Sunday, September 15, 2013

Santa Chimney Place Setting

Santa Chimney Place Setting

For this project I used Sno-Tex snow texture paint, Chalkboard paint, and Patio Paint. Man I love this Patio Paint! Have you ever used this? This was my first time and the coverage on this pot is amazing. I’ve painted a LOT of clay pots in my time and after this will never use regular acrylic paint again. Ev-er.
Santa Chimney Place SettingFirst you’ll paint the clay pot. To make the bricks, just use a small rectangle cut from a household sponge. Then put a layer of Snotex around the rim.
Santa Chimney Place SettingTo make the legs you’ll twist chenille together to make it a fatter piece, then twist them around a pencil or paint brush to coil them.
Santa Chimney Place SettingHis body is made from a Styrofoam egg. Paint glue on the fat end and cover in glitter. Put a toothpick into the narrow end, this helps it stand up in the pot. The legs go in the ‘red’ end, using a toothpick to create holes in the egg helps a lot. The shoes are made from a small egg cut in half and glittered in black. I actually didn’t have a small egg, so I used half of a ball, cut that in half, then shaped them. The egg would be easier, hence me suggesting it to you ;-)
Santa Chimney Place SettingThe full instructions are below, hope you have fun!
Santa Chimney Place Setting
 
Ingredients
  • Supplies:
  • 1 small terra cotta pot
  • Patio Paint: cream and reddish-brown
  • Black chalkboard paint
  • SnoTex snow texture paint
  • 1 medium Styrofoam egg
  • 1 small Styrofoam egg
  • 2 glittery red chenille stems
  • 1 white chenille stem
  • 10 small glittery white pom poms
  • Fine glitter: red and black
  • 2 toothpicks
  • 1 small wood rectangle (cardboard will work too!)
  • You’ll also need:
  • household sponge
  • paintbrush
  • white craft glue
  • hot glue gun
  • white chalkboard pen
  • cotton balls
Instructions
  1. First, paint your terra cotta pot with cream paint. Allow it to dry, then use a small rectangular piece cut from a household sponge to add the reddish-brown bricks. Let dry.
  2. Apply snow texture paint to the rim of the pot using a palette or a paintbrush. Set aside to dry.
  3. Fold a red chenille stem in half and cut to create two equal pieces. Twist the two pieces together to form one thicker piece. Repeat with second chenille stem. Now coil each of them around a pencil or pen, slide off.
  4. Cut the small Styrofoam egg in half lengthwise, these are Santa’s boots. Insert a coiled chenille stem into the round half of one of the egg pieces. Repeat with other chenille stem. Coat the “boots” with white glue and sprinkle with black glitter. Tap off excess and set aside to dry.
  5. Insert a toothpick into the smaller end of the large Styrofoam egg. Paint the larger end with white glue. Sprinkle red glitter all over the glue and tap off excess. Set aside to dry (hint: if you have floral foam stick the toothpick into the foam. If not, simply use a cardboard egg carton).
  6. While the painted pot and the glitter eggs are drying, paint the wood rectangle with black chalkboard paint. Hot glue the second toothpick to the back of the “sign”. Use chalkboard pen to write your guest’s name on the sign. Add some snow texture paint to the top of the sign. Allow everything to dry.
  7. Place 2-3 cotton balls inside the clay pot. With toothpick pointing down, insert the large red glitter egg into the pot. Pull additional cotton balls into pieces and tuck them into the pot around the glitter egg to help support it.
  8. Cut white chenille stem in half. Carefully twist around Santa’s legs to create pant cuffs. Secure with glue. Insert the chenille legs into the red glitter egg (Santa’s bottom) and secure with white glue. You can create small holes in the egg first by poking a pencil into it, then inserting the chenille.
  9. Hot glue the white glitter pom poms in a circle around the red glitter egg to create the bottom of Santa’s coat.
  10. Insert the personalized sign into the terra cotta pot and secure with glue.

Santa Chimney

I found this at www.craftsbyamanda.com
 

No comments:

Post a Comment