For the past few weeks I´ve been
making Christmas cards, something which would normally take only a
couple of days, but these are a little more complicated than most
because they´re stitched rather than printed. Well, the motif is
stitched but the layout is printed. Stitching is the fun part as I
can plug myself into my iPod and lean back and relax during the day
without that nagging guilty feeling that I´m neglecting other more
important tasks. But all good things eventually come to an end and
once all the stitching´s done I reluctantly unplug myself from my
iPod and get on with the more tedious parts of the project. First the
motifs have to be washed and pressed then stiffened by the addition
of an ironed on backing. After that comes the part I enjoy least,
namely designing the layout which entails some very precise
measuring...not my strong point. The following screen shot may give
you an idea of what´s involved.
As you can see, the layout is in 3
equally sized parts, (designed to fit onto an A4 sheet of card) the
back of the card, the aperture and the flap which covers the back of
the motif. By the way, the little corners within the frame are my
guidelines for cutting out the aperture. For that I use a steel ruler
and a sharp knife. The 4 vertical lines are for scoring the card in
order to fold the flaps neatly and the large rectangle is the actual
size of the card. If I´m feeling lazy I only print the card once and
write the greeting by hand after the card is folded, otherwise I have
to create a new layout with a printed greeting on the right side
which will be on the inside once I´ve turned the card accordingly
and printed it. Does this sound complicated? Believe me, it IS!
However, it only has to be done once as I can alter the layout and
change the aperture and the greeting for any similar cards. After
printing I score the folded parts, cut the card down to size using –
thank goodness – my trusty paper cutter, then all I have to do is
cut out the aperture and stick on the motif using double sided sticky
tape. I also use the tape for sticking down the flap to cover the
back of the motif. TADA! One card down, a whole pile more to do...No,
not really as I only make these cards for a chosen few.
Having said all that, here are some
I´ve already finished.
I enjoyed stitching this Christmas
pudding so much I made a batch of them, some on cream linen and some
on green. I think I prefer the contrast of the green but I like both
variations. It´s just a pity that the glittering thread and the
shine on the beads don´t show up on these scanned images.
I forgot to say that although the second pudding is smaller than the first, it´s only because it was stitched on finer material.
This angel is very glittery because I used lots of sparkling threads. Again, the effect is lost when it´s scanned.
The following 2 motifs were really
intended by the designer of the chart to be stitched using black
thread on white linen but I think they look more effective and
dramatic the other way round. By the way, I stitched the house motif
before I realised that it was too wide to fit into a landscape layout
and I had to create a portrait layout especially for it. You can
imagine how I enjoyed doing that!
I´m off now to start a new project
using this chart.
I stitched this motif many years ago
and gave it to a friend. This time I´m going to keep it and frame it
and hang it in my living room so if I´m not around for quite some
time, you´ll know where to find me. I´ll be sitting comfortably in
my workroom plugged into my iPod....with a Do Not Disturb sign on the
door.