I have so many Christmas project ideas bookmarked that I knew I would never get to them all unless I started working on them throughout the year. To that end, I started my Christmas in [Insert Month Here] series. I had my April project completed early in the month, but the weeks got away from me, and now I am posting my results belatedly, in May.
Oh well, better late than never!
I did another paper project, this time using a tutorial for confetti tags from The Creative Place. When Ashley, of The Creative Place, creates books and albums to sell in her Etsy shop, she often includes a confetti page, which has such a fun and festive air about it. I really like the way she converted this idea into making festive confetti tags, which would work for Christmas or any holiday equally well.
She has a detailed step-by-step guide for making them on her site, but I'll just walk you through the basics of what I did. Check out Ashley's site for her wonderful step-by-step photo directions.
First, I used a hole punch to create confetti in red, green, and multi-colored paper. You could adjust your colors to suit the holiday. It would be great to use leftovers from previous projects, as Ashley does, to make this an eco-friendly project! I stored all the little circles in a resealable plastic bag, though you could put them in a little cup or bowl, too.
I used a manila shipping tag as a template to create two white shipping tags. You could change the color of the tag to suit the holiday. I used a circle cutter to create a window in one of the tags. I left the second tag intact.
Then I created a little pocket for the confetti out of a plastic page protector. I sewed up three of the sides before filling it with the confetti, and then adhesive to close up the fourth side. If you don't sew, I imagine you could use adhesive for all four sides. (For this project, I used a glue runner.)
I used the same glue runner to cover the window tag on one side with sticky. Then I adhered the confetti pocket behind the window, and then adhered the non-window tag over that. You have a sandwich: window tag, confetti pouch, non-window tag. I had to really use my fingers to squeeze the tags together so there were no gaps once the glue dried. In some cases I had to trim some edges so the tags were exactly aligned.
Finally, I used that manila shipping tag as a template to know where to punch a hole in the top of my tag, and I added a ribbon for the completed tag.
I think they look festive and fun, and my daughters have already asked me to be sure to put them on their Christmas packages this year!
4 comments:
wow. Okay? You are actually doing this! I need to do this with Halloween through the year! Because I always get backed up with my black cats and my skeletons and alla that. And it takes a long time to cut out skeletons!!
I wonder if they'd work well in a shaker tag? Hmmmm...
So cute, Andrea. I am pinning this!
It's never too early I reckon.
This is such a cute idea!! Thanks for sharing it.
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