MANAGING A CRAFTS ADDICTION

This blog is Chris Verstraete’s fault. I guested (new v.i.) on her site last month. I presented some tips on how to use up crafts supplies that accumulate and seem to take over your crafts corner, no matter how big or small.

To save face, I had to practice what I preached there. I started with Tip #1: DONATE! This week, I invited two women who run the wonderful Good Sam Showcase of Miniatures to come and carry off supplies for their children’s programs and white elephant sales. They drove away with the back of their SUV packed to the limit, including the toaster oven, for crafts clay only. (Thanks Barb and Phyllis!) Here’s the before and after proof.

Before the purge

1. DONATE. (More ways to donate.) Every year I donate a furnished dollhouse to a local school. I work on it through the summer and have it ready for their holiday raffle. Instead of furnishing the house completely, I include a bag of materials—odds and ends of wood, plastic, fabric, paint—with ideas on how the lucky winner of the house can make her own accessories.

After (this will last ~2 days)

I also prepare small scenes for auctions. Recently a mini scene brought in one nearly $300 at a silent auction to benefit a library literacy program. Donating not only helps a worthy cause, but it allows me to Buy More Stuff. (I warned you this might not help trim down your inventory!)

2. Scrapbooking supplies—not just for scrapbooks. I promised myself that I wouldn’t buy a greeting card until I had no more paper left in my house. I’m not very good at those professional-looking cards some of my friends make—the ones with several layers of paper, cutouts, brads, and stamped messages placed exactly in the center where they belong. But expertise is not necessary to make a personalized card by simply arranging a collage of stickers or stamp images on a piece of stiff paper. Use the kitchen-themed stickers for a friend who’s a good cook, flag stickers for a vet, or cut the shape of a boat from a scrap for the friend who sails. The large scrapbooking sheets that have a design on them can be folded twice, into card size and often used as is. Most people prefer something hand-made, even if it looks a little like a day care effort.

3. Fabric scraps. Besides dressing up and giving texture to greeting cards, fabric can be used as wrapping paper and to make small items like pouches for travel and luggage tags. (For these, just fold and press the fabric into a sturdy block; stick around the edges, leaving an opening to insert a business card. At the tip of the opening, thread yarn to make a loop for attaching to luggage.)

4. Out of the box. Sometimes it’s fun to pick a piece from a crafts drawer at random and make something from it. Today, I found a partially used page of red glittery sticker letters. I took the H, B, and S, and made a Happy Birthday gift tag for Steve using an odd piece of gold cardstock.

I think of my crafts “corner” as my playground—and everyone knows playgrounds are usually overstocked and a bit messy, and always a lot of fun. I hope you have fun playing with your crafts!

More miniature scenes are on display in the gallery.

Add a tip in a comment and win a chance for a copy of the newest Miniature Mystery, MADNESS IN MINIATURE by Margaret Grace!

 

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