12 Ornaments of Christmas – Part 7

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I have a riddle for you! ๐Ÿ™‚

What do you get when you take this . . .

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And add it to this?

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Answer: A unique handmade Christmas ornament! ๐Ÿ˜‰

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The 7th ornament in this series is a little wooden sled that I’ve decorated with a small piece of cross stitch – but you could choose any number of other ways to embellish it including a crocheted motif, or embroidery, sewing, pieced felt, papercrafts, or even decorative painting. The idea is to use a winter or holiday item, like the sled, and decorate it in an unusual way to create a very special ornament!

Supplies:

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small wooden sled (available at craft stores)
tiny cross stitched design of your choice
scrap of felt for hat
small beads (seed beads for hat, 4mm bead for pom pom)
glittered ribbon cord for hanger and bow
small piece of decorative braid or trim
tacky glue

Directions:

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You’ll notice my sled has been stained and painted – which is NOT necessary. Leaving it natural is perfectly fine, or you may decide to paint your sled a bright color.

Stitch the design of your choice in cross stitch.

Lay the finished stitching on the table face-up. Place the sled (seat side down) on top of the stitching. Be sure it is centered and trace around the sled (directly onto the fabric) so that you will have the traced outline as a cutting guide.

Cut on the line and after placing a thin layer of tacky glue on the top of the sled, attach the stitching to it. Press firmly and allow to dry.

Use a piece of cord to make a “pulling rope” for the sled.

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Optional:

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I made a hat for the penguin by cutting a small triangle of felt and sewing it in place. I folded the top corner over and attached a crystal pom pom and a few seed beads for sparkle!

I decided that the cross stitch design could use a border of some kind. Since I didn’t have any suitable decorative trim on hand, I took a piece of the glittered ribbon cord and crocheted a “chain” to glue around the edges of the sled. A small bow in the lower left corner was the finishing touch.

candy_caneYou’ll have lots of your own ideas, of course, but I hope this will inspire you to look around for something you have there right now, that could be used to make a unique ornament. ๐Ÿ˜€

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Comments

12 Ornaments of Christmas – Part 7 — 5 Comments

  1. I remember those days of leisurely creating something and adding those special little touches that made it uniquely mine. The little crocheted ribbon is such a special touch.

    I can’t get into the swing of things yet. 60 degrees at Thanksgiving. Nice but hardly Spirit of the Season weather.

    xx. carol

  2. Hi Crystal! You did it again!…another ADORABLE, little treasure! I love all your special extra touches! You are so wonderfully creative! Thank you again, for sharing such a cute, CUTE idea! xoxo ๐Ÿ™‚

  3. What a really cute idea! I try and squeeze in a little time to make some handmade ornaments for our tree but with two little kids running through the house, it’s often very hard to do it.

  4. How cute is that! This is also a great project to do with my 7 year old daughter! I especially like it because it’s not messy. No paint, no stain. Just the glue, but we can manage that. It looks very cute. We will probably make this for her black/and/white christmas tree, on white background. Thanks Crystal!!

    Hugs, Claudia

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