Heart Garland

I found this on pinterest the other day, and loved it. It didn’t come with a tutorial, but I figured out how to make them on my own.

Paper Heart Garland

All you need is some colorful paper – I used a few sheets of Valentine’s day-ish paper. Cut them into 1″ strips. You’ll need to cut these into different lengths to make these hearts. I experimented with different sized strips, and decided I liked the following the best: 2″, 3.5″, 4.25″, and 5″. You’ll need two of each length for each heart. You can double them up if you want color on both the inside and outside of your hearts, but I was happy with color on just the outside.

Paper Bunting Tutorial

To make the hearts, start by layering the strips in this order: 5″, 4.25″, 3.5″, 2″, and then repeat backwards (see below picture). If you’re doing color on just the outside, you need the colored sides facing inwards for the all the strips except the 2″ ones.

Paper Heart Garland Tutorial

Make sure all the strips line up at one end, and staple them in the center.

Paper Heart Garland Tutorial

Then wrap the three longer strips around on each side, and slide them so that the ends all line up together.

Paper Heart Garland Tutorial

Place another staple here to finish the heart.

Paper Heart Garland Tutorial

Then just take some twine or thread and a sharp needle, and string them all together through the 2″ strips to hang them all together.

DIY Paper Hearts

The original source for this garland here had these at a birthday party, and I think they’d be great for all kinds of occasions even though they’re hearts. They come together really fast too – so you could even whip one up for a date night.

DIY Valentines Decor

I made these for my Valentine’s mantle this year – you can see details on the rest of it and links to a couple other tutorials for my display here.

I’ve been really into garland and bunting in all forms lately – I’d love for you to share your favorite with me in the comments below!

Heart Jar

One of my projects for Valentine’s this year was this recycled jar for my mantle.


DIY Tissue Paper Heart Jar

I saw the idea here, but did mine a bit differently because I didn’t have any liquid starch.

Supplies: I started off with a clean spaghetti sauce jar, one sheet each of red and white tissue paper leftover from gifts (hoarding craft supplies comes in handy sometimes!), mod podge, a foam brush, and a sheet of wax paper to protect my table.

Decoupage Supplies

Directions: I watered down a tiny bit of mod podge in a bowl (about one part mod podge to two or three parts water – and you don’t need much). I also cut the white tissue paper into rectangles roughly 2-4 inches on each side. To get a base white coat on the jar, put some tissue paper on the jar then painted a light coat of the mod podge mixture over it with the foam brush. Keep doing this until the entire jar is covered in a couple layers of white tissue paper. Then cut out hearts from the red tissue paper in a variety of sizes, and add them on the same way. I let the whole jar dry on top of wax paper (switching between right-side up and upside down every now and then to keep it from sticking to the wax paper) for a few hours, and then stuck a tealight inside!

Tissue Paper Candle Holder

See more information on the rest of my Valentine’s mantle and links to tutorials for a couple of the other projects here!

DIY Valentines Decor

Valentine’s Paint Chip Art

One of my (free!) projects for Valentine’s Day this year was this fun paint chip art. Ombre/gradients are still one of my favorite looks, and paint chips make this super easy!


Paint Swatch Heart Decor

Want to make one of your own? This was super fast so you still have time to make one before the 14th – or you could do it in any other color for another holiday! Maybe green with shamrocks for St. Patrick’s Day? Eggs on pastels for Easter? Trees on green for Christmas? So many options!

What you’ll need:

  • A gradient paint chip. I used a Behr one from Home Depot because it was exactly the size/shape/gradient I wanted! Mine is 150B, with colors pink eraser, cheery, fire cracker, and poinsettia.
  • Some white paper
  • A 5×7 frame (I used an Ikea Ribba one)
  • A craft cutter (i.e. Silhouette), exacto knife, or craft punch

I put together a little file in the Silhouette computer program to cut out some randomly placed hearts over where the paint chip would be (it’s not exactly 5″x7″, so there is some extra white space with no hearts), and a 5×7 rectangle around them. If you want my .studio file for this project, you can get it .

heart paint chip .studio file

I cut this out of some white paper, then stuck the paint chip on the back with some tape. Set this in the frame, and you’re done! I ended up using some of the left over cut-out hearts by taping them around another frame – you can see both of them (and links to some other project tutorials!) in my post about my Valentine’s mantle here.

DIY Valentines Decor

Halloween Decorations

Yes, I know it is November 3. I’ve been pretty busy lately, but I still wanted to share some of my Halloween decorations, even if it is already after Halloween.

Ever since Eddie and I moved into our house (more than two years ago!) I’ve been wanting to decorate for holidays, but keep thinking to myself ‘I don’t have time for [upcoming holiday], I’ll just start making stuff for [next holiday]’. Well, this year Eddie and I kind of got volunteered to host our church small group Halloween party, so I decided this would be the holiday to start decorating!

Our first project was putting a floating shelf in our living room. I had an Ikea Lack shelf sitting around that I’d used in my previous apartment. We installed it over our TV (about 18″ over the top of the TV because I want to be able to use it for stockings!) by putting two of the screws into a stud and installing the other 8 screws with drywall anchors. I’m really excited about using this in the future as our general holiday/seasonal decoration spot even if I don’t have time to decorate the rest of our main living/eating area.

Ikea Lack Shelf Halloween Mantle
The glass vases and candles are mostly leftover from our wedding. The orange candle has a really cool texture, and is from Ikea as well, as is the black lantern. There are two tea lights that I wrapped with some of my washi tape from downtown tape, and the mini pumpkins are from a local pumpkin patch that is run by the A&M Habitat for Humanity. I made the ‘Happy Halloween’ bunting by just cutting out the letters from card stock (the font is called Haettenschweiler) with my Cricut and threading them with some orange embroidery floss. I love the shadow behind them – it was much easier to see in person.

Halloween decorations

And why, yes, there is a penguin on my Halloween ‘mantle’. If you don’t know already, I have a minor obsession with penguins. There are dozens of them all around our house, so when I realized that I had several with the perfect colors for my Halloween decorations (black, orange, and white), I couldn’t resist adding one.

Paper Bats Halloween Decor

One of my favorite projects was this wall of bats Eddie and I cut out. I saw this idea on Made ages ago, and have been wanting to try it since then. We just cut them out of cardstock (didn’t use up a pack of 50 8.5×11″ sheets) while watching tv a couple nights, and then I taped them to our wall with scotch tape. When I first taped them up, I noticed that the ones with small loops of tape fell down by the next morning – but once I replaced those and started doing the rest with big loops of tape (as big as would fit on the backs), they stayed up fine and have been up for about a week now with no more casualties. We cut them out in two sizes, and you can get my templates as a pdf by clicking this link: Bat Templates. We folded the paper in half (hot-dog style, not hamburger), and were able to fit two of the bigger and four of the smaller bats from each piece of card stock.

Yarn Spider Web

As a last minute project on the day of Halloween, I decided to decorate our front door since we didn’t have much going on on our porch. I got some white yarn, and put up the ‘spokes’ first with some duck tape on the sides of the door (which you can see in the picture below). Then I took longish pieces of yarn, and wrapped them around the spokes going outwards to make a web.

Halloween Yarn Spiderweb

Another area I decorated was this open area between our kitchen and the living room (it’s actually open – I just put up a black cloth behind it for that picture so you could see the ghost better). Eddie even got me halloween colored flowers!

spray starch cheesecloth ghost

The main piece was a super awesome cheesecloth ghost using this tutorial. It just involved making a form out of a wine bottle, a 6″ styrofoam ball, and a coat hanger.

cheesecloth halloween ghost

I put this form on a towel on my counter, then draped the cheesecloth over it and sprayed it with starch. I let it dry (without using a hair dryer – I wasn’t in a rush, and the hair dryer moved the cheesecloth too much), then sprayed and let it dry again a few hours later. At this point, it was stiff enough that I could carefully peel it off of my form and it stood on its own! To finish it off, I just glued on some black felt circles for eyes. I really like how the cheesecloth puddles at the bottom then hangs over the edge. Here’s a picture to show how see through he is:

Cheesecloth Ghost

The little pumpkin/spider there is hard to see in the picture because of our dark counters, but here’s a better picture:

Mini Pumpkin Spider

It’s another one of the mini pumpkins from the pumpkin patch, but I used a tool like to make a spot for a tea light. I then poked holes in his side with a safety pin, and then put in pipe cleaners for legs. To finish him off, I hot glued on a couple of googly eyes. The tea lights are the ones from our living room shelf – just a closer view of their cute washi tape wrappers.

Jack-O-Lantern Chandelier Decorations

Another of my favorite projects were these cute chandelier magnets I made for the new chandelier in our kitchen (we got the Ikea Lerdal). The jack-o-/anterns are from a string of Halloween twinkle lights I got on clearance, and they’re attached to the beads with the tops from those round Christmas tree ornaments. They’re attached to the chandelier with magnetic jewelry clasps. I’m planning on doing some more for Christmas and I’ll do a tutorial on how I made them then, but I got the idea from here.

Whew! After typing that all up, it sure sounds like a lot of work, but they were almost all quick and inexpensive projects I did in the week or so before Halloween. Maybe I’ll get around to putting up my Christmas projects before Christmas? We’ll see. I’ve already made an awesome tree skirt and a couple ornaments, because Christmas is my very favorite holiday and I’ve been set on at least starting to decorate for Christmas this year.