My Creative Blog [Search results for jewelry cards

  • How To Make Awesome Hang Tags

    How To Make Awesome Hang Tags





    These tags make great personal touches for gifts, or, if you're a crafty, use them in altered art and scrapbooking projects. If you sell your work, use these as jewelry cards or hang tags for your handcrafted items, as I have done above.
    Supplies needed:
    Manila hang tags 'available at office supply stores, or if you prefer you can cut your own from cardstock. I prefer to use the purchased ones, just because it is more time efficient for me.

    Teabags and hot water to brew some strong tea (or you can use coffee)

    Other Optional supplies & embellishments:
    Spray bottle (optional)

    Ribbon scraps
    Carnival tickets (office supply stores, Walmart, and Party supply stores)
    Misc. ephemera
    Glue stick

    STEP 1
    Brew a strong pot of tea and when cooled, pour it into a medium pot (I keep the teabags in). You can brew the teabags right in the pot on the stovetop. I use about 6 teabags per every 4 cups of water. If you prefer you can use coffee instead of tea.
    STEP 2
    Submerge and soak the manila tags in the cooled tea until stained and saturated. They do not have to be evenly stained. The less-even the stains are, the better. You can either just dip them for a lighter look, or you can allow them to soak for a while for a deeper shade. Experiment until you achieve the look you like.
    STEP 3
    When the tags are the color you like, remove them from the tea soak and lightly blot them on an old tea towel. Next, arrange them on a cookie sheet and bake in a warm oven (about 200-250 degrees F) until they begin to dry. Watch them carefully so that you do not burn them. Then remove them from the oven.

    when dry, your tags should look like this

    STEP 4
    This step is optional, but I like to go the extra mile for the look: spritz the tags with a spray bottle filled with tea or coffee to add some extra, darker stain marks. If you don't want to use a spray bottle you can just randomly drip the tea on your tags. This step helps them look old and worn or grungy: that is the look we are going for. Bake again for just a few minutes until dry and remove from oven.

    I love drip stains on my tags!
    STEP 5
    Embellishing: Once your tags are completely dry you can rubber stamp them with designs. Using the rubber stamp and stamp pad, stamp your tags with whatever designs you desire. Some nice stamps that I like to use are seasonal designs and nature designs. You can stop here and use your tags as-is, or read on for more embellishment ideas.
    For Those Who Want More * Thread a few scraps of ribbon through the hole in the tag and tie for a colorful look (see below).

    Just thread the ribbon through the hole...

    ....and then tie in a simple knot

    I coordinated these earrings to the ribbons to complete the look!
    Getting Fancy
    * Use rubber stamps to decorate carnival tickets, punch a hole in each with a hole-punch and then attach these with ribbon through the hole on the tag (as shown above). Or, if you prefer, use a glue stick and glue the carnival ticket directly to the tag.

    You can buy carnival tickets by the roll

    use a simple, small stamp on the carnival tickets

    a colorful, whimsical look
    A Few Other Ideas
    * Distress the edges of your tags by running the edge of the tag along the stamp pad or by tracing along the edge of the tag with a marker.
    * Add some color to your rubber stamp designs by coloring with colored pencil.
    * Add vintage ephemera to your tags with a glue stick for an altered art look.
    * Good idea: If you're using these as tags for items you are going to sell or as jewelry cards, use the reverse side to write pertinent info about your item (such as materials used, etc), or, stamp the reverse side with a sticker or personalized rubber stamp to advertise your business name and/or website. I had a custom rubber stamp made by Etsy seller terbearco, and I love it!

  • Vintage Halloween Postcards

    Vintage Halloween Postcards



    Vintage Halloween postcards
    ....turned into unique jewelry

    Pendant necklaces made from vintage Halloween postcards

    Pendant necklace made from vintage Halloween postcard


    I love the change in season from summer to fall. It's early September and already our local grocery store has Halloween candy on display! Is it a bit too early for that? Maybe, but the lure of Halloween is one that I' ve always found charming. I'm especially fond of vintage Halloween items. Decorations, masks, costumes and postcards from years past have quite a different charm than those we see today.

    The nostalgia of yesteryear is apparent in these vintage collectibles, and for many, brings back memories of childhood fun and games, costumes and trick-or-treating.

    Halloween truly is a timeless holiday. What other time of year allows us to be something we are not, to fully use our imagination and allow reality to slip away, even if just for one night?

    Halloween Postcards


    I once read somewhere that Halloween collectibles are more desirable than collectibles from any other holiday, with Halloween postcards being some of the most sought after items due to their rarity. The illustrations and color lithography on these cards are beautiful. Depictions of witches, black cats, jack'0lanterns, as well as fortune games and scenes of children bobbing for apples are common designs. I personally am intrigued by those with anthropomorphic figures; the corn-cob man and the grinning pumpkin head girl, vegetable people with smiling faces.

    Pendant necklace made from vintage Halloween postcard
    It's amazing to think that at one time (around the late 1800's and on) Halloween postcards were once as popular as Christmas cards!

    Pendant necklace made from vintage Halloween postcard
    Be sure to check out my Halloween Postcard Jewelry. Each of my postcard pendant necklaces is reversible, with a different vintage Halloween image on each side.

    Pendant necklace made from vintage Halloween postcard
    I' ve been making jewelry from antique and vintage postcards for a number of years now, and in my opinion, the Halloween images are the most intriguing than those of any other holiday. (Aside from Halloween I also make them with Christmas, Easter, Valentine's Day and St. Patrick's Day postcards) 'And don't worry, no original postcards are harmed in the process!

    Pendant necklace made from vintage Halloween postcard

    Pendant necklaces made from vintage Halloween postcards
    What do you think?