Showing posts with label German scraps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label German scraps. Show all posts

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Victorian Santa Images From Germany


Here are two sheets of scraps with two distinct colorways - the more muted rich Christmas burgundies and the brighter, traditional Christmas reds.


Saturday, August 18, 2012

German Santa Claus Paper Scraps

These are perfect for Christmas card making, scrapbooking, making ornaments - so many projects!  We have over 500 styles on the website and in our Etsy store.


Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Victorian Santa Scraps


We'll start showing you some of our German Christmas scraps over the next couple days.  We love these Victorian Santa Claus images!  We have over 500 styles of scraps from England and Germany available on our website or in our Etsy store.






Sunday, November 21, 2010

Just in: Glittered Scraps!

 Just in time for Christmas crafting, we're stocking several styles of German scraps featuring pretty silver glitter accents.  Check them out HERE!

Friday, October 1, 2010

Project Idea: Make a Hallowen Treat Bucket

With today being October 1st, we couldn't resist sharing a project for making decorative Halloween treat buckets. At just 3 1/2" deep and 4 1/2" across the top, these little guys work best as tabletop decorations as opposed to something to take trick-or-treating.

Tool wise, you'll need: glue, an x-acto knife, scissors, tape and a pencil.
And as for supplies, here are a few ideas:

Gilded Florentine paper from Italy, above, in festive harvest colors. I really like the middle one... reminds me of a pumpkin patch, and the one on the far right looks like a fall orchard. These are all available HERE.

You'll also need a selection of Dresden trims. The medallion shapes are for building the pumpkin medallion and the trim strips are for edging along the top of the bucket. You can find these same trims available HERE.

We also mixed in fancy fabric trims with our Dresdens. Wouldn't the ones below be lovely? You can find the fringe HERE, the pom pom & loop HERE and the lace HERE.

And don't forget the paper scraps! We used the large pumpkins from this German sheet, available HERE.


In addition, you'll need tinsel sticks, non-toxic paint, and sturdy paper board (like mat board used for matting picture frames.) We also used part of a tinsel garland to further embellish our pumpkin medallion. You'll need the following template, too:

Click on the template to make it full size, then drag it to your desktop and print it out. It fits on a standard sized sheet of paper. Next transfer it to your board, cut it out and glue the sides so you end up with a shape like this:

Once dry, we painted the inside of ours with festive orange non-toxic paint before covering the outside in Florentine paper.

With the paper on and dry, we next applied a tinsel stick handle, gluing it to the outside of the bucket then "hiding" it under rows of Dresden and fabric trims. Last but not least came the pumpkin medallion, which we made by layering part of a tinsel garland, a Dresden medallion and a pumpkin scrap. Our last step was applying the medallion to the bucket and, voila! finished treat bucket:


This is a fun and easy project that packs a lot of decorative punch. Try painting the inside a pretty fall hue like burgundy or sunflower yellow.... Make your pumpkin medallion a witch or cat medallion instead -- and you don't have to use paper scraps, different Dresdens layered also look great.

If you're keen to have a couple of these, but aren't feeling creative, we have the ones you see here available on our website HERE along with many more autumn inspired supplies and already made Halloween decorations.

Happy crafting! Hope you're all enjoying the fall!

Thursday, February 25, 2010

New Scraps for 2010 Arrived Today from Germany


We've been anxiously awaiting the release of the new German scraps for 2010 and are excited to announce that we have them in hand as of today. They've been added to our site as well as listed in our etsy shop. As usual, they are so much more beautiful in person than in the photos with beautiful embossing and rich detail. Pictured are three of my absolute favorites.