Showing posts with label handmade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label handmade. Show all posts

June 26, 2013

Armita and Rob Topper

Another topper for your viewing pleasure.  Because of this particular pose, I had to bake the polymer clay in several more steps than usual to make sure that the pose of each figure worked together.




Photography: Green Autumn Photography

Caroline and Craig's wedding

Check out this gorgeous post of Caroline and Craig's wedding over on 100 Layer Cake featuring a topper by yours truly!  I can't get over all those fresh and bright colours!  And those shoes...oh those delicious shoes!  It's pretty amazing to see one of my cake toppers captured on the actual wedding day and to have been able to contribute to their special day.




Photography: Apryl Ann Photography

March 18, 2013

Felted Topper with Curly Hair Tutorial (Gwyn and Danny)

The best thing about making custom toppers is that each project allows me to try something new or different. That means there is a lot trial and error, doing research and generally just learning and testing throughout.  I would not consider myself a needle-felting expert yet and I know that I still have a lot more to learn.  So I'm grateful for the wealth of knowledge, expertise and tutorials on the interweb.  Many of my techniques are hybrids of other tutorials that fit my expertise and my purpose.  So what may work for me may not work for someone else.  

Custom Cake Topper
Gwyn and Danny

For Gwyn and Danny's topper, Gwyn's hairstyle was a romantic half up-half down with curls.  I was very experienced with felting updos but not with "down dos".  Down dos, that's a word, right??  For updos, I had previously cut thin strips from a flat felt sheet and then felted them to the back in little curls.  But I found that this method didn't really look realistic.  Since a felt sheet is only one thickness, the curls didn't quite have that dimension and they looked, well, flat.  Also, flat felt sheets are very limited in colour choices and therefore sometimes makes it impossible to colour match with my wool roving.  

So I played around with wet felting each strand to give them more dimension.  Since I didn't have a teeny little curling iron lying around, I had to "set" the strands in a miniature form of "rollers" and let them dry into shape.  So I did what I normally do, find something I already have lying around.  In this case, it was wooden BBQ skewers and chopsticks.  Check out my tutorial!    

March 6, 2013

Felted Topper with Pups (Caroline, Craig, Winnie and Jemma)

Custom wedding topper

Ever since I blogged about my C+J topper, I received a lot of interest from all over the world.  So it's really quite amazing now that I'm making custom toppers for people from across the country and the world!  Doing custom projects are a wonderful contrast to my day job.  As an industrial designer, I work on consumer products that are mass produced and are sometimes quite technical.  These toppers allow me to work on more handmade, custom products that will hopefully become lasting keepsakes for couples of their special day.  Also, needle felting is truly a labour of love that takes time and patience.  The fact that people are interested in my work and recognize the time and effort that is put into each topper is a true testament to the growing handmade craft movement.  Also, many of my customers tell me that after all the wedding dust has settled, the topper is a perfect memento that is all the more special because it was made only for them.

I've got several toppers on the go right now but I wanted to share one that I did recently.  See more after the jump!

December 14, 2011

Laptop Sleeve

After 7 tumultuous years, I finally ended my relationship with my laptop.  I really should not have let it go on for so long.  Especially when the power jack started looking more like an asteroid crater than a functioning connection.

So enter my new love: the 17” Macbook Pro.  Like all big purchases, it needed to be accessorized.  Just like when I first bought my bike, I dressed it up real nice with pretty lights, a rear collapsible basket and a Sumowrestler bike horn.

The first most important thing was to make a laptop case to protect my laptop from all the harsh realities of the world.  I wanted it to be easy to slip over my laptop and stay secure.  It also had to have lots of padding for the occasional bump.  Lastly, I wanted it to look nice and colourful.  Now I haven't sewn anything in a really long time and my skills are very limited to lines and really slight curves.  So thank goodness laptops are rectangular and not heart shaped.  Check out my easy breezy tutorial!





Keep reading for the tutorial...

September 12, 2011

Felted Wedding Topper (Jenn and Chris)


After the success of J+L's wedding topper, another friend asked me to do their wedding cake topper.  Jenn and Chris gave me complete creative freedom with the only requirement that I use their signature pose: the high five jump.  Chris and Jenn love anything quirky and cute so I knew that I would have fun creating personalized characters.  I also wanted to create soft figures and decided to try needle felting.

Needle felting is pretty much sculpting with wool and it is a breeze to learn.  All you need is some wool roving and a special barbed felting needle.  Then you stab the needle into the wool to create a denser shape.  Since it was my first time, I wanted my shapes to be perfect so instead of stabbing quickly into the wool, I more so poked cautiously - I'm such a risk-taker.

August 10, 2011

Wedding Topper (Jackie and Lorne)

One of my best friends (J) got married and I was given the honour of making the wedding topper. This was based on her expectation that I would just make simple wooden figurines. But as you'll learn I don't like doing the same thing twice and I like to make things difficult and complicated. To me, a new project is a chance to learn something entirely new and challenging. So I decided to make the wedding topper out of polymer clay (i.e. Fimo, the stuff that kids use to make ugly brooches that moms are obliged to wear to work).

I decided to base the topper on one of J and L's engagement pictures. I thought that this picture represented exactly the kind of fun people they are...and why I would never pick a fight with J.

source: Definition Photography
So I did some research on working with polymer clay and found the most informative step by step breakdown at: www.thumbprintkids.com/pages/stepbystep.html. I went to my arts supply store and stocked up on little bricks of Sculpey.  Full process after the jump.

August 5, 2011

Penelope the Elephant

The funnest part of crocheting is making impossibly cute animals. The funnest part of making impossibly cute animals is coming up with the right name for it. Meet Penelope. I made her as a gift for my sister. boop!


Pattern by LionBrand
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Blogging tips