Archive for the ‘diy’ Category
LA App: Recyc-all
So it’s been a while since the cell phone was invented. Also, there have been a few upgrades since that 386 with a 40mb hard drive. So maybe you have some old tech lying around. Old tech that you’re thinking you kept for the sake of nostalgia. Or perhaps one day you wanted to show your kids what a video game system was like when you still had to use your hands. In any case, the lovely gurus at Engadget put together an extremely comprehensive list of where to recycle just about any tech you’ve got.
Check it out here.
And let us know if it actually works!
Lost And Found Vintage Sale
Squee! Vintage sale! Lost and Found is having a giant clearance sale this weekend. Halloween costume? Check. Winter jacket? Check. Weird unitardish pantsuit with some sort of floral pattern? I’m sure there’s going to be a check there too.
Everything is only $5 a piece or 5 for $20! Double squee! It’s cash only, they’re very adamant about no early birds, and there’s going to be a snack/beverage stand! Just don’t spill your cupcake on your new silk blouse.
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WHAT: Lost and Found Vintage Sale
WHEN: Saturday and Sunday, October 24th & 25th 12 – 6pm
WHERE: 408 N. Ave 65 Los Angeles 90042
$$$: FREE!
Become a Caveman
Who knew cavemen could be hip? The one and only Machine Project brings you a new lineup of paleolithic classes including palm leaf rope-making, basket weaving, knife making from stone, antlers, and leather, and finally a fire by friction class. Over the course of four days, this workshop will teach you how to live off the land away from the metal, plastic, and glass… while never stepping foot outside of L.A. Maybe if you’re lucky you’ll meet a cute cave woman and use your stone knife to present a wild boar to her. You’ll totally win her over.
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WHAT: Paleolithic Workshop
WHEN: Check the schedule here
WHERE: The Machine project
$$$: $35 each or $120 for all four
Craftiness is Next to Godliness: Mangled Tacky Art = Halloween Costume
Ever pawed through the art in the back of Goodwill? There are definitely some gems there and one of them could be your Halloween costume if you have an Xacto knife.

Thanks to the wonders of Photoshop, this is what I would look like if I cut a hole in the official portrait of Governor Jesse Ventura and wore it to my graduation.
What you need:
- A tacky vintage painting. Old portraits are good…or paintings of pets. Basically, anything with a head
-Pencil
-Sharp Xact0 knife
-Tape measure
-Clear nail polish
What to do:
1) Buy your painting. Make sure that you can cut out a piece the size of your head and still leave it somewhat intact.
2) Measure the circumference of your head so you’ll know how large to cut your hole.
3) Trace an oval the approximate shape of your head onto the front of the painting.
4) Cut according to the lines you’ve made.
5) Use your clear nail polish to seal the edges of the oval you’ve just cut so that it doesn’t fray.
6) Stick your head in and walk around.
Super easy, super kitschy. Happy crafting, folks!
Stuff With A Past Fabric Swap
Saturday, the friendly people who like to bring you things Burning Man related in Los Angeles are graciously throwing a free clothing swap!
Trade in all those leftover and unwanted remnants of fabric you have laying around, meet some cool strangers, then leave with oodles of new (to you) odds and ends! Craft supplies are also welcome. This is quite possibly the perfect timing to have a anything to do with clothing or creativity with the little holiday of Halloween peeking around the corner. Just enough time to put the last minute touches on and late enough to know what you’re doing. Hooray!
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What: Stuff With A Past Clothing And Supplies Swap
When: Saturday, October 17th, 1 – 4 pm
Where: Smashlabs @ 1714 Albion St., Los Angeles
$$$: FREE!!!
Craftiness is Next to Godliness: Where the Wild Things Are costume
What child doesn’t dream of being Max and playing with the Wild Things? Next weekend I’m hosting a Halloween party for the kids I teach and so I had to come up with a costume that wasn’t scary and might be someone they’d recognize. Thanks for the inspiration, Spike Jonze! I searched online for adult footie pajamas (I figured they’d be the key to a successful costume) but they’re all so freaking expensive. Then I went to Home Depot earlier this week and it came to me: a hazmat suit! You, too, can make your own Max costume for less than 20 bucks.
What you need:
-A white, hooded jumpsuit (in the painting section at a home improvement store)
-Stapler and plenty of staples
-White cloth 2″ medical tape (like what you use to tape gauze)
-Yellow poster board
-4 black pipe cleaners
-1 pair white gloves
-White craft foam sheets
-1 pair white socks or sneakers
Now put it together:
1) Try on your hazmat suit. If you got it at Home Depot, the only size they have is XL, so it’s probably going to be huge on you. Fortunately, there should be a seam down the middle of the back. You can make the suit fit more snugly simply by stapling the inside of the back just like you would take in a seam on a regular garment. Put in a few staples, then try it on and make sure it fits you well before putting in lots. Once you’ve got the right size, staple close together all the way down the seam.
2) The hood of your jumpsuit will be edged with elastic because it’s designed to keep particles out. That’s no good for being a Wild Thing, so cut along the edge of the elastic and get it all off. Don’t worry about making your edge neat just yet. Once you’ve got the elastic off, cut along the edge again to make it neat.
3) Once you’re done cutting, the hood will probably not quite cover your head. Enter the cloth medical tape! Cut a length of medical tape that is the same length as the edge of your hood. Place it on the edge of the hood and fold it over to the underside of the hood. The medical tape will act like bias tape and both extend your hood while stopping the edge from fraying.
4) Take your pipe cleaners and fold them in half. Try on your suit to see where the whiskers would logically go on the side of the hood. Punch the tip of your pipe cleaner through the edge of the jumpsuit and twist the two halves together so that one pipe cleaner forms two whiskers. Use a staple to secure. Do this again for the other three pipe cleaners (two on one side, two on the other).
5) Now make your horns. Cut horn shapes out of foam and carefully staple them to the top of the hood. Then use your medical tape to edge both sides of the bottom of the horns (tape them to the hood) so they stand up straight.
6) No Max costume would be complete without a gold crown. Cut a 6″ wide strip out of the poster board. Make sure it’s at least as long as the circumference of your head. Then cut triangles out of it to make the points on the crown. Staple it so that it is the right size for your head while you’re wearing the jumpsuit and horns (don’t do it on your bare head or it won’t fit later!).
7) In the book Max wears mittens, but I’ll need to use my hands while I’m wearing the costume, so instead, I bought a pair of cheap, white stretchy gloves and cut off the fingertips. It’s the best of both worlds: my hands are white, but I can still use my fingers.
8) Last but not least: monster feet. Cut feet shapes out of the white foam and staple them to the ankles of the pants. Then wear either white socks or tennis shoes underneath depending on whether you’ll be indoors or out.
Happy crafting, kids!
Halloween Swap-o-Rama-Rama
You might remember the Swap-o-Rama-Rama people from the Renegade Craft Fair and they’re back. Today from 12-5, bring a bag of you unwanted clothes and Halloween costumes and leave with as many clothes/costumes as you can carry. It’s a great chance to freshen up your wardrobe and recycle the stuff you don’t wear anymore. Plus, there will be free silkscreening, Halloween applique and felting stations. Don’t have anything to silkscreen? That’s fine; Yelp will be giving away totes.
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WHAT: Halloween Swap-o-Rama-Rama
WHEN: Saturday, October 10 from 12-5
WHERE: Venice Center for Peace with Justice and the Arts
$$$: $5 with a bag of clothes, $10 without
Craftiness is Next to Godliness: Got an old carboard box? Turn it into a zombie!

Search zombie silhouettes on Google images and you'll find tons of inspiration, like these cool cutouts.
Halloween is 27 days away! That means for the next few weeks, I’m going to bring you lots of tips and tricks to make your house as spooky as can be. Arguably, there are a few things spookier than zombies (Ghosts, perhaps? Or witches…). But nevertheless, zombies are pretty Halloween-y. So, pop in a copy of 28 Days Later or Shaun of the Dead and start cutting up some cardboard boxes. In no time flat, you’ll have zombies of your own.
I was inspired by bumblev at tried&true, who came up with a great way to make zombies for your windows. Basically, cut out a zombie shape from a window-sized piece of cardboard, spray paint it black, and then prop it up in your window. Voila, instant zombie invasion!
Happy crafting, kids…and keep your fingers crossed that your new zombie friends don’t try to eat your braaaaaaain.
LA Blink
Speaking of Falcor and Soapbox Derbies, here are some pics from the Redbull event this last weekend.
EXTREME advertising.
Submitted by Jeremy N.
Faaallllcoooorrrr!
Submitted by Smokey Cloud of CubicleGM
He may have been on giant mushrooms.
Submitted by Smokey Cloud of CubicleGM
Competitors crashing right out of the starting gate.
Submitted by Smokey Cloud of CubicleGM
LA is awesome. Prove it with your pictures. If you have an LA Blink you’d like posted, send it to marksy [at] boredla [dot] com. Make sure you include your name, where you took the photo, and anything you want to say about your pic.
Red Bull Gives You…Soapbox Racing!
Having a car in Los Angeles is pretty much a necessity. You can’t walk anywhere and public transportation is so horrible, you’re left with almost no choice
but to drive.
Having a soapbox racer in Los Angeles, on the other hand, not so much a necessity. Until Saturday. On the 26th of September, on Grand Ave. And 5th St., right here in Downtown, almost 50 soapbox racing teams will compete in the Red Bull Soapbox Race. The racers will be faced with a crazy course of drops, turns, and everything in between. And if you’re thinking “okay that’s exciting, but they’re just cars going down a street”, you are totally wrong. The 47 teams were carefully chosen out of 200 applicants. The winners will be picked based on three criteria: speed, creativity, and showmanship. So be prepared to see anything from a giant nose to Pac-Man flying down the streets of LA.
The event is free (woo!) and begins at 11:00AM with soapbox viewing. The opening ceremony is at 12:30PM and the race begins at 1:00PM. The first place winners of the race will get the ultimate Red Bull NASCAR experience..or something like that.
Now let’s move on to more important matters. While there may be 47 teams participating in the race, one team
in particular is all you should really care about, cause well, they’re from the future and trying to save the world. Team Apocolypse, with driver Zantor Wipple have crafted a pretty crazy soapbox racer out of things like a shopping cart, golf club, and what looks like the barrel of a machine gun. If we are to believe what the team is telling us, “On September 26, 2009, a young scientist will unleash a deadly virus in downtown Los Angeles.” Wipple and his cast of time traveling heroes will do their best to thwart this villain and save the world…I guess by winning the race? Find out more here at their blog or join their facebook group and cheer ‘em on on Saturday as they try to do the impossible and save us all from destruction.
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WHAT: Red Bull Soapbox Race
WHEN: Saturday, September 26th @ 11:00AM
WHERE: Grand Ave. & 5th St.
$$$: Free
Craftiness is Next to Godliness: Didn’t think you could make a rug? Think again.
The Santa Ana winds are coming this week, but you can bet once those are over it’s gonna start to get chilly. There’s not much that’s worse than waking up in the morning, getting out of bed, and having to walk across a freezing cold floor when you’re half-awake. What’s a crafty guy or gal to do? Make your own rug! Problem solved.
ReadyMade magazine has a really easy tutorial for making your own chevron pattern rug out of a rug pad and felt. But, here’s the thing: you could take this tutorial and make any pattern you want. Straight lines will be easier to sew than curved ones, but you’re really only limited by the colors of felt you can find, your sewing skills, and your creativity.
Oh, and another hint. You don’t even have to sew. It will last longer if you do, but if you want something a little bit more decorative, you can use the same Steam a Seam that I used to make the no-sew sink skirt.
Happy crafting, kids!
Craftiness is Next to Godliness: Butterflies for Charity (+ bonus idea)
When you were little, did you ever read that book Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes? So sad/touching! When I found out about the Butterfly Project earlier this week, I immediately thought of the book and of origami.
What’s the Butterfly Project? The Holocaust Museum in Houston is collecting 1.5 million butterflies between now and June 30, 2011. One for each of the children that died in the Holocaust. It’s sort of a downer, I know, but imagine how cool it will look when all 1.5 million are displayed in the museum.
You can make any type of butterfly you like as long as it’s no bigger than 8″ x 10″ and they prefer 2-D submissions, but any medium is fine as long as it doesn’t involve glitter. When you’re finished with your butterflies, send them to the museum and they’ll be displayed. Check the website for complete shipping details.
To all you aspiring artists out there, it’ll be pretty cool to say your work was in a museum!
Create whatever butterflies you like, but I’m already working on a bunch of origami ones. Learn how to fold butterflies here.

Also, while we’re on the topic of origami, I found a really cool centerpiece. Normally, Rachael Rae makes me want to rip my hair out, but sometimes even she has good ideas. This is one of them. She says it’s good for kids, but I say I’d want it at my dinner party, too! Learn how to make a paper airplane centerpiece here. Her instructions are literally a paragraph long, so it’s super easy.
Craftiness is Next to Godliness: Sink Skirt (minus sewing)
Sink skirts sometimes head into the realm of awful and tacky, but if you do them right, they can be an awesome way to hide the ugly pipes under your sink, and add some extra covered storage. Most of the ones you can buy in the store go on the outside of the sink, but that just strikes me as a little gross. I mean, who wants to try and wash off the icky crusted up toothpaste that missed the sink and dripped down the edge? Yuck! My version goes on the inside of your sink, so it won’t work with all sinks, but it will with a lot of older ones AND you can make it without sewing. If your sink doesn’t have a way to put the skirt on the inside, you can follow all the directions and attach it to the outside. Just make extra sure the fabric you use is machine washable.
What you need:
-Fabric of your choice (something a little heavier is better).
-Tape measure
-Tailor’s chalk, fabric marker, or Sharpie
-Scissors
-Steam-a-seam
-Iron
-Ironing board
-Thread
-Needle
-Sticky Velcro squares
-Steel wool/scrubby sponge
-Soap
-Towel
Now put it together:
1) Before you buy your fabric (or choose which fabric to use from your stash), use your tape measure to measure the distance from the bottom edge of your sink to the floor and also the distance around the edge of the bottom of your sink.
2) Using the measurements you just took, calculate the amount of fabric you’ll need. Add 1″ to each measurement to allow for seams. Your piece of fabric will need to be as long as the distance from the bottom of the sink to the floor and the width should be 2.5 or 3 times the measurement you took of the distance around the edge of the sink, depending on how ruffly you want the skirt to be. The rufflier you want it, the wider your fabric piece has to be. Example: my sink ends 24″ above the ground and is about 32″ around. My piece of fabric was 81″ x 25″ to allow for seams.
3) Purchase a piece of fabric that is at least that big and cut your fabric to the appropriate size.
4) Use the Steam-a-Seam to hem your fabric rectangle on all four sides. Follow the instructions on the box for the appropriate iron temperature. As far as creating the actual seams, you can do it however works for you, but the way I do it is: Fold 1/2″ of fabric over to the back of the fabric along each edge and use your iron to press the crease. Then, cut your Steam-a-Seam to the appropriate length, insert it in the fold you’ve made, and then iron slowly over to set the seam. Make sure there’s no Steam-a-Seam sticking out from the fabric fold or it will melt onto your iron and create a sticky mess. I find it easiest to do one edge at a time all the way through, but you could do each step on each edge before you move on.
5) Once you’ve got a hemmed rectangle, thread your needle with a length of thread that’s longer than your longest fabric edge. (E.g. in my case my thread would have to be more than 81″ long). Along the top edge of your fabric, sew long, loose running stitches. Each stitch should be about 1/2″ long. This is called basting. If you’re not quite sure what I’m talking about (it’s hard to describe!), click here to look at pictures.
6) When you’ve finished sewing, pull your thread tight to gather the fabric into ruffles. Make it as ruffly as you’d like it to be and then tie off the thread so that the ruffles stay. You can cut whatever excess thread you have.
7) Attach one side of your sticky Velcro squares to the inside of the fabric at appropriate intervals. My sink is pretty small, so I used six squares, but if you have a larger sink or are using really heavy fabric, you might want to use more. If you’re worried about the fabric coming unstuck from the squares, sew a few stitches through each square to make sure it stays in place.
8) Before you attach the other side of the squares to the sink, be sure to clean it really well and dry it off. If it’s an older sink, like mine was, it’ll probably be rusty on the inside, in which case a good scrubbing with steel wool is in order.
9) Once the inside of your sink is clean and dry, stick up the other side of the sticky Velcro squares (at the same intervals you stuck your squares to the fabric) and hang your sink skirt. It’s all done! And then, if you ever need to wash it, just un-Velcro it and wash away. If you want, you can create more than one curtain and rotate them.
I know this seems like a lot of steps, but I made mine in well under an hour (not including time to buy fabric, since I got mine from my stash), so it’s definitely do-able. Happy crafting, kids!
Handmade Cinefamily Fair
This weekend, CineFamily @ The Silent Theater will feature Faythe Levine’s 2006 film Handmade Nation. The movie documents the extents of DIY culture in the contemporary, post punk and post knitting circle, landscape. You’re sure to get some crafty ideas (right, lola?) and probably a warm and fuzzy feeling from a motivating glimpse at active people around the country who haven’t entirely sold out, bought in, or turned into complacent robots.
The film also looks at art collectives, online communities, and independent creative businesses. Cinefamily notes that the film features, “papercut artist Nikki McClure, the Rhode Island-based feminist art collective The Dirt Palace, X-rated latch hook creator Whitney Lee, and Houston’s yarn-based graffiti crew Knitta.” Yarn graffitists? I’m there.
Q&A will follow the Saturday 12pm screening, and ticket holders will score some gift bags.
Also on Saturday, from 2-6pm, Cinefamily will host a mini-craft fair featuring some talented LA makers and hands-on activities where you will get the chance to put your creativity cap on (and maybe make AN ACTUAL THINKING CAP). Faythe Levine will be around to sign her book, same name as the movie. This fair is free to everyone!
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WHAT: Handmade Nation and Craft Fair
WHEN: Sat 12pm (gift bags and QA and Fair from 2-6), Sat 7pm; Sunday evening at 3, 5, 7, and 9
WHERE: Cinefamily @ The Silent Theater
$$: movie $12, but the fair is free
Craftiness is Next to Godliness: I <3 Ice Cream Cones
When I went to Trader Joe’s yesterday, I found mango vanilla soy ice cream. The truth is, it’s probably been there for a long time and I’m just not observant enough, but for me it was like happening upon a cache of buried pirate booty. (That sounded dirty).
You see, as a lactard, I can’t really eat most ice cream. So whenever I find a good version that isn’t dairy-based, I rejoice. Today, I found a way to make my soy ice cream into cones like you get from ice cream trucks and I did a little dance in my chair. Now you can make delicious ice
cream cones, too!
What you need:
-ice cream (kind of melty)
-sugar cones
-Magic Shell
-waxed paper
-scissors
-nuts (if you want)
-hammer (if you want nuts)
-plastic sandwich bag (if you want nuts)
Once you’ve got all that stuff together, head over to Instructables and get the full directions. Then eat up!
Happy crafting, kids.
Craftiness is Next to Godliness: Brown Bag it DIY Style
Remember way back when I showed you how to make waterproof fabric out of old plastic bags? I said I was going to make a lunch bag and I finally did it! Sure, it’s almost 6 months late, but it’s worth the wait. And now I’m going to teach you how to make your own.
Oh, and if you don’t want to make your own plastic fabric, you can buy oilcloth or use an old vinyl tablecloth, but the plastic bags end up looking pretty cool.
What you need:
-Enough fabric to cut out the pattern. Since I used plastic bag fabric, it wasn’t an exact science. But if you’re using regular fabric, you could probably get everything out of a half yard with fabric to spare.
-Scissors
-Sewing machine (or needle and thread in a pinch)
-Paper grocery bag or newspaper to cut out the pattern
-Ruler
-Marker
Now put it together:
1. Cut open your paper bag so that it’s flat and then trace the pattern onto the bag. You’ll need to cut out two rectangles: one that’s 10.75″ x 6″ and one that’s 27.75″ x 4″. Cut out your two rectangles.
2. Use the pattern you’ve cut to trace outlines onto the wrong side of your fabric (for the non-sewers out there, the wrong side means the side of your fabric you want to be on the inside of your bag and the right side means the side of your fabric you want to be on the outside of
your bag). You’ll need to trace two of the 10.75″ x 6″ rectangles and one of the 27.5″ x 4″ rectangles. If you’re using fabric made from bags, you might not have a long enough stretch of fabric to get the whole 27.5 inches in one go. That’s cool. Just cut a lot of 4″ wide strips that total about 29 or 30 inches long and you’ll sew them together later. I used three strips and it ended up looking pretty cool.
3. Fold over the top of your 10.75″ rectangles and sew a hem.
4. With right sides together and wrong sides out, sew each of your 4″ wide strips together. When you’re finished, measure 27.75″ and cut off the excess.
5. Fold a hem on either end of your 27.75″ pieces and sew both hems down.
6. With wrong sides out, pin the 27.75″ strip around the edges of one of your 10.75″ rectangles. Sew along that edge leaving about 1/8″ seam allowance. Be careful not to sew over the pins if you’re using a sewing machine.
7. Pin the other side of your strip around the edges of the other 10.75″ rectangle, again with the wrong side out. Sew along the edge leaving about 1/8″ seam allowance.
8. Turn the bag right side out, trim the ends of the threads and voila!
If you’re new to using a sewing machine, the best way to turn corners on a project like this is to leave the needle in your project, lift the foot, and manually turn the project 90 degrees so that you’re now sewing in a new direction.
If you want, you can sew a buttonhole and a button, but I’ve found that a clothespin works pretty well and looks cool.
Happy crafting, kids!
Jam Against the Machine
It is summertime and we all know that means; it is time to start storing away food for the winter (unless you are some kind of freewheeling grasshopper), and the good folks down at the Machine Project are here to help.
On Sunday join the Fallen Fruit Collective and whip up some homemade jam. Just bring by some frozen or fresh fruit and some clean empty jars, and let the jamming begin. According to the Machine Project’s website they hope to try some new exotic jams like basil guava in addition to more traditional fare (the jam actually made will depend on what type of fruit shows up). So get down to the Machine Project and get preserving, because I just made a batch of from scratch scones, and I am coming over Sunday night.
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WHAT: Make your own fresh jam and jelly.
WHEN: 10am to 1pm Sunday, August 2, 2009.
WHERE: The Machine project
$$$: FREE! Bring any fruit you want to turn jammy, and some empty glass jars (sounds like they will have extra for the fruitless).
Machine Project Loves Geeks
Just got an e-mail from Machine Project about some serious events happening in the near future. This Friday, Jamie Zigelbaum, a Ph.D. student at the MIT Media Lab, will present a lecture about computer interfaces and their interaction with humans. This may sound a bit over your head, but we deal with this everyday and you might just learn something interesting. And to be honest, the description of this event is a bit over my head. So that’s all you get from me. Check out their site to find out more. (I trust in Machine Project to provide us with mentally and creatively stimulating events, so I’m sure they won’t disappoint).
Speaking of creativity– Coming the first week in August, Machine Project will play host to it’s new workshop, Monster Props and Costumes. It’s a bit expensive, $250 for non-members, $225 for members, but it includes four 3 hour classes, tools, and a basic materials kit. It’s a pretty good deal because pounds of liquid latex and foam rubber aren’t exactly cheap. You will be able to create your own awesome Halloween costume after this! Cooooool. Sign up soon!
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WHAT: Computer Interface Lecture///Monster Costume Workshop
WHEN: Friday, July 24th @ 8pm///August 4th, 6th, 11th, & 13th @ 7-10PM
WHERE: Machine Project
$$$: Free///$250
Super Sweet Workshop
Nobody likes taking classes, especially during summer. But who doesn’t love a cupcake class? Or a class on pies and tarts? Gourmandise Desserts offer weekend classes on the art of all things sweet. Although this weekend’s cupcake class is sold out (another one will be held on August 1st), the following weekend will play host to both the cookies, brownies, and bars class, as well as the pie and tart class. For $55, all you teens (yup, we post a lot of 21+ events, time to give others some cool events — sorry if you are 20. That must suck.) can sign up online to learn how to make lemon bars, fudge brownies, crusts, fillings, and delicious toppings made from meringue and caramel. Everything is included with the price plus the best part– eating it when you’re done!
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WHAT: Teen Baking Workshop
WHEN: Thursday, July 30 @ 6-9pm, Friday, July 31st @ 6-9PM
WHERE: Gourmandise Desserts
$$$: $55
Craftiness is Next to Godliness: DIY Undies
Yeah, you could buy your own undies, but what’s the fun in that? From what I’ve seen, they’re crazy easy to make out of old t-shirts (or pillow cases, tablecloths…whatever you want basically). All you need is a little stretch elastic, an old, beat up pair of knickers to act as the template, and the fabric of your choice. Oh, and a sewing machine would help, too.
For exact replicas of underwear you already own, give this tutorial a shot. I was so excited when I found it. Now I can replicate my favorite boyshorts over and over and over again. Yippee! And, while you’re at the blog, take a look at her amazing quilts. She’s incredibly talented.
If you want to make copies of current underwear, but add pretty lace to the edges, check out this tutorial on Cut Out + Keep. I’m not sure that I would want Stewie Griffin on my ass, but the polka dot half of the undies is pretty cute.
Oh, and for the menfolk, Threadbanger also has a great tutorial on making your own boxer shorts.
So, make some cute underwear for yourself or that special someone. It’s cheap and recycling fabric is good for the planet.
Happy crafting, kids!
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