The first craft I tackled was the mind jar. For those of you who don't know, a mind jar is a little bottle filled with glitter that you shake like a snow globe... it's perfect if you're frustrated or for a grumpy child to watch... you are supposed to be calm by the time all the glitter has finished swirling around and settled on the ground. The directions I found were as follows:
Ingredients needed:
1 tablespoon of glitter glue
1 tablespoon of glitter
food coloring
1 cup warm water
1 mason jar
So after work the other day I stopped at A.C. Moore and picked up a five pack of glitter glue, along with two little tubes of glitter in blue and purple. I had some old mason jars in the basement and rinsed them out, then emptied most of one of the tubes of glitter glue into the bottom of the jar. I headed up some water and mixed it with the water. I realized that the glue didn't entirely dissolve, but thought that would be okay. I filled the jar the rest of the way with cool water (because it was way too hot to handle with just the hot water in it) and dumped half of the container of glitter into the mason jar. I then screwed the lid on, shook it up, and ended up splashing water all over myself. Whoops!
No big deal, I'd just find some glue and glue it shut. The first glue I found was hot glue... and that didn't work out so well. But I took a picture anyway.
Isn't it pretty?
I thought so. But the lids didn't work, and if you look closely, you can see the awful hot glue. Yeeck.
So I did some quick thinking and realized that... duh! We constantly have glass/plastic bottles and containers overflowing the recycling bin... so I grabbed a few. Two were glass former salsa jars, one was a plastic former green tea bottle (which I do not have a photo of) and one was a plastic former juice bottle.
I filled one of the salsa jars with the blue glitter mixture from one of the mason jars, but stopped on my way home the next day, this time at Walgreens, for more supplies. I found that the glitter glue and glitter were WAY cheaper at Walgreens, and I bought a few egg coloring kits for the color tablets (couldn't find any food coloring, and I guess we were out at home.)
So I mixed a purple tablet in with one and an orange in with another.
The bottle on the right is the purple mixture. I don't really like the bottle... it doesn't show the glitter mixture well enough. I'll find a different container for it sometime soon.
The one with the orange tablet... I think it's kind of gross looking, actually. I used multi-colored glue and glitter and it just didn't turn out well. It looks almost like... soup.
The blue is my favorite by far. I didn't add a color tablet to it, but it swirls beautifully and looks great. I think I need to add a little more glue to my jars, though, so they swirl more slowly and it takes longer for the glitter to settle. Overall, though, my son is in LOVE with these jars and insists upon taking one to bed with him to watch and "calm down" before he goes to sleep. I think it's so cute. I find myself shaking them up as I pass them in the house. I like glitter.
So the other project I worked on today was one I've been meaning to try for ages, that I found on pinterest. It's a do it yourself canvas photo tutorial, and you can find the original here ... anyhoo. I thought this would be a really easy task, but decided to test it out on my less expensive color printer, when the ink had almost run out, on a small canvas that I purchased at Ollie's for $1.25.
The ingredients needed for this project are:
1 canvas
Modge Podge (or elmer's glue)
a color printer
Tissue paper
Regular paper
tape
scizzors
PATIENCE
.... haha. I had to add that last bit. So as I said, my printer was running out of color ink, so I decided to try out one of my "old time" photos, one of my son and two of his friends from last Spring. I taped the tissue paper to a regular piece of paper and tried to send it through the printer... to have it try to eat the tissue paper. Tried again with it taped a bit better and it tried to eat the tissue paper again. Ack! I found a thicker piece of paper, more of a poster board type of thickness, but 8x10 size. I taped the tissue paper to the thicker piece and ran it through... success! I cut the tape from the paper, and here is what it looked like:
The one above I found was too SMALL. Darn. Then I tried printing the right size, printed on the paper instead. Whoops! Didn't realize that the canvas was 8x10, not 5x7, and had to make the print size larger. So I tried again... and didn't tape it down enough.
Oops! Gotta tape it better. Let's try that again.
There we go! So now I had to wait for the tissue paper to dry, even though the print was clearly not saturated with ink as the earlier versions because I was running out... I wanted to make sure it worked before I decided to try to make more.
I gathered my other materials and painted a layer of modge podge onto the canvas. I then lay the tissue paper photo on top and failed to follow a direction from the original tutorial, which said to slowly press the tissue paper to the canvas in a circular motion until it all adhered to the canvas, then that was that... but I didn't realize that, I was running from memory, and added an extra step.
Yep, I covered the not-pressed-properly tissue paper photograph with another layer of modge podge and let it dry. It turned out sort of wrinkled and full of bubbles, but had a great old-newspaper quality that I liked. So I painted the edges of the canvas and ended up with the following:
See? It's kind of oddly colored, but it's vintage-y and I LOVE vintage.
I bought another ink cartridge tonight from Office Max, and will be buying more 8x10 canvases from Ollie's to make more of these. Definitely a fun project... even if it didn't turn out exactly the way it was meant to.
So that's all for today! More fun projects to come, I promise!