The fabulous new blog, Make It from Your Heart, is now live. You can see it by visiting blog.closetomyheart.com!
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To find a list of the other materials required, please refer to the Annual Inspirations recipes.
Make It From Your Heart Blog
Keep up with the latest project ideas, crafting tips, and products from Close To My Heart on our Make It From Your Heart blog.
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Things I Like
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
I have some exciting news to share!
From the window in my Close To My Heart office, I can see
ribbons of clouds winding around the middle of the mountains, as if nature is
wrapping up her final surprise for us before winter comes. Summer is fading
into reds and yellows and the air is filling up with the crispness of fall.
It’s a time of change and expectancy, and life is humming with anticipation for
the good things that are to come.
This same feeling is also settling within the walls of Close
To My Heart. Over the past few months, a new project has been in development and
the time has finally come to release it. Tomorrow, a new blog straight from Close
To My Heart will be born! The name will be Make It From Your Heart, and tomorrow you will find it at blog.closetomyheart.com.
There are some great things in store with this change that I
think you’re going to really enjoy. This new blog will fulfill the needs of our
growing company and will be an answer to the suggestions that so many of you
have expressed. It will open up a whole new world of creative space,
inspiration, and connection. It will be a fresh palette, a place for us to share
unprecedented levels of creative expression.
Although this has been overwhelmingly exciting, it’s been a
little sad, too, because with the dawning of this new project comes the time to
say goodbye to my blog that has meant so much to me for so long.
While the new blog will no longer be under my name, I will
still be deeply involved with it, looking over posts and artwork every step of
the way, and checking in with my own posts from time to time. My wish for this
new blog is that it becomes its own kind of bird—and I want to give it enough
space to spread its wings!
This transition to the new blog is a significant change. Changes
can be difficult in the beginning, but we must try not to push them away and resolve
instead to embrace with open hearts the good they have to offer.
This is not goodbye forever; this is simply goodbye to the
times that have come before. I hope you’ll join with me in welcoming this new
season for Close To My Heart. I’ll miss my blog and all the joy it’s brought me over the past six years, but I know that the new blog will bring a joy all
its own, pushing us onward toward greater horizons.
Always yours,
Jeanette
Friday, September 19, 2014
Annual Inspirations Witch Hats Tutorial
We all love home decor that screams creativity! Several of you have seen the adorable hats on page 38 of Annual Inspirations and have asked for instructions on how to recreate them. Below you’ll find step-by-step directions you can use with the Annual Inspirations recipes already provided to give your home a little more spook this season.
Happy crafting!
October 31 Hat
Cricut® Shapes:
Artiste
Spike Flowers: 3 ½" and 4 ½" Shift+Accent 2 (p. 54)
Round Flowers: 3 ½" and 2 ¾" Accent 2 (cut several, p. 54)
Cupcake Liners: 2 ½" and 2" Accent 4 (cut 4 of each, p. 77)
Circle: 11" Card (p. 48)
Vines: 1", 1 ½”, and 1 ¾" Shift+3D Object (cut several, p. 54)
Spiderweb: 4 ½" Accent 4 (p. 76)
Banners: 1 ¼" and 2" Accent 2 <5> (cut several, p. 35)5>
To find a list of the other materials required, please refer to the Annual Inspirations recipes.
Cone and Base
1. Attach two sheets of 12" x 12" B&T paper on top of two sheets of 12" x 12" cardstock. This double-sheet thickness is needed for extra stability in the cone of the hat.
2. Using tape, attach the two sheets of layered 12" x 12" papers together to form a 24" length. Ensure that edges are precisely aligned.
3. Starting from one corner, roll the paper into a cone, adjusting to form your desired shape. Use a strong adhesive to hold it in place. Hats will measure differently according to how tight you roll your cone.
4. Cut the 11" circle to form the base of the hat.
5. Center the cone on the base and trace the bottom of cone onto circle shape. Trace another circle within the first, about a 1/2" smaller than the original.
6. Trim out innermost center circle, then use scissors to cut ½" slits approximately 1" apart around the entire outer circle to create tabs. Fold tabs upward.
7. Staple, or adhere with a strong adhesive, the tabs into the cone, starting from where you would like the front of your hat to be.
Edging
1. Cut out spiderweb cupcake liners and trim off the tabs.
2. Attach four of the 2 ½" spiderweb liners underneath the base of circle so that the edges of the webs extend beyond the rim of the hat.
3. Attach the 2" spiderweb liners along the top of the hat’s brim against the inner edges, near the cone.
Decoration
1. Select where you would like the front of your hat to be and adhere the 2" banner to it.
2. Adhere 1 ¼" banners overlapping the larger banner around the bottom of the cone.
3. Cut several ½" strips of B&T paper, pleat them, and attach them end to end on the bottom of the cone.
4. Cut out flowers, spiderweb, and vines from the Cricut® Artiste cartridge.
5. Use an embossing tool to mold the leaves of the branch shapes. Ink the edges with Slate ink using the sponge dauber.
6. Ink the edges of the flowers in Thistle and Sunset using the sponge dauber. Using your quilling tool, roll the flowers, adhere them closed, and add Sparkles to the center of each as desired.
7. Attach the spiderweb to the side of the cone and layer the floral arrangement on top of it.
8. Back the “Spooky” metal shape from your Scaredy Cat Complements with Thistle cardstock and add it to the floral arrangement.
Top of Hat
1. Cut a 2" x 12" strip of Thistle cardstock. Cut a 1" notch every ¼".
2. Using your quilling tool, roll the strip until the solid edge is small enough to fit into the hole at the top of the cone. Adhere it so it cannot unroll. Make sure the roll is small enough to fit into the top of the cone. If needed, trim the tip of the hat to allow more space for the topper.
3. Fit the curled hat topper into the hole at the top of the hat and secure with adhesive.
4. Using your quilling tool, roll the ¼" strips downward into tight curls.
5. Cut the ribbon into 3" pieces, loop them, and adhere them individually to the top of the hat, arranging them in layers.
6. Add stars from the Scaredy Cat Assortment.
Embellishment
Embellish your hat with the Scaredy Cat Assortment, sequins from the Mini-Medley Accents black collection, Slate diagonal striped ribbon, or other accents of your choice.
Variations
You can create a variety of decorative hats using the cone and base shapes shown above. Check out these clever variations:
Spiderweb-Topped Hat
Cricut® Shapes:
Artiste
Circle: 7 ½" Card (p. 48)

















