I haven't been doing a lot of crafting lately, but here’s a quick Christmas project that I was able to complete
with items I already had on hand. If you don’t have these things on hand, they
can be purchased very inexpensively.
As I was decorating this year, I decided that I wanted a
little something different next to the Christmas cookie jar on my kitchen
counter that would coordinate with our stainless appliances. Since we live out
in the boonies, I looked through my craft stash to see what I had on hand. I
came up with a small cone tree and some ordinary silver thumb tacks.
I didn’t think I had enough tacks to cover the entire tree,
but that didn’t stop me from diving in head first. Starting at the top, I began
sticking the tacks into the foam tree – overlapping them slightly - going around
and around in rows. Now, don’t be too obsessive at this point. You may see tiny
areas of white foam between the tacks, but when the project is finished, you
won’t even notice them. (The camera may pick them up, but your eyes won’t.)
The first row stuck up a bit beyond the top edge of the
cone. At that point, I wasn’t quite sure what I was going to use for a topper
on this little tree.
I continued on down the tree until I didn’t have enough
tacks left to complete an entire row. As I was worked, I was thinking about
what to do next.
Going back to my craft stash, I retrieved this red sequin
ribbon and my glue gun.
Beginning at the bottom this time, I put down a short line of hot glue – no more than about 2 inches long – and began securing the ribbon to the glue – continuing on around and up the cone.
I didn’t want to see a gap between the ribbon and the tacks
– and I also didn’t want the ribbon to overlap the tacks. When I had almost
reached the lowest row of thumb tacks, I removed that last row, finished gluing
down the ribbon rows, and replaced that bottom row of tacks. The tacks then
overlapped the ribbon instead.
For the topper, I could have used a star or a tiny Christmas
ornament, but I went through my button jar and found this silver button instead
– just a dab of hot glue holds it on. Again, you can see a little white foam
around the button, but you don’t notice it in person.
In order to tie the two sections of the tree together, I used my leftover tacks to add silver “ornaments” to the red sequin section – just poked the tacks through in a random pattern.
At this angle, the camera picks up more of the foam peeking
through. If I had an unlimited supply of tacks and had planned the completed look
of this project from the start, I would have started at the bottom with the
sequin ribbon instead – covered the bottom third of the cone – and then
inserted the tacks into the foam beginning with the row that meets the ribbon
and working up to the top.
How many tacks did I use for this project? Hmm. The tacks
were purchased from Dollar Tree in a package of 300. I had already used some of
the tacks out of the container, so I’m guessing this 7” tree has about 280
tacks. It was a simple project to add a
little more Christmas bling to my kitchen, and I may make 2 coordinating trees
in different sizes next year – one with all thumb tacks and one with all sequin
ribbon.
All is well in the Keweenaw.
Cute idea! Thanks for sharing it with SYC.
ReplyDeletehugs,
Jann
Thank you, Jann!
DeleteOh my goodness, Julie, how are you? Haven't heard from you in such a long time. That tree is perfect for a stainless steel kitchen! Thanks so much for linking up with me at #AThemedLinkup 34 for All Things Christmas. Shared.
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