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Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Crayon-Sandpaper t-shirts

Day 1 of March Break - creating custom t-shirts with sandpaper and crayons.

Easy and inexpensive.

The shirts were $3.50 at Michael's, the crayons we already had and the sandpaper is a basic staple in this house.

First off - invite a few friends and their amazingly crafty Moms over for the event.
Have the kids colour whatever they want on to the sandpaper.

The lower the grit the more 'textured' your t-shirt image will be.  The finer the grit, the more 'smooth'.
(We used 180 grit for our crafting session)

The kids will have to go over their image until the crayon is really thick and dark - this is the wax that will be melted onto the shirt.  Too little and the image will be really washed out.
 We had a few MineCraft fans over, so there was a large "Creeper" showing.

Note: if you decide to do words, you need to remember to write them inverted so that when the sandpaper is flipped over and ironed, the image will appear correctly on the shirt.



Then, while one 'Craft Mom' serves up her amazing snacks:
Rainbow kabobs courtesy of "Amazing Amy"
  
have the other 'Crafty Mom' iron the images on to the t-shirts.

Make sure you have newspaper or something between the layers of shirt or the wax might melt through to the other side.


Thank you Lisa!  ("Lovely Lisa" seemed off somehow? - She is lovely, but I wanted something to label her that leaned more towards creative and talented.)
The kids were so excited to see the sandpaper peeled off and their image appear underneath.

I have to admit, I was just as excited standing there watching them.

Check these out:
 I think it's amazing that an 8 year old was able to figure out how to write "MineCraft" as a mirror image!

And look at this adorableness below.

I don't think I'd let my girls wear this - I'd immediately frame it - it's just too cute for words!



From here you iron again with a piece of paper towel over top to soak up any excess wax.

Dry it in the dryer for 20 minutes to set the image and then wash it by itself the first time; just in case any wax does come off.

We took it a step further and added a bit of fabric puffy paint to ours:
 Madison's Creeper needed a couple of flowers in it's hair.
Custom shirts, rainbow kabobs and wait until you see the sumo fight that followed!

Seriously - frame this one:








Have a great one!
  
 



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2 comments:

  1. What a cute idea and the girls really seemed to enjoy it. (Also noticed the budding Chef in the background. ☺) Shall keep this craft in mind for the Grandchildren. Thanks for sharing it. -Brenda-

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    Replies
    1. And SOOOO easy! The kids immediately put their shirts on to show them off to everyone.
      Thanks for the kind words, and for checking out the blog! (please pass it on!)

      Delete

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