;

Archive for January 2008

Buttercup 24/7

Jan
30


Grumpy. Always. Some things, you can just count on.

Comments Comments
Share: |    Subscribe to my feed Subscribe
Posted by Suzanne McMinn | Permalink  

More posts you might enjoy:


Sign up for the Chickens in the Road Newsletter



Love in a Jar

Jan
29

Thinking about Valentine’s Day yet? You’d better get started! It’s almost the end of January! I’m giving you a two-week headstart to get ready with this idea–Love in a Jar. It’s good for lots of occasions, but especially Valentine’s Day. It’s inexpensive, easy, and sweet–just some paint, ribbon, a bit of prettily-wrapped candy, and a simple glass jar stuffed with hand-written love notes.

I made this jar for Georgia to thank her for all her kindnesses while we’ve stayed here in this old farmhouse. The jar contains four thank-you notes, one from each of us, to Georgia. I can talk about it on the internet without spoiling her surprise because Georgia doesn’t know how to get on the internet. This is handy because I can say anything I want about her. But I love her, so I’ll control myself. Though I did tell the world where she hides her cracker candy. Don’t tell her you heard it from me!


Start with a clean canning jar from the old cellar. If you don’t have an old cellar or any canning jars, a washed jelly jar or other glass container will do. By the middle of winter, we’re starting to have a lot of empty jars in the cellar. You’re also going to need some paint (nail polish will do), toothpicks, ribbon, glue, scissors, wrapped candies, and paper.


Everything I know about painting, I learned from nail art books. In other words, we aren’t going to do anything real difficult here. I love nail art. I started doing it when my daughter was little, then she decided she didn’t like having her nails painted, but by then I was hooked on painting teeny tiny things on my fingers and toes and various other items.


Use fast-dry nail polish in whatever color scheme you’re going for with your jar. I’m using blue here because the pretty wrapped candy I found had blue wrappings, so I got hooked on a blue theme. Using a toothpick, dip the tip into the polish. I’m demonstrating here on a piece of paper before I work on the jar because it was easier to take photographs against the white paper than against glass. If you haven’t done this before, you might want to practice on a piece of paper before you get started on the jar. To make tiny hearts, make two little blobs of polish. Now dip the toothpick tip into one blob and pull the polish down to a point. Repeat with the other blob, making the points meet to form a heart shape. See how easy that is? It doesn’t have to look perfect or even very good. This is a primitive craft! Primitive crafts hide a multitude of sins. And ineptitude.

I love primitive crafts.


Now you’re an expert so you can get started on your glass jar. Paint however many hearts, in whatever pattern, you want. Go all the way around the jar. If you use fast-dry polish instead of paint, the whole process will go quickly. If you don’t like how anything comes out, just clean it off with nail polish remover and start over. I love fast-dry nail polish. And little hearts. When you’re satisfied, get out your ribbon.





Cut your ribbon to a good length to tie a bow around the top of the jar. Cut it a little longer than you think you need and you can trim the ends. Using a bit of glue, attach the ribbon around the rim of the jar then tie neatly. Add wrapped candies and hand-written notes.

When the candy is all gone, the painted, ribboned jar will make a pretty keepsake for the notes.

Isn’t that fun?

Comments 19 Comments
Share: |    Subscribe to my feed Subscribe
Posted by Suzanne McMinn | Permalink  

More posts you might enjoy:


Sign up for the Chickens in the Road Newsletter



Daily Farm

IMG_8606











If you would like to help support the overhead costs of this website, you may donate. Thank you!

Sign up for the
Chickens in the Road Newsletter




The Slanted Little House

"It was a cold wintry day when I brought my children to live in rural West Virginia. The farmhouse was one hundred years old, there was already snow on the ground, and the heat was sparse-—as was the insulation. The floors weren’t even, either. My then-twelve-year-old son walked in the door and said, “You’ve brought us to this slanted little house to die." Keep reading our story....



Today on Chickens in the Road


Join the Community in the Forum

Search This Blog



Out My Window

34°F Light Snow

Walton, WV



I Love Your Comments

Rolling in Clover

"Cookies are good." Read my barnyard stories....

Entire Contents © Copyright 2004-2012 ChickensintheRoad.com.
Text and photographs may not be published, broadcast, redistributed or aggregated without express permission. Thank you.

Privacy Policy, Disclosure, Disclaimer, and Terms of Use

Contact