cut out the freezer paper. Shiny side down, paper side up. Remove the die cuts from your cutting mat. Iron on the cut outs to your fabric. Iron it the same way that you cut it out. Shiny side down/paper side up.

Using your freezer paper as a pattern cut around the outside of the flowers. Then peel the freezer paper off of your fabric and discard. I love that my pattern didn’t slip! Yay!

I now overlay my two cut out felt flowers to look like a poinsettia. I fold them in half and stitch them together, and stitch on the button. Honestly, it would probably be easier to just glue them together and glue on the button (thus no sewing required…. totally up to you.)

Now, I cut a circle/oval shape piece for the back. I cut a little slit for my pin to slide through.

Then I glue on my pin and slide that little piece of felt through to cover the pin back.

It was so quick and easy that I made two in just a few minutes (hence the different color fabrics in the tutorial.)

Fun to wear as a pin to that holiday party this week.

Pin onto a gift bag for an added little pizazz.

or glue on a hair clip and wear in your hair.

So fun and festive! Hope you have a safe and Happy Holidays!!

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