HOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN SILVER AND WHITE CHRISTMAS GARLAND

I know it’s hot outside, so we are mentally cooling things down a little by bringing you Christmas in July!  

I’ve teamed up with some awesome bloggy friends and every Wednesday in July we have been sharing and linking up Christmas themed projects!  It has been a lot of fun!  We wrap things up this week with an easy Silver and White Christmas Garland.

We lost our images sorry. If you make this, please email us your pictures.

Christmas in July is being hosted at these awesome blogs:

2 Crochet Hooks
Across The Blvd.
SewCraftyCrochet
The Boondocks Blog
One Mama’s Daily Drama
My Husband Has Too Many Hobbies
Purple Hues and Me
Stone Cottage Adventures
Purfylle
Olives-n-Okra

It’s never to early to be inspired by fabulous Christmas ideas!This week I’m sharing a lovely Christmas garland. White and Silver come together beautifully with twine to create a simple yet elegant garland.  If twine is too rustic for you – use a ribbon to dress it up to match your own fabulous style.

Supplies used:

Air-Dry Clay
Star Cookie Cutter
Rolling Pin
Sheet of Freezer Paper (or wax paper)
Bamboo Skewer (or a pencil or paint brush)
Jingle Bells
Twine
Fine Grit Sandpaper
White Spray Paint  (optional)

When thinking up Christmas projects to share with you, I spied a tub of air dry clay I purchased months ago, but had yet to use for a project.  I decided to give it a try and make the stars for this project with the clay.

I laid down a sheet of freezer paper to help keep the clay from sticking to the surface as I rolled it out.  I like to use freezer paper because it is sturdier than wax paper.    I used a length of copper pipe to roll out the clay because it was smooth and it was handy.  What? You don’t have a piece of copper pipe?  I’m sure a standard rolling pin would work just as well.

I used a medium-sized star cookie cutter.  The clay did stick a little to the freezer paper as I pulled them up, and they stretched slightly out of shape too.  I ended up getting a small spatula to help lift them off the paper.

The star shapes were not exactly perfect and most of the points were rounded.  I took a few seconds to consider this, and decided that they were perfectly fine.

Let the clay dry completely.  The dry time will depend on the thickness of the clay.  Mine took 2 days to completely dry.    I used a fine grit sandpaper to lightly sand the tops to smooth over a few rough spots.

The pictures above were taken at night, and the stars look yellow-tan.  They are actually a natural white color and not yellow.

I wanted stars that were ultra white, so I spray painted them with a gloss white spray paint and waited another 24 hours for the paint to dry.

To put it all together, cut a length of twine (ribbon) and alternate stringing jingle bells and stars.  Hang and enjoy!

Thanks so much to everyone who has participated in Christmas In July!

Best Lawn Sweepers
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Lawn Sweepers

A lawn sweeper picks up leaves, grass clippings, twigs and pine needles in a fraction of the time of raking. Tow behind a ride-on mower or push by hand — they save serious time on autumn cleanup. The right sweeper has

Read More »
Best Lawn Edging Tools
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Lawn Edging Tools

A clean lawn edge — where grass meets path, garden bed or driveway — is the visual difference between a maintained yard and a tidy one. A dedicated edging tool gives a sharper line than a string trimmer, especially o

READ  DIY SIMPLELINE CUCKOO CLOCK KNOCKOFF
Read More »
Best Lawn Rollers
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Lawn Rollers

A lawn roller flattens lumpy lawns, presses new turf into contact with the soil, and helps level out frost-heaved or pet-disturbed grass. They’re not a routine-use tool — once or twice a year for new lawn establishment

Read More »
Best Lawn Dethatchers (Manual and Powered)
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Lawn Dethatchers (Manual and Powered)

Thatch — the layer of dead grass and roots between your lawn and the soil — chokes lawns by blocking water and air. A 1cm thatch layer is healthy; over 2cm and the lawn declines fast. A dethatcher rips out the thatch

Read More »
Best Manual Lawn Aerators
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Manual Lawn Aerators

A manual core aerator is the right tool for compacted suburban lawns where a powered aerator is overkill. They pull plugs of soil out, rather than just punching holes — which is what compacted lawn actually needs. Slow

Read More »
Best Lawn Aerator Shoes
Buying Guides
Marcus Linden

Best Lawn Aerator Shoes

Spike aerator shoes are the simplest, cheapest aeration option — strap them over your boots, walk the lawn, and let the spikes punch holes. They don’t do as much as a core aerator but for a 200sqm suburban lawn they’re

Read More »

Back to top button