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Advent Shadowbox 2012: Day 1, Have a Tree Trimming Party, Make Cinnamon Glitter Ornaments & Favourite Photo Ornaments

Technically, it’s the day before Advent Begins….well, unless you go to Saturday night mass, as my grandmother would have said. Let’s just say we’re taking my granmother’s advice….

This morning, the kids woke up and ran downstairs to see if I had gotten their Advent Shadowbox out of storage. They found the image above in the frame.

Today, we’ll be having our annual family tree trimming party, and we’ll be making two types of ornaments with which to adorn our tree:


We’ll be making the 2012 edition of Our Favourite Photo Ornaments

and we’ll be whipping up a brand new recipe

a batch of heaven-scented, non-edible Cinnamon Glitter Ornaments

[you'll find the DIY directly below.]



Cinnamon Glitter Ornaments

Materials
1 Cup Cinnamon [get it at the bulk store!]
1 tsp nutmeg
1 tsp cloves or allspice
.5 c glue
.3+ c glitter
.5+ Cup Applesauce
Glitter
Cookie Cutters
A Drinking Straw
Parchment Paper
Cookie Sheet
Oven
Thin Ribbon [we used metallic elastic ribbon]

Method
Heat oven to 200 F.
In a medium bowl, mix Cinnamon, Spices, Glue and Glitter with a spoon.
Add Applesauce by the quarter cup until a thick, somewhat tough dough forms.
[If the dough becomes a deep dark brown and wet, you've added too much applesauce, add more additional cinnamon to compensate.]
Add additional glitter if you think you’d like more sparkle.
Divide the dough into 2-3 sections.
Roll out each section on parchment paper.
Cut dough into desired shapes with cookie cutters and use a straw to punch a hole for hanging towards the top.
Place ornaments onto a parchment or silpat-lined cookie sheet.
Bake for 2.5 hours and let cool on a wire rack.
Run a thin ribbon or piece of elastic through the holes in the ornaments to hang.

20121126-150805.jpg 20121126-150836.jpg 20121126-150843.jpg
The dough above is just right!
The dough below is too wet!
20121126-150814.jpg 20121126-150822.jpg 20121126-150829.jpg

A Little Gallery:
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Today’s Shadowbox:
20121201-080834.jpg

This year’s Favourite Photo Ornaments

20121201-140120.jpg

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Handmade Holidays: Favourite Photo Ornaments

December 3, 2011

It’s Tree Trimming Day…
T
ime to make the Favourite Photo Ornaments

It has become a tradition in our house. Each year, we browse through our photos and find our absolute favourite photo of each of the kids. And we use these to make simple black and white photo ornaments for the tree.  

To keep things consistent, we bought supplies in bulk. Several years ago, we picked up spools of silver ribbon and a heap of clear plastic frames at the dollar store. [For $30, I think we must have gotten enough product to make 2 ornaments a year for the next 18-20 years!]  We keep our supplies in a small ziploc bag which gets nestled in the holiday storage box with all of our other Christmas ornaments. Each year, we take a pair of frames and a bit of ribbon out of this box, and we add to the growing collection. 

Favourite Photo Ornaments

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Supplies

Clear Plastic Frames (we use 6cm x 9cm)
Ribbon
Hot Glue Gun 
Hot Glue Sticks

Photo Paper (plain will do in a pinch)
Computer & Printer

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Method

  1. Let ‘er rip!:  Our frames came packaged as “magnetic” photo frames, so our first step is to rip the magnet off of the back of each of the frames. It’s easier than removing a bandaid, and there’s no one screaming back. 
  2. Cut and paste:  Next, we cut a 10in/25cm strip of ribbon, and hot glue both loose ends of the ribbon to the back of the frame so as to form a hanger or loop for the ornament.
  3. Workshop: After we browse our photo files for our favourite shots [btw, we tend to limit ourselves to portrait shots, as opposed to landscape], we use our favourite photo editing software to turn the pictures into black and white shots, to round the corners of each photo, and to add text [the year the photo was taken] below or towards the bottom of the photo.This year, using http://www.picnick.com, we added a little pizzazz by using a funky font for the year and by printing it in red rather than our traditional black…
  4. Size & Print: Using photo editing software or simply by inserting a photograph into a document in MSWord, we resize the photo with added text to fit into our 6cm x 9cm frame. And we print the photos on glossy photo paper. (One could just as easily print an all black and white photo on plain paper. It woud be hard to tell the difference.)
  5. Display:  Since we have so many of these ornaments now, we hang them at the end of our decorating party – (call them the photographic equivalent of tinsel?). I try to get the kids to hang the photos from the top to the bottom of the tree so that the baby photos are near the tippy top and the later photos are further down.

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