Are you hosting a Thanksgiving dinner and looking for a nice centerpiece to brighten up your table? There is something special about natural items that when put together, they become a simple yet elegant décor with all their colors and elements combined.
One nice centerpiece is a pillar candle surrounded by layers of beans, rice, corn or other dried grains to resemble colorful rows. You can also try putting flowers and stalks around the candle with small ribbons as accents.
Tall glasses can be transformed into attractive table decoration when filled with small grains and round fruits, such as berries and white beans, and adding some wheat stalks or flowers for a fresh look. Place a little dish with a pillar candle beside it to add sparkle to your dining table.
Brighten up your Thanksgiving turkey by putting decorations, such as fruits, grains and vegetables around it.
A creative centerpiece is also a good conversation topic among families and friends. Who knows, your guests may have some nice Thanksgiving decoration ideas that you can try out in your next Thanksgiving dinner.
At the start of every new year, we always make resolutions to do something, change something. As a crafter, one of my more common resolutions is do something about all the little balls of yarn that have accumulated over my three-decade love of crochet. Oh yes, I still can find leftovers from projects I made back in the 80′s! I could never throw it out. What if years later I needed just a little bit of that special color for a new project?
But this year, I’ve finally decided, I’m never going to “need” these little balls for anything, but throwing them out is not an option either (gasp! What a waste!), so I’ve vowed to use them. Somehow. And these are some projects I plan to use them on.
Amigurumi – little by nature, they don’t require much yarn, so my little stash balls should be perfect. And I’ve got so many I could make a whole army of amigurumi. The hard part? Trying to decide which of hundreds of adorable patterns to make! Here are a few free crochet patterns at Lion Brand to get you started. If you aren’t already a registered Lion Brand customer, it’s free to sign up and view the patterns.
Elephant Pillow
Pumpkin Ornament
Amigurumi Parrot
Gingerbread Man
or take a look at what Craftsy now offers in its new Patterns section. SO cute!
Stuffed Animals – Generally larger than amigurumi, but still smaller than a sweater of afghan, stuffed animals are great stash busters. Pick a colorful animal, such as a fish or bird, or make up your own mystical monster creature, and you won’t need too much of any one color. What better way to use up all those little balls of yarn? And the best part – in the end you have a toy you could give as a gift or donate to a charity for a child to enjoy.
Multi-colored granny squares – This I think is the perfect way to use your leftovers to make a blanket. You always think of blankets as something that takes a lot of yarn (and generally why I make things other than blankets or afghans), but the crochet granny square is the perfect stash buster. Every round only used a little bit of yarn, and they’re begging to be multi-colored. The more colors the better.
Here’s my granny square stash busting strategy: take all your little balls of leftovers and line them up, make a granny square center from each color, then mix up all the centers in a pile and randomly apply a new color for rnd 2 on each square, again using each color only once. Repeat until the granny squares are 3 or 4 rounds wide and sew them together in grid shape—instant lap rub, blanket, shawl, you name it, you just made it! And you cleaned out your leftover stash as well.
Here are some more tips for managing your stash from Knitting Daily.
Happy crafting!
Katelyn
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