If either breast cancer and lymph node removal and/or spina bifida has touched your life, please go to this site and do a quick download and listen to the first ten minutes of THIS PODCAST.
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
"Good News and Ah-Choos" by NPR - Health
The podcast showcased here is important to me because it deals with breast cancer and spina bifida, two health conditions with which I am much too well versed.
If either breast cancer and lymph node removal and/or spina bifida has touched your life, please go to this site and do a quick download and listen to the first ten minutes of THIS PODCAST.
You will be happy to know there is some good progress with research and surgeries going on with both conditions.
If either breast cancer and lymph node removal and/or spina bifida has touched your life, please go to this site and do a quick download and listen to the first ten minutes of THIS PODCAST.
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Make Custom Buttons the Easy Way
That clay you buy in hobby stores has so many uses that I completely forgot that it could be used to make buttons!!
It is an amazingly easy tool for creating beads. A couple of years ago, I did a post on making beads for earrings, thusly:
There was a stash of clay still in my craft closet that had not seen the light of day since 2008.
Thanks to KnitDragonFlies and her recent blog post on making custom polymer clay buttons, she brought to light using polymer clay for making buttons. So out came the Fimo from the box: a bit dry, but still pliable after exercising my hands with the stiff polymer.
It would be just the ticket to make one inch buttons to match my newly sewn Knitting Workshop Tribeca Shirt.
I mixed some blues and green Fimo together to create an aqua-ish color that matched the blouse fabric, then streaked it with purple straight from the package, layering them together and rolling this mixture into a tube. Then the tube was cut into 1/4 inch circles and further rolled down to make a flatter circle. The top of a pill bottle was used to cut out button circles, similar to cutting out biscuits from dough.
I also made some matching beads for earrings from the striped purple and aqua clay mixture. Then the cookie sheet came out and the beads and buttons were baked for 30 minutes at 230 degrees F.
After cooling, I applied clear nail polish for a lacquer finish. Here are the buttons pinned onto the fabric:
The aqua is not a perfect match to the fabric, but they will do. And it was fun to create a one-of-a-kind accessory.
It is an amazingly easy tool for creating beads. A couple of years ago, I did a post on making beads for earrings, thusly:
(layering colored clay with gold leaf)
(rolled into a tube, cut into pieces, and then rolled again in the palm of hand for a bead)
Thanks to KnitDragonFlies and her recent blog post on making custom polymer clay buttons, she brought to light using polymer clay for making buttons. So out came the Fimo from the box: a bit dry, but still pliable after exercising my hands with the stiff polymer.
It would be just the ticket to make one inch buttons to match my newly sewn Knitting Workshop Tribeca Shirt.
I mixed some blues and green Fimo together to create an aqua-ish color that matched the blouse fabric, then streaked it with purple straight from the package, layering them together and rolling this mixture into a tube. Then the tube was cut into 1/4 inch circles and further rolled down to make a flatter circle. The top of a pill bottle was used to cut out button circles, similar to cutting out biscuits from dough.
I also made some matching beads for earrings from the striped purple and aqua clay mixture. Then the cookie sheet came out and the beads and buttons were baked for 30 minutes at 230 degrees F.
After cooling, I applied clear nail polish for a lacquer finish. Here are the buttons pinned onto the fabric:
The aqua is not a perfect match to the fabric, but they will do. And it was fun to create a one-of-a-kind accessory.
Friday, February 11, 2011
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