Tuesday, May 26, 2015

A patriotic lace flag to make for the 4th of July


Now, I have to say, this flag was not my idea.  I have see them for sale on ETSY, just type in " rustic American lace flag" and you should find some.  But I thought I would make my own.  I think the ones on ETSY are made with lace ribbon, but I bought some lace panels and cut them into strips.  There is also some yarn and rick/rack thrown in. 

I want to warn you, I am not much for measuring.   And I sure as heck didn't measure when I was making this.  I think it is a fact that stopping to measure interferes with the creative process and if it isn't a fact someone needs to change that.  I have gone back to the finished product and measured what is there.  I tried my best to guestimate.




This flag is about 18 inches across and 17 inches high about another 2 inches make up the dowel ends.  When I was making it I was thinking about hanging it in a spot where both sides could be seen.  So my description and instructions are as if I were doing that.  I think that is the reason it looks so poofy.  But I ended up liking it that way.


I realized after taking these pictures I should have straightened my door mat out, oh well.  





The bunting and pin wheels were bought at my local "In Home" store.   I'm sure you can get the bunting in a lot of stores, but I haven't seen these large pin wheels anywhere else.  They are about  16 inches across. They look really cool when they are all spinning.





What I used for this project:

Wooden dowel, one of the ones that is fairly thick in diameter, cut to about 20 inches long. I just used a little       hand saw.
Gold craft paint
Foam paint brush
Small drill bit
Drill
3 or 4 panels of different patterned white lace fabric,  I bought mine at Hancock Fabrics.  Each panel is about 60 inches wide, I got about a yard in each panel.
2 panels of different patterned red lace fabric.  Again I got mine at Hancock Fabrics.   Each panel is about 60 inches wide, I got about a yard of each.
Blue fabric with white stars, again I got this a Hancock Fabrics.  If I was doing this over again, I would just get some denim and paint some stars on it.  You will need about a quarter of a yard of whatever fabric you use.
Craft glue
Fluffy, Fuzzy white yarn
Red Ric/Rack
Red Ribbon of some sort.
Monofilament for a hanging thread.
Scissors





To Make this:

1.  First I cut my dowel rod to the 20 inch length.
2.  Paint it with the gold craft paint and allow to dry. 
3.  For the hanger.  Use your drill to make a hole in each end of the dowel going through the sides, not the ends.  Go in about 1 1/2 inches from end and drill your holes.  Make sure you drill them in the same  spot on each side.  I  sort of thought of the rod as having a top and a bottom.  I drilled through the  "top" all the way through.   I suppose you could use some sort of glue and just tie them on, but this did not  seem very secure to me. 
4.  I threaded my monofilament through the hole on each end.  I then tied it to make it secure.
5.  Next I got my lace panels and cut them into strips.  I cut them about 2 1/2 inches wide.  I didn't cut the length, just left it as it was.   Now, if you are one of those people who have a rotary cutter and a plastic cutting mat, this should be pretty fast and neat for you.  But I don't have any of that fancy stuff, so my strips are not very neat.
6.  I started in the middle and tied 3 strips of different white lace on the dowel.  You may want to use a dab   of glue to help hold them in place.  I didn't, but that is up to you.  I was a little unsure of how this was to end up and I wanted to be able to add and subtract as needed. 
7.  I cut 6 strips of the fuzzy white yarn about 64 inches long.  They will be handing below your ribbon, but I just went along and trimmed it to length when I was done.  I took three of the lengths of yarn  and tied them onto the dowel on one side of the ribbon.   I just bunched the three together and tied them on as a group.  Repeat on other side of ribbon.
8.  I probably scrunched them together more than I should have as this flag is verrrry full and poofs out a lot. With that being said, continue to fill in with the strips of lace and yarn.  Do what looks good to your eye.  Fill dowel until you reach the monofilament. I worked my way out from the middle, putting some on one side and then the other, hoping to make it look symmetrical.   I finished with the white before adding any red.
9.  Go in and place your red lace strips, rick/rack, red ribbon or whatever you are using.   I just did this by eye, no real measuring(I hate to measure).  I mixed it up hoping to make it look random.  I tied them on just like the white. 
10.  I then cut my blue fabric into about a  25 x 19 piece.  I just put it over the one side on top of the lace strips.  I did run a bead of glue along the top of the the lace and then placed the blue fabric  on top of  that.  I did this  to hold the blue fabric in place. I also ran a bead of glue down one of the strips of lace and pushed the blue fabric onto that, just to make it stay put. 


Saturday, May 23, 2015

Pretty White Button Mosaic Swan Christmas Ornament Craft

I hope you love this swan, I sure do.  




My obsession with Christmas ornaments continues.  I have made hundreds of shrinky ornaments and now I am just trying to find new ways to use it.  

I am unsure if they have stoped making the Shrinky Dinks brand or what, but I can't find them.  You may have to use another brand like Grafix.  I have not used this brand, but I am sure it works fine.  From what I have read it doesn't shrink as much as Shrinky, but you will have to play with it.  I will probably switch to it if I can't find Shrinky. 

I am not uploading a pattern on this one.   I am sure you can find a drawing that is better than what I drew.  My drawings always have lots of corrections.  So just look around I am sure you will find one. 


I picked a simple form as I thought it would be easier to fill in with buttons(they only make them so small).  Then I decided to use seed beads, gems and small beads.  You could also use glitter.   So, after doing a few of these I suppose you could do any form that you can cut out of the shrink plastic.


That is the nice thing about the shrink plastic.  I can make any form I want.  The plastic is strong so it holds up. 







This is a picture of the back, just so you can see how I colored it.





This is a picture of some of the many of the items I use.  I used Shrinky Dink brand, but I am not sure if they have stopped making this or not.  You can also use Grafix brand.  I have never used this brand, but may have to try it if I can't get more Shrinky.  From what I have read, the Grafix doesn't get as small while baking, so you have to play with the size of my pattern to get it the size you want. 




A list of what I used for this project:

Shrinky Dink Ruff and Ready, 1 sheet
Hole Punch or small drill bit, I usually don't use a hole punch for the hanging hole.  I use          the smallest drill bit I can find and drill after I have finished the ornament.
Orange Pencil
White Pencil
E6000 glue or something similar 
Tooth Picks
Black Sharpie for tracing and coloring
Parchment Paper
Tile or some other heavy, smooth flat item
Flat Spatula
Cutting board or some other surface on which to drill
White Buttons of all sizes
Flat Back gems in White colors - just an assortment of things in White
Rose Beads with Flat Backs - Bought mine at Michael's in the strung bead section, backs      were a little rounded but with enough glue they stuck
Orange Seed beads(or glitter)
White Seed Beads(or glitter)
Black Seed Beads(or glitter)
Flat Back Black Gem
White sequins
White Boa - the small size

How I made this.

1. I traced it onto shrink plastic by laying my drawing  underneath the sheet of shrink plastic with the frosted side up.   I used the sharpie.

2.  I used the sharpie to color in the face and  the orange pencil to color the  beak.  I colored the rest of it white.  I colored it just because I thought some of the plastic might show through.  I wasn't particularly neat when I did it. Just filled it in. 

3.  Cut shape out.

4.  Bake according to directions given by the manufacturer of the product you are using.  When I bake these I put parchment paper on the pan and place the plastic on that, then I put another layer of parchment paper on top of the ornament.  I have a small aluminum pan that came with my toaster over that I put on top of that. This seems to keep the plastic from curling on itself and sticking together.  I use my regular oven for baking these but I know some people use their toaster oven, but since I am using the pan from that oven to put on top of the items being baked that wouldn't work for me. 

5. Now, these things warp sometimes.  I don't know why one does it and one doesn't, even when I am doing the exact same shape.  If this happens I put it back in the oven for 5 minutes and then you can work with it a little to get it in the shape I want.  I don't put the parchment paper or pan on it the 2nd time as it doesn't seem to curl up so much at this point.  But remember, these will sometimes warp and it may never get to the exact shape you want.  Just consider it as having a handmade look and move on. 

6.  I also have a fairly heavy floor tile that I put on top of these when I take them off the pan from baking.  I put it on top and wait a few minutes for it to cool. Anything smooth, heavy and flat should work.   This helps it get flat.

7.  Once baked, use a flat spatula to remove to counter and cover with the heavy object you are using to flatten, like the floor tile I use.  Allow to cool for a few minutes 

8.  After cooling completely I move it to another piece of parchment paper because I know I am going to be sealing and gluing and lots of other things that make a mess.

9.  I used a tooth pick to spread the E6000 glue where ever I was putting a button or gem. I squirted out a glob of glue on the parchment paper to begin and used the tooth pick to dab it on.   I started with the eye, just use the tooth pick to put a dab of glue where you want the eye and affix the black gem.  I then started in the middle and adhered the larger buttons or gems by applying glue to the shrink plastic and placing the items down.  I worked my way out to the edges and up the neck.   Don't worry, you will fill in any blank spaces with the seed beads, glitter, small beads or whatever you have decided to use.  Use the orange and black seed beads to fill in the face and beak.   I would stop and let things dry, so they wouldn't move around and then go back and fill in some more until it was filled in the way I wanted it. 

10.  I just smeared the glue on the spots that were blank and poured the seed beads on, pressed them in with my finger and poured off any excess.  You will have to play with what works best for you. 

11.  You may want to leave 2 blank spaces for the hanging string.  If you do it this way, remember to use a hole punch to make the holes before you bake it.  Or you can drill through those spaces.   I just drilled right through buttons and the shrink plastic, but I did it slowly, so I wouldn't loosen what was glued down.   If I did loosen it, I just  re glued it.  You  just have to plan how you will handle this.  But I managed so I'm sure you will too.   Remember to put something under the swan so you don't drill through your counter. 

12.  Make sure all is dry and firm, I rubbed my finger over everything to make sure it was firmly affixed.  If it felt loose, I used a tooth pick to add more glue. 

13.  To add the boa, put swan on it's front.  Cut about a 3 inch piece of boa.  Add E6000 glue along edge of tail.  Press boa onto back of swan.   I tore a small piece of parchment paper and place it over the glued down boa.  I then place a small heavy bottle over this and allowed the glue to dry. 

15.   Put a string through the hole in the top, tie a knot and you are done.   I actually made 2 holes on the body of the flamingo for hanging.  I just thought it would hang better. 






Friday, May 22, 2015

Button Mosaic Shrink Plastic Flamingo

I have seen a lot of the button mosaic art lately and it gave me an idea.   Could I do a version of this with shrink plastic?  And, as I seem to be on a flamingo high, I thought I would use the same drawing for the frosted glass one for this flamingo.  



Now as I said, it usually comes back to Christmas for me.  And I thought, wouldn't it be cool to do a button mosaic Christmas ornament.  


I picked a simple form as I thought it would be easier to fill in with buttons(they only make them so small).  Then I decided to use seed beads, gems and small beads.  You could also use glitter.   So, after doing a few of these I suppose you could do any form that you can cut out of the shrink plastic.


That was the nice thing about the shrink plastic.  I can make any form I want.  The plastic is strong so it holds up. 



















This is a picture of the back, just so you can see how I colored it.



This is a picture of some of the many of the items I use.  I used Shrinky Dink brand, but I am not sure if they have stopped making this or not.  You can also use Grafix brand.  I have never used this brand, but may have to try it if I can't get more Shrinky.  From what I have read, the Grafix doesn't get as small while baking, so you have to play with the size of my pattern to get it the size you want. 




A list of what I used for this project:

Shrinky Dink Ruff and Ready, 1 sheet
Hole Punch or small drill bit, I usually don't use a hole punch for the hanging hole.  I use          the smallest drill bit I can find and drill after I have finished the ornament.
Pink Pencil
White Pencil
E6000 glue or something similar 
Tooth Picks
Black Sharpie for tracing and coloring
Parchment Paper
Tile or some other heavy, smooth flat item
Flat Spatula
Cutting board or some other surface on which to drill
 4 Long Eye Pins - I think that is what they are called - for the legs
Pink Buttons of all sizes
Flat Back gems in Pink colors - just an assortment of things in pink
Rose Beads with Flat Backs - Bought mine at Michael's in the strung bead section, backs      were a little rounded but with enough glue they stuck
Pink Seed beads
White Seed Beads
Black Seed Beads
Flat Back Black Gem
Small Black Beads for making the legs
2 Jump Rings
Pliers




I think you should be able to print this out and use as a pattern

 I hand drew this, I think you can probably tell.   You may  have to adjust his size if you are using a different brand of shrink plastic. At this size, after you make it and add legs, it is about 7 or 8 inches high including the legs.   Don't trace the wing.


How I made this.

1. I traced it onto shrink plastic by laying my drawing  underneath the sheet of shrink plastic with the frosted side up.   

2.  I used the sharpie to color in the tip of beak and a white pencil to finish beak.  I colored the rest of it pink.  I colored it just because I thought some of the plastic might show through.  I wasn't particularly neat when I did it. Just filled it in. 

3.  Cut shape out.

4.  Bake according to directions given by the manufacturer of the product you are using.  When I bake these I put parchment paper on the pan and place the plastic on that, then I put another layer of parchment paper on top of the ornament.  I have a small aluminum pan that came with my toaster over that I put on top of that. This seems to keep the plastic from curling on itself and sticking together.  I use my regular oven for baking these but I know some people use their toaster oven, but since I am using the pan from that oven to put on top of the items being baked that wouldn't work for me. 

5. Now, these things warp sometimes.  I don't know why one does it and one doesn't, even when I am doing the exact same shape.  If this happens I put it back in the oven for 5 minutes and then you can work with it a little to get it in the shape I want.  I don't put the parchment paper or pan on it the 2nd time as it doesn't seem to curl up so much at this point.  But remember, these will sometimes warp and it may never get to the exact shape you want.  Just consider it as having a handmade look and move on. 

6.  I also have a fairly heavy floor tile that I put on top of these when I take them off the pan from baking.  I put it on top and wait a few minutes for it to cool. Anything smooth, heavy and flat should work.   This helps it get flat.

7.  Once baked, use a flat spatula to remove to counter and cover with the heavy object you are using to flatten, like the floor tile I use.  Allow to cool for a few minutes 

8.  After cooling completely I move it to another piece of parchment paper because I know I am going to be sealing and gluing and lots of other things that make a mess.

9.  I used a tooth pick to spread the E6000 glue where ever I was putting a button or gem. I squirted out a glob of glue on the parchment paper to begin.   I started with the eye, just use the tooth pick to put a dab of glue where you want the eye and affix the black gem.  I then started in the middle and adhered the larger buttons or gems by applying glue to the shrink plastic and placing the items down.  I worked my way out to the edges and up the neck.   Don't worry, you will fill in any blank spaces with the seed beads, glitter, small beads or whatever you have decided to use.  Use the white and black seed beads to fill in the face and beak.   I would stop and let things dry, so they wouldn't move around and then go back and fill in some more until it was filled in the way I wanted it. 

10.  I just smeared the glue on the spots that were blank and poured the seed beads on, pressed them in with my finger and poured off any excess.  You will have to play with what works best for you. 

11.  You may want to leave 2 blank spaces so you can drill through the plastic for adding legs.   And think about where you will be putting the string for hanging.   I just drilled right through buttons and the shrink plastic, but I did it slowly, so I wouldn't loosen what was glued down.   If I did loosen it, I just  re glued it.  You  just have to plan how you will handle this.  But I managed so I'm sure you will too.   Remember to put something under the flamingo so you don't drill through your counter. 

12.  Make sure all is dry and firm, I rubbed my finger over everything to make sure it was firmly affixed.  If it felt loose, I used a tooth pick to add more glue. 

13.  To make legs, I strung some small black beads, about 8 or 9 onto one of the eye pins and made a loop at the straight end.  I filled another eye pin and made a loop on the end of that one  that I used that loop to attach to the other eye pin.  Make 2 of these. 

14.  Put jump rings through the holes you made on the body of the flamingo.  Attach the legs you made.

15.   Put a string through the hole in the top, tie a knot and you are done.   I actually made 2 holes on the body of the flamingo for hanging.  I just thought it would hang better. 

I will be adding some other button mosaic ornaments.  Just got to get the pictures. 

Thursday, May 21, 2015

Frosted Glass Look Flamingo Shrinky Plastic

I have started experimenting with paper and Shrink Plastic.  I have made hundres of these things by now.  My tree was covered with them this year.  I do one and it gives me ideas to do something else.   I have done the paper on the front and back of these.  Both have their appeal.  This one has the paper under the plastic.  I think it gets a cool, fosted glass look. 

I know most people make jewelry with these, but I am obsessed with making Christmas ornaments right now(probably for all time).  



I don't know if you can see it, but in real life, this looks like frosted glass.



A list of what I used for this project:

Shrinky Dink Ruff and Ready, 1 sheet
Hole Punch or small drill bit, I usually don't use a hole punch for the hanging hole.  I use the smallest     drill bit I can find and drill after I have finished the ornament.
Mod Podge Gloss - MP
Small Paint Brush
E6000 glue or something similar 
Black Sharpie for tracing
Regular pencil
Parchment Paper,
Tile
Flat Spatula
Cutting board or some other surface on which to drill
Pink Feather Boa - the small kind
Black chenille stem about 7 inches long
Scrapbook paper, I used one in a Pink Color and with a smaller print
Small Flat back Black gem for eye


I think you should be able to print this out and use as a pattern

 I hand drew this, I think you can probably tell.   You may  have to adjust his size if you are using a different brand of shrink plastic. At this size, after you make it and add legs, it is about 6 1/2 inches high including the legs. 

 I want to say a few things about coloring and cutting this out of the shrink plastic.  

1.  I usually trace these onto the shrink plastic with a black sharpie, on this one, don't trace the middle section that was drawn for the wing, unless you want to have that outline on the finished product.  That might actually look cool.  Maybe I'll try that on one.

2.  If you are using Grafix, you are going to have to play around with this.  I haven't tried it with that brand and from what I have read it doesn't shrink as much as the Dink's brand.

How I made this.

1. I traced it onto shrink plastic by laying my drawing  underneath the sheet of shrink plastic with the frosted side up.  I followed the steps above.   

2.  I used the sharpie to color in the tip of beak and a white pencil to finish beak.

3.  Cut shape out.

4.  Bake according to directions given by the manufacturer of the product you are using.  When I bake these I put parchment paper on the pan and place the plastic on that, then I put another layer of parchment paper on top of the ornament.  I have a small aluminum pan that came with my toaster over that I put on top of that. This seems to keep the plastic from curling on itself and sticking together.  I use my regular oven for baking these but I know some people use their toaster oven, but since I am using the pan from that oven to put on top of the items being baked that wouldn't work for me. 

5. Now, these things warp sometimes.  I don't know why one does it and one doesn't, even when I am doing the exact same shape.  If this happens I put it back in the oven for 5 minutes and then you can work with it a little to get it in the shape I want.  I don't put the parchment paper or pan on it the 2nd time as it doesn't seem to curl up so much at this point.  But remember, these will sometimes warp and it may never get to the exact shape you want.  Just consider it as having a handmade look and move on. 

6.  I also have a fairly heavy floor tile that I put on top of these when I take them off the pan from baking.  I put it on top and wait a few minutes for it to cool. Anything smooth, heavy and flat should work.   This helps it get flat.

7.  Once baked, use a flat spatula to remove to counter and cover with the heavy object you are using to flatten, like the floor tile I use.  Allow to cool for a few minutes 

8.  After cooling completely I move it to another piece of parchment paper because I know I am going to be sealing and gluing and lots of other things that make a mess.

9.  I use the baked flamingo as a pattern.  Place it on the paper you are using, trace and cut out.  You are going to want to make sure that you can't see your tracing line on your cut out paper form.

10.  I use Mod Podge to adhere paper to back of flamingo.  Cover the back of the flamingo(the shiny side) with Mod Podge, then cover the printed side of paper(you want the pattern to show through the plastic) and lay it over the glue you put on back of flamingo.  Cover the back of paper with Mod Podge to seal.  You may have to trim the paper some more along edges.  You can do it now, but your scissors will be a mess. or wait until dry.  Once it is trimmed the way you want try to seal edges with MP.   Allow to dry completely.


11.  To make legs, simply fold chenille stem in half and fold up one leg to cross over the other.  Use E6000 glue to adhere legs to back of body.  I sat a small heavy bottle over the area where the legs were at so it would dry firmly.  

12.  To add Pink Boa to tail I again used E6000.  I sort of made a loop of the stuff and glued it to the front and back of the birds tail.  I laid the flamingo on it's back, tore a piece of parchment paper large enough to cover the tail and put a small heavyl bottle on top to help it adhere firmly. 

13.  I used a small flat back gem to make an eye.  Used E6000 again.

14.  Drill hole with drill bit, use plastic cutting board or something similar so you don't drill through your counter. 

15.   Put a string through the hole in the top, tie a knot and you are done.   



Shrink Plastic with Dangling Legs and Fluffy Tail

OK, here is another one.  A pretty pink flamingo with dangling legs and a fluffy tail.




I hope you can see the sparkles 









A list of what I usually use

Shrinky Dink Ruff and Ready, 2 sheets
Hole Punch or small drill bit, I usually don't use a hole punch for the hanging hole.  I use the smallest drill bit I can find and drill after I have finished the ornament.
Colored Pencils
Mod Podge Gloss
Sparkle Glaze
Mod Podge Dimensional Magic
Small Paint Brush
E6000 glue or something similar if you are gluing rather than melting the 2 parts together
Black Sharpie for tracing
Regular pencil
Parchment Paper,
Tile
Flat Spatula
Cutting board or some other surface to drill on
Jump rings
Black Feather Boa
Pliers for pulling jump ring open and closed



I think you should be able to print these out and use as a pattern

 I hand drew this so  you may also have to adjust his size if you are using a different brand of shrink plastic. At this size, after you make it and add legs, it is about 8 inches high. 

 I want to say a few things about coloring and cutting this out of the shrink plastic.  

1.  I usually trace these onto the shrink plastic with a black sharpie, on this one, don't trace the semi- triangular area at  the the base of the flamingo's neck.  This area is going to be left clear, so at most trace it lightly with a regular pencil and then erase before baking

2. The triangular area inside the legs doesn't need to be cut out, it will turn mostly clear after baking and sealing. 

4.  If you are using Grafix, you are going to have to play around with this.  I haven't tried it with that brand and from what I have read it doesn't shrink as much as the Dink's brand.

5.  I use whatever colored pencils I have, but be warned, the darker colors in particular tend to smear.  So, when coloring, do light colors first and then take care with the darker colors that you don't smear them into the lighter ones while coloring.  

6.  Also be careful while cutting that you don't smear the colors around too much. 

How I made this.

1.  Traced it onto shrink plastic by laying my drawing  underneath the sheet of shrink plastic with the frosted side up.  I followed the steps above.  I used 1 sheet for the body and 1 sheet for the legs and neck.   If you have scraps laying around you could cut the neck and legs out of those. 

2.  I used 3 different shades of pink to color the body.  I started with the darkest on the outer edges and went lighter towards the inside on the wing.   I sort of did the same thing on the neck and blended it all in together.  I used white pencil on his face and a black sharpie for the tip of the beak, eye and legs.

5.  Cut all the shapes out.

6.  Bake according to directions given by the manufacturer of the product you are using.  When I bake these I put parchment paper on the pan and place the plastic on that, then I put another layer of parchment paper on top of the ornament.  I have a small aluminum pan that came with my toaster over that I put on top of that. This seems to keep the plastic from curling on itself and sticking together.  I use my regular oven for baking these but I know some people use their toaster oven, but since I am using the pan from that oven to put on top of the items being baked that wouldn't work for me. 

7. Now, these things warp sometimes.  I don't know why one does it and one doesn't, even when I am doing the exact same shape.  If this happens I put it back in the oven for 5 minutes and then you can work with it a little to get it in the shape I want.  I don't put the parchment paper or pan on it the 2nd time as it doesn't seem to curl up so much at this point.  But remember, these will sometimes warp and it may never get to the exact shape you want.  Just consider it as having a handmade look and move on. 

8  I also have a fairly heavy floor tile that I put on top of these when I take them off the pan from baking.  I put it on top and wait a few minutes for it to cool. Anything smooth, heavy and flat should work.   This helps it get flat.

9.  Once all pieces are baked, remove the legs and put under whatever you are using to make it lie flat, like the tile I use.   Line  up  the clear, semi-triangular section at the end his neck with where you want it on the body.  Gently slide them back in the oven so they don't slide around and melt together in a way you don't want.   I bake them again for 5 minutes, open the oven, use a flat spatula to press them together, then flip it over and bake for another 5 minutes, press again then take off pan and put under the tile I use.  I guess you can use E6000 glue to glue them together, but I like melting them together. 

10.  After cooling completely I move it to another piece of parchment paper because I know I am going to be sealing and gluing and lots of other things that make a mess.

11.  I work on the rough side of these things.  I think the item looks more like what I intended.  It also means I get 2 shiny sides, so all is protected.

12.  I used my sparkle glaze to paint his body and neck.  You could just use Mod Podge and glitter to add this if you want or not do it at all.  Don't smear the pink into the white while you are doing this.

13.  Use Mod Podge to seal face and then do the rest of the body and legs.   Since the face is white I try not to smear the pink into it.  I have found if I don't Mod Podge the whole thing before I put the Dimensional Magic on that the colors sometimes lift off and run.

14.  After the Mod Podge has dried. I then used the Dimensional Magic and covered the whole thing including the legs.  You are going to have to watch out for bubbles and if you get one just use a pin or tooth pick to pop them or move to edge to get rid of it.  It is usually pretty good about staying on the item, but if I really go overboard and put to much on it has run over the side so use discretion.   Let it dry, don't move it around.  This can take several hours.  You can usually tell it is dry if it no longer has that hazy, milky look.   This is another reason I don't use a hole punch as it would just fill in with this stuff.  Once dry you can decide if it needs another coat, I wouldn't recommend more than two coats as it seems to crackle a little on me after that point.

15.  Use the drill to make a hole at the top of the legs and then a hole where you want it to dangle from the body.  Make another hole or holes(sometimes to get it to hang correctly I make two holes to put the hanging string through) for the string for hanging.     I placed a plastic cutting board under it and drilled on top of that so I wouldn't drill my counters. 

16.  Use a jump ring to attach the legs to the body.

17.  I used E6000 glue to add black feather boa to the tail.  I glued it on the back.

18.   Put a string through the hole in the top, tie a knot and you are done.