This is my little place for my creativity.

UPDATE: THE SITE IS MOVING AS OF FEBRUARY 10, 2014 TO:

http://www.emilylikestomakestuff.com
http://www.emilylikestomakestuff.com
http://www.emilylikestomakestuff.com
http://www.emilylikestomakestuff.com
http://www.emilylikestomakestuff.com


It's time to move on to a place that is more DIY for this DIY-er. Please come on over to see what is up, comment, make suggestions, stalk, or just say hello.
The links are all the same--I have trouble clicking on tiny stuff on my phone so I thought that having it over a few lines of text might make it easier for folks like me.

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This is more or less a record of my crafty pursuits. I'll use this space to keep track of promising ideas and my own successes or "learning opportunities" for future reference.

Comments are welcome, but will be removed if they don't actually contribute to the content. In other words, comments should have all meat and no time-sucking fillers.

As I complete the projects/ideas on the right, I'll move them to the left so you can see how well it worked out.

Friday, November 16, 2012

DIY-T-shirts-Freezer paper stenciling

Now that I am pregnant and my belly is pooching out enough to make me walk weird, it's time for some cute maternity t-shirts.

Note:  My jeans were bothering me within 6 weeks.  I bought some butt-ugly maternity jeans.  Why-oh-why is the tradition to sew a panel in them that goes all the way to the front of the crotch and then make it a completely different color?  Most modern shirts don't hang all the way to the crotch and with the black panel in front, I am sure that it looks like I have wet my pants .  Gggrrrrr...   I do have some pants that are working for me, but for how long, I don't know.  We'll cross that bridge when we get to it.

Now for the shirts.  I've made 5 and have plans to make another from a men's shirt later.

Tips:  Be generous with your freezer paper.  I like to turn the shirt inside-out and iron that on as my backing.  I feel like I get less bleeding and more control with that than a cardbord cutout.

To place my design, I put the shirt on and slobber on my finger enough to mark a darkened circle in the middle.  This lasts long enough to get the freezer paper stencil ironed on.  

Freezer paper is backed with a plastic.  It is NOT wax.  Don't confuse the two.  The freezer paper peels off pretty easily.

Wash the shirt first or buy it at Goodwill. 

Links to sites with directions are below my own project info.  Click on an image to see it better. 

This is my "swallowed a watermelon seed" shirt.  It is cartoon-ish and silly. The shirt was 5$ and the paint was 2 including tax.  7$ for a customized and cute shirt is a steal!

On the directions, it states to spray repeated coats to desired coverage.  It does NOT say to let it dry between coats.  The base colorant does bleed under very easily.  Coverage is nice, but this is a pain in the butt project.  The can clogged horribly and "spraying it upside down to clean the nozzle" didn't work--it DID spray/drip all over the place.  I used a dime that was discolored and creepy as the center of the O.
 Since the above shirt looks like crap, I am thinking that it would be an appropriate diaper cover.  A crappy paint job to hold a crappy diaper. We'll see.


These were my "good paints".  1.) They dry harder than I had hoped.  2.) The bottles are easier to open and deal with, but they will sneakily roll over your art.  Approx 1.75$ @ Michael's.  3.)  The tube paints were easier to handle but opening them means you might squirt it out at your face, hair, etc.  Once the safety foil is off, no problem. I am thinking my old bent sewing pins would be perfect for this.  Unless you are painting huge or multiple items, this set should be more than enough.  It was around 7$ @ Wal-Mart.

I am not the best stencil-cutter-outer.  I dug out an old off-brand X-acto to cut some after trying scissors and a normal razor blade (cover one edge with duct tape and the other edge is ready to go).  I tried running the freezer paper through my printer, but it was as likely to jam as it was to take it.  It was just easier to print out what I wanted, staple it on, and then tear it off while leaving the staples to plug the holes.

Stickers are a great resist that work like magic. One portion of the S in "special" wouldn't come off.  I used a marker to color over it and am hoping it will come off in the laundry.  I used the blade to scrap off stray paint.  It worked a little, but the fabric markers are probably more effective.  We'll see.

Dollar store sponge.  I cut off the un-painted end and tossed it in the baggie with the rest to use later.
2nd attempt at this one.  I wanted it for Thanksgiving day.  I can't even feel him kicking yet, but we have seen on ultrasound that he is a HE.  The can of glitter paint still sucks.  I threw it away even though there is enough for another project.  It was about 6$ @Michael's.
Here are the three shirts waiting to have the elastic put in the sides.  Not too bad, huh?
I would like to make another that says "I love Mommy.  Te amo Papá." in a word balloon that comes from the belly.  I'm not sure that I can justify having 7 maternity shirts though.  After the future Señor Robles is born, I plan to eBay these off, if they still look good.

This is such a popular method to customize your stuff that there are tutorials and videos all over.  Most of the videos are long and boring, though.  Don't bother unless there is a language barrier.

*** Modify a shirt one size up into a maternity top--EASY!
      *** Another tutorial
              ***Note: Don't bother trying to hand sew this, just gather it if you don't have a sewing machine.  For the elastic,  definitely use a machine.

Freezer paper stencil tutorial
      Another tutorial


Baby Shirt-Class of...onsie

Preggo-Halloween shirt

Baby monthly milestone onsies

Maternity calendar shirt

Krylon spray paint tutorial





Baby hats!


This bear hat is the one that I have enjoyed making.

Baby Teddy Bear hat to crochet.



Here're more hats to try out.

Baby sun hat  
Sewn baby hat from t-shirt fabric

Friday, August 17, 2012

Making a Quena

A quena is an Andean flute, very common in Perú, Ecuador, Bolivia, Chile, and Argentina.  These can also be found in other places, but the music made with these is notably Andean. 

If you'd like to hear some examples, Peru Folk Radio is my favorite Peruvian station:
http://www.perufolkradio.com/

To start with, say: KEH-huh with the "eh" being like Canadian's say it.  It is not KAY-nah unless you are a complete redneck. If you speak Spanish, you should already know how to say "qué". 

I want to learn to play one so I ordered one from Bolivia.  It has been about 3 weeks and I am still waiting waiting waiting.  Since these are reputedly very easy to make, I figured it would be fun to try.

I elected to use bamboo because I like it and because I already have some.  Specifically, I have the tiki torches left over from the 4th of July that I bought at the dollar store.  Seriously.

Materials:
  1. Screwdriver - my longest one
  2. Clamp - (It came with my Dremel-style tool.)
  3. Work surface - I used a TV tray.
  4. Pencil
  5. Scotch tape
  6. Hammer
  7. Drill
  8. Drill bits
  9. Tape measure
  10. Saw
  11. Laptop videos and sites
  12. Tiki torch (I had 4 of them.)  (PVC is also popular.  Use what you've got.  I have seen sites with beautiful Pyrex ones.)
  13. Superglue - optional--for small cuts on fingers or bamboo that splits a very little bit
  14. Grinding stone - optional--I have one that is 6 or 7 mm at its thickest, in a cone shape.  This was PERFECT for this project.  
Here is the first of a video series in making a quena.  This one shows what you need to make one out of PVC. (You can see the rest by clicking the link below the word "quena" in the title.)

4 min video I wish I would have watched before I ever tried my first time. Good chart. Good demonstration. 3rd video in the series above.
 Websites that helped me:
YouTube: Make a Quena from beginning to end-8 minutes
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZ4GNDk3nck&feature=plcp
At 7 minutes in, he slides the measurements past the camera slowly to read them. 

Instructable: Make 4 Easy Bamboo Flutes-Quena --This makes it look very doable
 http://www.instructables.com/id/Make-4-easy-Bamboo-Flutes-for-free/step3/Bamboo-Flute-End-Blown-Quena/

Translated website that was especially helpful for the mouth portion
The original Spanish Quena-instructions site
http://pacoweb.net/Quena/constru.htm

YouTube-How to Tie a Quena (to help prevent splitting or hide ugly spots)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hc5G6YKjJaE

Quena Playing:

Old manual that is posted online
http://www.scribd.com/doc/48233255/METODO-DE-QUENA

Brief single page: Posture and mouth position with great image
http://jlfeijooi.en.eresmas.com/quena/posicion.htm

YouTube: Checho - Famous Peruvian quena player giving basic instructions- English subtitles
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G1zYc7B4m3E&feature=channel&list=UL

YyouTube: Checho #2-How to hold the Quena and basic notes-English subtitles
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KokaUFf0LsI&feature=plcp

YouTube-Michaela Chauque video-very nice demonstration of mouth movements
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rz5_EJnB8yQ&

My Quena making adventure

I started off earlier this week making 2 of them.  They are difficult to play and I can't do anything with them.  OBVIOUSLY, I screwed up.  A little more research after those first two attempts and my 3rd one is much, much better. Each site had differing measurements or, more commonly, vague ones.  I chose to use this set because the mm are more precise than inches and the video was especially helpful.




  1. I chose the tiki torch with the longest space between joints that was also the most aesthetically appealing. (That's fancy talk for "pretty".)  I gathered up the stuff and:
  2. Cut the bamboo. 29.2 cm  I put tape around it to prevent splitting and cut just beyond that.  The tape marked my cutting line nicely.  
  3. Put a piece of Scotch tape down the length of the front of the flute.  You decide where you want your front to be.   
  4. Using the Dremel (or files, if you have them), the mouth will be cut a rounded 8mm wide at the top narrowing down to 7mm wide and 8mm deep.  Angle the cut so that below that 8mm  deep mark, it has a bit of an angle or the look of a slide. try to do a slight angle on the back side, too. Try it out now to make sure it works.  If you have no experience, you can do what I did the first night--I put in a TV show and while watching it, I practiced until I could get a tone.  It took me about 2 hours of goofing off.
  5. If there is a  joint in the bamboo, you will have to de-crud the inside.  Put your screwdriver in the tube and use the hammer to knock it down.  Work it a bit.  You will see the bits fall out. 
  6. Draw a straight line on the tape (I used the side of the package of extra sawblades.)  It might be easier to put the tape on the table to mark it.  
  7. Also mark on this line, 23.7cm, 21.1cm, 19.1cm, 16.9cm,14.6cm, 12.5cm, and on the back, 11.2cm (thumb hole). Measure these from the mouth portion.
  8. Drill these out with a small bit.  You will enlarge them later.
  9. Expand the holes a little. If you want to tune the instrument after you have practiced at it and have some experience, don't enlarge them too much.  Expect to need to de-crud the backs of the holes.  The bamboo has a sort of "skin" running down the inside.  I worked at it with my screwdriver.  I would bet that a brush would work better, but I don't have one handy.
  10. Tie your quena, if you want.  
  11. Play, play, play.
Update:
I got my quena from Bolivia today (August 23).  It is bigger than I anticipated.  Difficult to hold properly and cover all the holes with my fingers.  I think that I only need practice.
Once I have gotten SOMEwhere with it, I will post a vid.
:)


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Video on playing El Condor Pasa (in Spanish)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bGrgyK47mqg

Circular breathing video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rhZZgzzm_Mg

YouTube collection of individuals demonstrating demonstrations with their quenas
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=quena+tocar