Stick Stars

I love making these simple stars from twigs!  They’re easy and free to make, and they add such a wonderful, comfortable homey-ness to wherever they are hung.

I admire when people make these without the use of a glue gun, and I may get there someday, but for now, my glue gun makes these possible.  My favorite way to use these is hanging many of them from a tree branch on the wall at different lengths (You can see this in the YouTube short below).  These would also make sweet ornaments.  You could try painting them different colors for different celebrations throughout the year.  And I’ve had a lot of fun experimenting with making these stars with other upcycled materials as well.  (You can see my coffee stopper stars briefly in the video!)

Hope you enjoy coming up with your own unique ways to make and enjoy these!

Reusing Projects

Fabric
(unusable clothing, sheets, etc.)
Fabric Gift Bags

Paperboard Boxes/Card Stock
(food boxes, tissue boxes, store-bought toy boxes, etc)
Gift Bags
Gift Tags

Paper Products
(magazines, catalogs, pages from damaged books, outdated maps, paper bags, etc.)
Envelopes
Paper Fortune Cookies
Stocking Gift Bags

Card Stock Paper Products
(old greeting cards, old calendars, etc.)
Gift Tags

Shipping Boxes/Moving Boxes
Storage/organizing cubes or like this

Nature
Stick Stars
Branches

Upcycled Paper Stockings

 

Stockings from UPcycled Paper

I was inspired to make these during the COVID shutdowns.  I’ve been a reusable bag person long before it was law in many places.  When grocery stores were scrambling to find their own safety policies at an unprecedented time, some stores let us continue to bring our bags, but one of them didn’t.  We started limiting our trips to that particular store, but we still ended up with way too many tragic paper bags.  I began brainstorming uses for them, and this is one project I particularly love.

These homemade stockings are darling!  I love that they can be customized to the size you’d like.  You can leave the bag designs on the outside or turn the bags inside out for a blank canvas.

You can use these as actual stockings, decoration, or as very creative gift bags.

This is such a fun way to upcycle any paper product, whether it’s paper grocery bags, catalog pages, magazine pages, calendar pages, reused gift wrap, old maps, damaged book pages, or even coloring pages.

 

It’s quite simple:

–Cut the shape of a stocking on two bits of a paper –  Remember, if you’d like a specific side facing out on both sides, you may have to flip your template for the second cut out.

–Punch holes all along the edges.  The closer they are, the more secure the stocking will be for smaller objects, but the longer the threading will take.  Then just weave a piece of string, yarn, or t-shirt yarn through.  I’ve also used my machine to stitch these closed.

–Make a bunch at once to have them on hand for future gifts or to share with friends who might like to use them.

–Try making a bunch of tiny ones and number them for a decorative advent calendar.

Have fun with it!

What are your own creative ideas you’ll add to this project idea?

Your actions can and will make a difference.

Play Dough-Homemade

Homemade play dough is a fun, easy way to cut down on all those plastic containers the store-bought ones come in, and it’s also really great for gifts.

Play Dough is so much fun and such a part of childhood. Unfortunately, the widely known “Play-Doh” brand, upon further research, wasn’t exactly something I felt great about for our kids or the environment. While the exact ingredient formula is a secret, ingredients do include things like petroleum and surfactants, both of which can be harmful to the environment and to one’s health. I’m also extremely wary of manufactured dyes. The original use for Play-Doh was actually as a wallpaper cleaner, which didn’t exactly thrill me to read. So, with all that information in hand, and considering all those plastic Play-Doh containers entering our environment, I decided to opt for the homemade route.

I always love trying the homemade/do-it-yourself route, but I’m never quite sure what I’m getting into when I start a new project. Fortunately, in this case, homemade play dough is easy and fun. I love that the kids can be involved in making it, and there is little else more wonderful than kneading warm, fresh play dough. 

Normally, I can be pretty particular about where our ingredients like flour and oil come from, but with play dough, I am more relaxed. I keep a stash of the cheap, generic ingredients in bulk in a high cupboard just for crafts like these. (The cream of tar tar ingredient can seem a bit much, but I’ve sometimes found it in bulk sections at natural food stores for cheaper, and once, I stumbled across a mega sale of these and stocked up.)

I know there are tons of recipes out there, which are probably all pretty great, but the first one I tried was this one, and I LOVE it!  (I think it’s always nice to have someone narrow down recipes to ones that are tested and good, so you don’t have to.) We usually make a single or double batch, but you can easily make a half batch or times it by four or five even. Occasionally, I’ll use natural dyes, if we have some in the freezer. And once in awhile I’ll make scented dough too. I keep the play dough in glass jars or Pyrex containers in the fridge when the kids are done playing, and it lasts quite a long time for us.  You can also just reuse Play-Doh containers you might have on hand.

Play dough is fun to play with all on its own, but if you’d like accessories for it, don’t worry about buying a big kit. You can collect cookie cutters, garlic presses, rolling pins, and the like from garage sales, thrift shops, or your kitchen cupboard. Play dough “stamps” can be really anything you have lying around–corks, Legos, spools, and so on.  I’ve also come to love having a small plastic “kid” knife in our collection and a pair of very kid-friendly introductory scissors. Play dough is a great opportunity for little ones who are ready to practice cutting!

If you’re looking for a simple gift for a kiddo in your life, a jar of homemade play dough with a couple of cookie cutters attached with a ribbon is a perfect idea. The cookie cutters can be added to any collection the kiddo might already have. The play dough will be enjoyed until its time is done, and the jar can be cleaned and reused for more play dough or something else. For families who seem to have more than enough toys already, this is a great “consumable” gift.  You might also consider attaching a printed copy of the recipe and even a stash of the ingredients as the gift or part of it, so the family can make their own batches.

And, I have to say, even if you don’t have kids around and you aren’t planning on this as a present anytime soon, I do highly recommend everyone give this recipe a try at least once. There’s something very relaxing and grounding about holding and rolling this dough.  I recommend closing your eyes at least once while kneading the warm dough.   

Thank you for being here, as always!  Wishing you peace and calm at this time.