Posts Tagged ‘teacup’

The TeaCup Quilt

I started writing this post a week ago, at which time I started it with the line, “Well August is upon us. How on earth did that happen!?”, and now we’re two weeks in. How on earth did THAT happen?!

Back in April we (read: our craft group) started working on a teacup quilt. It was one of those things where we loved this pretty tea party fabric, and wanted to make a wall hanging out of it, but it didn’t belong to a pattern we liked (or as far as were aware, any pattern at all).

So Nana set out to make her own pattern with the odd shaped sections of fabric we had. Lets just say that it has NOT been an easy task, hence it being August already, and we’ve not started it.

Last Tuesday at craft group we decided to bite the bullet and sacrifice parts of the fabric in order to easy the planning and quilt making process.





I think it’s going to work well once it’s all put together. We’ve divided the quilt into three sections, so tomorrow we plan on putting the first section together, and then I can start the embroidery for it as well.

This is going to make my list of quite big projects rather long… Hopefully I have them all finished by the end of the year!

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Pretty Pretty…

While you’re checking out these pretty things (there are heaps MORE on my tumblr- I’ve stopped autoposting all of them on my twitter, so you’re missing out if you’re not checking) :-) , you can also have a look at the sidebar, and the new google friend connect thingy-ma-jiggy I installed. If you use google reader, or have a blogger blog, and use that to follow blogs, then it will now be dead easy for you to follow my blog- and people can see who you are too! Also, just a note that I would love some more comments… :-D

If you’re not sure what to say, then you can tell me if you like that this post has different words in different colours, or if you find it distracting/cheap/tacky etc.

1. Scrabble Furniture

Scrabble Furniture

Scrabble Furniture

2. Tea Cup Wall

Tea Cup Wall

Tea Cup Wall

3. Monkey On The Wall.

Buy it on etsy...

Buy it on etsy...

4. Cup Cake Clippies…

Buy on etsy...

Buy on etsy...

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How to Make Teacup Candles

Saturday was ANZAC day. I had great plans of going to Spotlight, but silly me, forgot that they are CLOSED on public holidays! So I trundled back from my trip to Kawana and was sitting at home thinking, ‘What can I make today?’ I remember that the other week my candle making kit had been delivered (I bought it on ebay) so I decided to try my hand at some candle making! Below are instructions and pictures. I would LOVE to know what you think of it, and would love to know if you give candle making a try!

Check out the colours compared to when I was making it in the slideshow!

Check out the colours compared to when I was making it in the slideshow!

Now, the wax I’ve used is soy wax, which apparently burns 30-50% longer then regular wax (paraffin), it’s water soluable, and biodegradable. Also, there’s not much soot from them, they’re non-toxic, so they’re great if you have little ones around!

Step 1: Organise your area- I made sure that I had all the bits and pieces I would need, as well setting it out on the dining room table in a logical manner- so spaced out well. I also set up a chopping board, which I used to sort of ‘protect’ my table.

I need the following equipment: Scales, Chopping board, sharp knife (steak knife will do), pyrex jug (or a microwavable jug), as well as the wax, my dyes, and the oils.

I also set up my teacups here. Obviously you don’t have to use teacups (but they are so adorable!), you can use tealight containers, or anything you want! My mum has a glass handbag that she wants me to fill up as a candle! You’ll need to set up the wicks in whatever it is you’re using, and make sure they’re clean. I used ready made wicks, with little stands on the bottom, and just applied a double sided sticker to the bottom so they stayed in the cup. But I did run out of them, so I had to just cut up a long wick, and use blu tak on the end. This works fine.

Step 2: Measure out how much wax to use. The instructions I got with my kit said to fill the container I was going to use up with water, and then put it into the jug, so that I could see how big it was. So if I ended up with 90ml of water, I would need to measure 90g of wax. I ended us using more then that, and it’s better to have too much then not enough. Of course, mine are in two colours, so if you want different colours you need to just measure out what you want for that particular colour.

Step 3: Once you’ve put the wax into the jug (obviously with no water in it), then you need to melt it in the microwave. I did short bursts of 20-30 seconds. It’s a bit time consuming to have to stand there near it, but really only takes like 2 minutes to melt. The jug will get REALLY hot, so make sure you use oven mits (btw- look out for a tutorial soon on how to make your own!). You can let this cool on the chopping board now.

Step 4: Organise your colours and smells. Both of these are a bit of a ‘guessing game’. I just shaved off bits of colour and then put it into the wax. It was pretty cool to watch it melt! Remember that the colour you make it here is a LOT darker then what it will actually turn out as. As far as the oils go- put some in, about 3-5ml for a 100g candle. But you can just smell for it to see if it’s okay. The frangapani oil I used the second time was a LOT stronger then the rose one I used first, so make sure you take that into consideration.

Step 5: Depending on how long it took you to decide on your colour etc you may need to let your wax rest a little longer! Apparently if it’s too hot the candle might look a little rough on the top. I found that mine weren’t rough, and I sort of just did one thing after the other. So now you can poor the wax into the teacups.

Step 6: You can trim your wicks now. It’s best to leave about 1/2 cm in height for the first burn. You’ll need to wait about 48 hours before you can use them though- they need to set and ‘cure’. The longer you leave them the better the scent will be. Note: the soy wax will hold the colour, and the scent better then parafin wax anyway.

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