Homemade Christmas — Quick and easy ideas for holiday crafts

Category : other crafts, techniques

Here are some last minute ideas for Christmas crafts for you and your family. I have to get back to decoupageing a gift, so Happy Holidays to all!

christmas crafts

Deseret News (Salt Lake City), Dec 8, 2006 by Carma Wadley Deseret Morning News

Take some paper. Add ribbon, a few stickers and other trims. Throw in some quick-and-easy ideas, and it’s a great way to add more heart to your holidays, says Carrie Warner, director of marketing and advertising for Pebbles Inc., a local scrapbook company.

Paper crafting is big all year, but it is especially fun at the holidays, she says. “There are so many ways to add personal touches to decorations and gifts. You can add cute little touches that make a big difference. Lots of times, women feel stressed out because they don’t consider themselves ‘crafty,’ but there are so many easy things you can do.”

Just adding a simple gift tag or a fun little topper to a bag of goodies, for example, “adds a touch of homemade, makes the gift seem more heartfelt.”

Mostly, she says, what people want are things that are “inexpensive, that don’t take a ton of time and are easy enough that anyone can do them.” There are so many fun things out there to work with, she adds. You can take some patterned paper, add a sticker, print out a saying on your computer — and there you go.

For a lot of people, making cards and gift tags “is therapeutic,” says Ashlee Ward, manager of the Pebbles In Your Pocket store in Orem. “The digital world has arrived. But people can turn to hands- on projects and feel more a part of the gift. It makes the gift more special, personalizes it.”

Plus, adds Trinity Nelson, a sales associate at the store, “lots of parents involve their kids in these simple projects. It’s like going back to the old-fashioned idea of making your own Christmas. It’s become so commercialized that adding handmade touches brings back the old-fashioned feeling.”

Here are some of their ideas and suggestions.

Tree ornaments. Take some double-sided scrapbook paper. Cut it into thin strips several inches long. Curl the strips around a pencil. Buy some clear glass ornaments at a craft store and tuck the curls inside.

You can also make a chain out of matching paper to have a garland for your tree.

You can buy small, metal picture frames that look like slide holders. Add small pictures of your kids and tie on bright ribbons for little ornaments.

Make snowflake ornaments by attaching a die-cut snowflake to a cardstock background with a metal brad. Add a ribbon.

Make snowmen out of tongue-depressor-size sticks. Paint them white, add a face and tie a ribbon around the neck.

Christmas cards. “The card-making industry is huge and still growing,” says Carrie Warner, director of marketing and advertising for Pebbles Inc. “Christmas cards are so fun to make.” To make simple cards, you can take card stock, cut it to the size you want, fold it in half. Then decorate the front with paper, stickers, ribbon, die cuts or whatever. Print or write a message inside — and you’re done.

Scrapbook pages. Using Christmas paper and seasonal stickers to enhance your holiday pictures can be a quick and easy way to preserve the memories. And don’t forget, says Warner, that it’s really all about memories. “It’s easy to get so caught up in making pages that you forget to do the things that make the memories.”

The wonderful thing about scrapbooking, adds Ashlee Ward, manager of the Pebbles In Your Pocket store in Orem, “is that it can be as simple as you want it to be. It totally depends on the person. You can also take a simple idea and add to it at any level you want. It shouldn’t be intimidating. It’s just a lot of fun.”

Neighbor gifts. Everyone’s looking for simple ways to make little gifts more original, says Warner. Adding a topper to a bag of popcorn or making a tag for a plate of cookies makes it special. You can think up a clever saying or just make a fancy tag.

Home decor. You can tie ribbons around candles, for either for your own home or to give away. Some people are framing a scrapbook page and hanging it on the wall. “I love how scrapbooking is becoming part of home decor,” says Warner. “One woman took scrapbook little squares of paper and used them to make a wreath. Then she added pictures of her kids. She had a very easy-to-do decoration that the kids loved.”

Gift boxes. You can make little gift boxes out of cardstock paper by cutting and folding to form a square. Or, you can buy die-cut containers that you simply punch out and put together. Decorate with stickers and ribbons.

article from Deseret News (Salt Lake City), Dec 8, 2006 by Carma Wadley Deseret Morning News

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