motor antik dan unik, motor yamaha tua, motor honda tua, motor tua sparta 125cc, motor merk bmw kwaci, motor tua harley davidson, motor vespa tua, motor tua yang sulit di temukan, motor tua honda bebek 70an, MOTOR TUA GILA, Motor Antik, motor pertama di dunia, modifikasi motor tua, Modifikasi Motor Honda Moped, motor honda tua, motor antik tahun 1950an, Sejarah singkat sepeda motor

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Clothes Pin Ornaments

Old fashioned wooden clothes pins can make quite cute Santa ornaments. Make sure to get the kind pictured below, the kind with the hinges might work, but not quite as well. You’ll need red and white felt, red pipe cleaners, red, black, yellow, and peach paint, acrylic is probably the cheapest and easiest, and glue.

The clothes pins have what looks like legs already, and small torsos, so without even getting started you can imagine how the Santa will look. First glue a one to two inch piece of clothes hanger on each side of the clothes pin. If you have a drill, you can simply drill through the clothes pin and string one longer piece of pipe cleaner through for his arms.

Next, paint everything but the top part, which will be the head, red. After the paint has dried use black paint to paint the bottom sections of his legs black, like boots. Use the black paint to draw a line where his coat would be covering his pants. Draw a black belt around his waist, and draw on two small dots for his eyes. Use the yellow paint to draw a square buckle on his belt. Use the peach to make his cheeks look rosy.

Cut a small rectangle of red felt and roll it into a cone to be used as the Santa hat, then glue it in place. Glue on a bit of white felt for his beard, and use a little more white felt for trim on santa’s hat.

Using a bit of red thread and a needle, sew a loop onto the Santa hat. This will be your ornament hanger.

This blog is brought to you by dialysis nursing jobs.

0 comments:

Pageviews past week

Blog Archive

Followers

Powered by Blogger.
My Ping in TotalPing.com