Showing posts with label egg decorating projects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label egg decorating projects. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

Yes! MORE Easter Egg fun!

Whoopee!!

vintage illustration
www.fashionnactioin.blogspot.com

MORE Easter Egg fun today!!


watercolor and pen eggs by Alisa Burke


Ever optimistic,
I am now doing round 4 
of attempts to make Geode Eggs...
Hah!
I will succeed......
makemylifelovely.com

(NO, those aren't my eggs...boo hoo)


Here is a very good tutorial I found online:

http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/lab/experiments/incredible-egg-geode

www.instructables.com

(NO, those aren't my eggs either...)

Here are some simple line and ink eggs:

www.confettisunshine.com

Again, check out food safe alternatives if you plan on eating them...

What about using the water-in-the-barrel watercolor pens.
You could simply fill the barrel with water and food safe dye,
for a nice airbrushed watercolor effect..
that is totally edible.

I thought these eggs were so charming:

for sale at: WestTwinCreationsLLC.etsy.com


vintage illustration postcard


Here are some DIY egg terrariums.
You can find directions here:
www.shelterness.com



www.shelterness.com

My choice would be to add tiny dried flowers,
or those little silk ones...

courtesy Jan Brett - check out her wonderful website!


Noah's Ark Mural coloring page, Jan Brett


You can find a tutorial link for these
DIY Nail Polish Eggs
at www.liluna.com

www.liluna.com


I read several tutorials from different crafters about the above 
Nail Polish Easter Eggs.

After reading them, I decided this one is NOT for me.
A big concern all had was about the
smell of the nail polish.
It also seemed like one of those really goopy kind of crafts,
not a favorite of mine, as you know!

But, if the idea intrigues you - go for it!
:0)

vintage Easter postcard


www.artistshelpingchildren.org


Next up are some really charming
'green' Easter Egg planters.

You can find the directions here:
www.craftpassion.com


Start out with fast growing wheat grass, a smidge of potting soil
and cardboard egg cartons.

After the grass has sprouted (see tutorial link above)
you place them inside the pre-colored egg shells.


www.craftpassion.com


The shells have been decorated/dyed
by using decals on the white shell,
then dying in a color bath.

Super cute I think!

OldPixels.com found on flickr.com


So, are you sick of Easter Egg decorating yet???!!!

If not, put in my search blog box
Easter Egg
and you will find many more ways to have
Easter Egg decorating fun from my past blogs!

antique Easter postcard


Here is one more for today:

found on www.coldwellbanker.com

This is a slightly different take on the Christmas ornaments that I used to make with my Mom and sister. We took round Styrofoam balls
- so for Easter use egg shaped
You can purchase small 'sequin' straight pins.
Gather a bunch of pretty sequins.

Anchor each sequin with one straight pin, pinned directly into the Styrofoam shape.
You can cover them, as shown in the photo above,
or you can make really fun patterns with swirls, dots, lines - whatever your imagination wants.

We found if a ball was completely covered with sequins, it made it heavy and the 'hanger' part pushed into the top wanted to come out way too easily, even when glue was applied.

That's when we started making patterns.
We also used cut out parts of doilies, anchoring them with straight pins, for really pretty and unique Christmas ornaments.

Since these are shown as just 'eggs' and don't appear to be meant to hang but to display in a pretty basket, you shouldn't be bothered with how 'heavy' the ornament is.

Send me your photos!!
:0)

www.realstylenetwork.com


...and because every holiday deserves a little mermaid...

www.jillatay.etsy.com

'til next time!
inkspired

www.collagepaperpainting.etsy.com
www.inkspired.etsy.com
www.inkspiredmusings.blogspot.com
and on pinterest: K.Kloberdans

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Easter Egg-cellent!

Good morning!
Or afternoon.....or night....depends on where in the world you are!

I have just been checking my 'stats' and am thrilled to see I have had folks from Spain, Malaysia, Israel, Egypt, Russia, South Korea, Mexico, Norway, the United Kingdom, and Italy visit - in addition to the United States!!!

Wow! Thanks for spreading the news of my blog! :0)

Today's focus is on Easter Eggs!


As I was looking through my files and some searches on Google, I had so much fun checking out all the pretty eggs! I have taken photos of the first batch of eggs that I have decorated this year, and hope to download them to edit later today.
Let's start with these lovelies:
Simple directions:

Start out with plastic eggs. Yep, plastic!
Apply various stickers - in this case multi-colored dots.
You're done!  What a great craft for little ones to participate in.

Now another idea:
Start by dying hard boiled eggs in various shades. Use those cheap Easter Egg dye kits! I get mine at the Dollar Store.

Get out your wonderful Aleene's Tacky Glue in the gold bottle, and scraps of ribbon, little silk flowers and stick on flat back rhinestones.
Check out the photos for placement ideas.
The artist as also used tiny felt flowers and a small covered button.
Beautiful!

Many churches do not have 'children's hour' during the Easter Sunday service. I think this is great. Even little ones need to learn how to behave during a church service (or a concert, or a play...). Most churches have some kind of special service to celebrate the Risen Saviour. Our church always has a terrific choir cantata. The kids don't have to sit through a (very long to them) sermon (Pastor does have a short sermon however!), and can celebrate with the music, even if they are too little to understand the words yet.

So, what are those kids supposed to do during that time? I think it is unreasonable to expect children to all of a sudden be quiet for perhaps a one and one half hour service, much of it sitting.

I know some parents bring an assortment of crayons and coloring pages. But why are the kids coloring Tinker Bell in church? Let's at least use that coloring time for a subject that relates to the service.

When I was growing up Dad often asked my sister and I, after church, what we learned that Sunday. Oooo, I hated that! That meant I had to pay attention to at least part of the service to be able to answer him! (My sister perfected the "open eyes sound asleep" thing. I was so jealous!)

So, here's my suggestion:
Go back through some of my blogs, and print out the coloring pages that you think would be relative to an Easter Sunday service.
Not a parent?
That's okay! You may be a grandparent, aunt, uncle, cousin or just the lady that sits behind the family with kids.
BE PREPARED!!
Here are a few pages to get you started:




Here is another simple but oh-so-pretty Easter Egg project for displays:
First the hard part:
Blow out the eggs.
That means taking a T pin (or corsage pin) and poke a hole in the top (pointed) end of the egg. Take a smaller pin and poke a hole in the bottom. Now go back to the pointy end. Make the hole larger, to be able to fit a few thin stems of flowers. Really, not too big!
Now....Blow through the tiny pricked end, and the raw egg will come out the bigger hole.
Yeah, that's the only way to do it that I have discovered.
Keep blowing. You can encourage things by poking the yolk inside with your Tpin to break things up.
Keep blowing until empty.
Sit, let the oxygen return to your brain.
Do another one!

Now take a nice paper cup - not the styrofoam unless that is all you have. Trim the cup to go half way up the egg. Tall enough so the egg doesn't topple over.
You can add a few glass marbles to the bottom to prevent tipping also. Make sure you re-adjust the height of the paper cup.

Gather some little silk grass blades, or use Easter Egg crumpled paper grass, or cut your own little snippets of tissue paper or crepe paper into tall leaf blades.

Just before you wish to display, snip some small flowers. Some ideas are johnny-jump-ups, daisies, columbines, pansies, or the small narcissus (daffodils). Fill each egg with water. The tiny hole from the bottom should have 'self healed' so very few water drops should escape. Place flower in top. Place egg vase in the cut paper cups. Arrange a few leaves on the outside. Refer to photo.

Are your eggs leaking too much water? Try a quick dab of hot glue.

Why not use these as name place markers, using a pen to write each name on an egg cup. After nuncheon, the guests can take their own egg vases home.

These eggs were made in the Ukraine, but using traditional Mexican patterns:
I won't go into details on how to make these,
but it involves bee's wax coating the egg,
and then pressing  seed beads into the wax.


Not sure, but the artist perhaps used decals? For instance, dye the hard boiled egg baby yellow. Then apply decal. Smooth edges with a fingernail. Dye egg spring green. Remove the decals, and you get the egg in the top row.

A felted egg with beaded embellishments:

These are painted wood eggs:

Or perhaps we should just wait for the Easter Bunny to decorate our eggs?

So who created the Easter Bunny any-who-how?
Think about it.
Doesn't make sense, other than eggs and rabbits are both strong fertility symbols.

Here's an unusual Easter wannabe Bunny!

American proverbs:
'Don't put all your eggs in one basket' - means:
don't plan on an outcome before it actually happens.

Here is another Easter Egg dying tip:
Place one teaspoon of cooking oil in the prepared dye.
This will make irregular spots on the eggs!

Hope you have enjoyed this Easter Egg-cellent blog!
inkspired