Friday, August 13, 2010

Spiral Pens


Something special happened on Tuesday.  I don't know what it was, but some have called this the best Unconditional Craft Night EVER.  Those people may have also been drinking.  In any case, let me indulge you with the glorious art of of Spiral Pens.  

You'll need to choose three contrasting colors of Sculpey or Fimo polymer clay. I like to use one dark color, one light, and one metallic. These first few photos are a dramatic re-enactment, because we were so caught up in the excitment of conditioning the clay on UCN, we didn't take photos. Sometimes you just gotta live, you know?


First, break a chunk of clay off and moosh it down a little into a fat pancake.  Roll it through the pasta machine (aka Clay Conditioning Device, aka High-Tech Molecule Redistributor) on the widest setting.  


(Moving on to a new color, same technique) fold the sheet of clay in half, and crank it through the ringer.  Keep folding and rolling on the same setting until the clay is approximately the same texture as a square of American cheese.  You can repeat this process as many times as you want.  You are only limited by how high you can count.  Once you have a nice square/rectangle, decrease the clay conditioner setting a notch or two.  Do not fold the clay.  Decrease again, roll again, and repeat, until you are at the second or third from the last setting.  Note to crafty cheese lovers: resist the temptation to roll Pub Cheese, Brie Cheese, or even a hearty Gouda through the Clay Conditioning Device.  Unless you've been drinking, and then it's okay.  


Try your best to get the sheets of clay to be the same size and shape.  This is not an exact science, so don't sweat it if you have some crummy edges.  Stack them together like a sandwich, press gently and uniformly so all three layers are sealed together.  Change the clay conditioning machine back to the widest setting, and send all three sheets through.  Cut the crusts off the sandwich, as it were.


Now, roll up your clay sandwich like a tight burrito.  Or sushi maki.  Or a jelly roll, whatever makes you happy.  Using gentle pressure, roll the burrito back and forth, until you have a snake of clay about 1/2" thick.  With a sharp razor ("Safety First" was the motto of this UCN), slice the ragged ends off the snake to reveal a perfect tri-color swirl.     


Slice 1/8" medallions off of the snake.  If you want to be extra crafty, stop slicing once you're about 2/3 of the way through the snake.  Take the remaining 1/3 and roll it into a thinner coil.  Then slice away.  Now you'll have two sizes of spirals to work with!  Celebrate your ingenuity with a cocktail.


Remove the meat of the pen with pliers.  All you need to cook these babies is the outer plastic shell.  We used clear plastic Bic Pens, and they didn't warp at all in the oven.  Working one at a time, press clay spirals all over the pen shell.  You can overlap them, join them tightly together like bricks, switch colors, whatever you please.  Once the pen is covered, you can roll it gently on the tabletop to smooth out the bumps and fingerprints.  Bumpy is a nice look, too.  The most important thing is that the whole pen shell is covered.  Try not to let any clay get in the hole where the ink cartridge will fit back in.  Now's the time to avoid restructuring issues.  


Bake the pens in a preheated 250˚ oven.  This is a little lower temp than recommended on the clay package, it ensures you won't melt the pen.  To keep the designs from cooking unevenly, you might want to suspend them in midair.  You can do this by sticking bamboo skewers in a foil ball and hanging the pens on the skewers, or stick a little clay in a baking dish and stick the skewers in there.   Bake for 15 minutes.  Just enough time to enjoy a frosty beverage.


And here are our final products.  The last step is letting your piece of art cool, and replacing the ink cartridge.  As you can see, we used two different color palettes, and those two eventually got mixed up into new designs.  This was a fun, easy, and cheap craft.  Cheers, Michele and Kristin, again, for all the great pictures!!

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Craft Super Show 2010


Last Friday, I made the drive to Rosemont to go to a little craft experience called Craft Super Show.  All the big names would be there.  Fiskars, JoAnn, Cricut, Lion Brand, and I was sure I would be surrounded by all of 12 other crafters from the area.  I was wrong.  No exaggeration, there were about 1000 people in line in front of me, waiting to get in.  Some of them were dressed up as bugs, some had huge project bags with them.  Some were hosting their own web shows as they walked around.  I tightened the straps of my camo backpack, took a deep breath, and walked in.  



Of all the tables, about half were scrapbooking stations.  I tried scrapbooking once, and I made a valiant effort, but it's really all about the tools.  I don't get it.  It's a lovely endeavor for those who have the means, but I just don't get it!  Anyway, this little card was a Make and Take project for a buck, so I gave it a go.  I stenciled, embossed, and sponge painted the copper card.  Then I made the fabric flower and punched a hole for the brad to hold it in place.  I punched corners in the navy blue card and added some copper paper clips.  I like it.  I still don't get it.



This was a beautiful moment.  I've always wanted to learn how to make this I-cord, and I've seen the knitting bug in stores, but I didn't know how to use him.  The lady from Lion Brand taught me, and I gave her a tip on how to get the yarn unstuck from inside the bug's body (just a little puff of air sends the yarn right through).  And when I was done, she let me keep the bug!  Doesn't take much to send me over the moon at Craft Shows.



If An Elephant Can Paint, the paint-your-own-pottery studio had ornaments for Make and Take.  I covered it with a wax paint, then burnished it until it was shiny.  I wrote lyrics from love songs along the edge, and added puffy paint hearts in the middle.  The puffy paint fell off when it was dry, but I wasn't upset.  I'd like another go at this project, using just wax paint.  


In an effort to try new things, and get over my problem with scrapbooking, I went to a die cut station making felt brooches.  I rolled out the paper and felt, and sewed a button on one side, and a pin on the other.  I really like this pin.  It took me about four times as long to complete this project than the veterans at the table.  I broke a sweat, and they were looking at me like I was nuts.  



I signed up for a potholder class at 1:45, knowing that Wendy Russell, the host of She's Crafty, would be holding a craft competition at 2pm.  I had a really hard time with the potholder, and I think the cranky ladies teaching me wanted to go to lunch or something.  Maybe they'd just never seen someone accidentally sew over a pin, I don't know.  But I sat there for a good half hour, struggling to finish, and I missed my opportunity to see Wendy.  I finally finished the potholder, and as grumpy as I was, I did learn a couple things.  I started to leave pushing through the hundreds of crafters in my way, knowing Wendy wouldn't be back until 4pm.  I didn't care about waiting.  I was done.  

Then I couldn't find the exit.  But I did find sloppy joes.  I ate lunch, got an ice cream cone, and with renewed interest, walked around for awhile, just looking about.  I spied Crafty Chica and the lady who hosts Knit and Crochet Today.  Maybe Wendy was walking around?  It was 3:15, and I thought I'd just hang out with the throng, waiting for Wendy to make an Elvis-like entrance.  Will she charge me $20 or $25 for an autograph, I thought.  

I found her station, and there she was.  Setting up a table.  No one was camped out in sleeping bags.  There was no one at all.  I fumbled through my bag, looking for the... ahem... Craft Night "party hats" that were inspired by her show.  She was about to walk back into her tent, when I exclaimed, "Wendy Russell will you sign my tassels?!"  Wendy was a very good sport, laughed heartily, and happily autographed both tassels.  She had her assistant take pictures with her camera and mine.  She was very nice.  When it came time for me to give her one of my clever business cards, my backpack zipper jammed.  Mercilously.  I thought I would have to grab a Fiskars and do open pocket surgery right there.  But she remembered my name, and hopefully won't forget Tassel Girl.  





Also made at the show were a decoupaged frame and a duct tape wallet with credit card pockets.  I got lots of great new ideas, and had fun by myself.