Saturday TastyLinks and Bead Chic Project Sneak Peek!


Sneaky Peek of a project from my new book Bead Chic All Rights Reserved Copyright 2009 Margot Potter

I am in the midst of a whirlwind week filled with exciting new possibilities and opportunities...none of which I can share yet...but trust me when I tell you that those big dreams I've been spinning into reality are finally materializing. I have so many things to do this week that my brain is about to explode. So much for the holiday weekend! If you're up and around tomorrow at 5am EST, I'll be on QVC with a fabulous 45 piece all occasion card collection you simply have to see to believe. Pour yourself a big cup of Java and join me!

I got an advance copy of my new book Bead Chic and it's really beautiful. Here's my quick description of the book as I pitched it, "Banana Republic and Sundance Catalog have a latte at Starbucks." Are you feeling me? This is a book for the fashion savvy gal who hasn't yet dipped her toes into the bead pool. She loves accessories, and she thinks to herself...I wonder if I could make that? Well, she can and I'm going to show her (and you, oh fashion and craft savvy reader) how to take inspiration and make it your own. The book has six chapters: Scale, Color, Texture, Pattern, Foundations and Focal Elements. The concept is that by changing one of these core elements, you can tailor an idea to suit your personal style. It's about learning how to go from monkey see-monkey do mentality to thinking like a designer. I really hope folks like this book. I give a little taste of stringing, wire wrapping, hammering, exposed wire, creating your own components, knotting... It's a pu pu platter approach to jewelry making folks can use to find directions to explore further.

Here are this week's TastyLinks from the crafty blogger gang:

The Artful Crafter
Advice on selling large lots of craft supplies.

Stefanie Girard's Sweater Surgery
How to make a recycled sweater gearhead hot pad inspired by the book- The Journal Junkies Workshop

Mixed Media Artist
Can you ever have too much fabric? Cyndi thinks not! Come and add your favorite link to Cyndi's favorites.

Margot Potter The Impatient Crafter
Madge shares her Zen Master Slacker Mommy's Guide to Letting Things Ride.

Cross Stitch at About.com
Read loads of great tips on Cross Stitch and then share your own - what tips and tricks have you learned that keep you out of tight spots?

Crafty Princess Diaries
Tammy is learning more every day when it comes to her Etsy shop, like the importance of tags and the number of items you should list, but it's definitely a work in progress.

Craftside-A behind-the-scenes peek at a crafty world
Craftside's got a hot new Look. Learn, and Create video featuring Barbe Saint John showing us how to make a Steampunk hair pin, a free bow graphic download, how to add words to a journal page and a bow, and an inside peek into 1000 ideas from 100 Fashion Designers.

Aileen's Musings
Aileen's excited to share her first how to video called Ribbon's & Lace. Take a quiet moment, grab a cuppa and stop by and see what its all about.

About Family Crafts
Is getting to be that time of year when people get out more whether it be day trips, camping trips, or gathering with friends and family and having picnics and barbecues! Find out how you can incorporate crafting into your camping and picnic fun.

Zen Master Slacker Mommy's Guide to Letting Things Ride

'Mom Killed the Family Pet' Shrine COPYRIGHT ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Margot Potter
(Featuring a fabulous Crafty Chica shrine and Traci Bautista's Collage Pauge Sparkles!)Link

I feel more than a little bit like the White Rabbit today. Alas I must away...I won't be posting again until Friday. I think you can live without Madge for a day. Yes?

I wrote this post several years ago for The Impatient Blogger. It's one of my favorites. Enjoy!

The Spin Cycle or The Zen Master Slacker Mommy’s Guide to Letting Things Ride


*Dust bunnies are pets. Give them names. Feed them the balls of fluff from your sweaters. Take them on walks around the house.

*Cobwebs are decorations. This works best around Halloween. For the rest of the year, you are cultivating next year’s decor.

*Breakfast...it’s what’s for dinner. It’s also what’s for breakfast. You got a problem with that?

*Call bathtub rings and sink stains 'altered art.' Explain that they give the porcelain depth and personality.

*Brown is the new black. Sheesh, everybody knows that.

*Practice your best Scarlett O'Hara voice while saying "Fiddle dee dee." and "There's always tomorrow, and Tara." This works better if you make a dress out of the living room curtains, which is WAY more fun than cleaning.

*Dirt, dust, pet hair, small bits of paper, indistinguishable tiny objects on the floors make great material for mixed media artworks! Arrange them in patterns. Glue them to old decaying wooden boards. Sell them in your Etsy shop. Give the pieces mysterious names like...If These Floors Could Talk or Revenge of the Dust Mites.

*Follow all declarations of ‘I’m Bored’ with the ceremonial passing of the Swiffer. Make it into a game. Whoever gets the biggest pile of crap on their Swiffer pad gets to take out the garbage and do the dishes! YAY!

*Junk Mail collages! When the Swiffer Races end, break out the Elmer’s glue, the scissors, the inks and the poster board. Hey kids! Let’s turn this junk mail into art! Woo hoo. Sell it in your Etsy Shop. Call it assemblage. Label it ‘primitive’ and ‘childlike.’

*Stop mowing the lawn. Scatter wild flower seeds and watch them grow. Ignore the neighborhood association Nazis, because you’re an artist. Fill your yard with giant gnomes, plastic pink flamingoes, gazing balls, rusty wagons, flexible flyers...simply empty the contents of your basement on to your lawn. This saves you from having the ubiquitous and futile yard sale. Add some small walking stones. Call it an English Garden. Sit in the center in a gazebo wearing a large Victorian hat and have high tea every afternoon. Charge admission on the weekends.

*Buy blinders. Decorate them with sparkles. Put them on. Smile while you pour yourself a large glass of chardonnay and concentrate on the important things in life.

ILoveToCreate Teen Crafts: May Flowers Embellished Tank Top


IloveToCreate Teen Crafts
May Flowers Embellished Tank Top

Margot Potter

“Mom crafted, kid approved.”

Summer is almost here and it’s time for tank tops, flip flops and shorts. Yippee! Here’s a fun project teens can do in the back yard with their friends. Just buy a bunch of inexpensive tanks or t’s and give them a pile of Tulip 3D Fabric paints andTulip Fashion Graffiti Big Phat markers and let them make their own wearable works of art. This isn't a 'make it perfect' kind of project, it's meant to be playful, so don't worry about coloring inside of the lines.

My color palette and design were inspired by the charming new graphic buttons from La Mode. Tulip fashion paint comes in virtually every color so it’s easy to match the button colors. I had so much fun with this; I think I’m going to have to make one for myself!

Materials
Cotton tank top (pre-wash to remove sizing)
3 Blumenthal Lansing La Mode buttons
Tulip 3D Fashion Paint poppin' purple, deep turquoise, yellow and clover green
Tulip Fashion Graffiti Big Phat fabric marker black
Aleene’s Fabric Fusion glue
Coordinating DMC Color Infusions embroidery threads

Tools
Embroidery needle
Paint brushes
T-shirt form

1. Slide a t-shirt form under your tank top. (Secure the back with safety pins to tighten if the shirt is too loose.)

2. Using the button pattern as inspiration, paint three flowers with graduated circles of color in pink, teal and yellow. Change the brushes out between colors. Allow paints to dry.

3. Use the marker to draw graphic circles to define the flowers. Draw stems and add leaves. Use green paint to color inside of leaves. Allow to dry.


4. Glue buttons to center of flowers. Allow glue to dry.

5. Add embroidery thread accents to each button, one yellow, one teal and one pink.

Book Review: Waking Up in the Land of Glitter by Kathy Cano-Murillo

Kathy Cano-Murillo a.k.a. The Crafty Chica is one of my favorite people on the planet. I'm not just saying that because she paid me. Because she didn't. (Hey Kathy, if you're reading, just email me for the bank deposit info.) No, no, no, all kidding aside, Kathy is a true force of nature. She's a whirling dervish of creativity. She's a wild roller coaster ride of great ideas meeting unstoppable determination. Absolutely no one I know can go from idea to reality with as much precision and exactitude. (My apologies to the reader who complained about my advanced vocabulary words in my last post, but I like words. I intend to keep savoring them so just think of my those words as a prompt to hit Google and learn a few new ones.)

I won't go into the details now, but the manner in which Kathy and I became friends is worthy of a scene in a novel or a TV sitcom. We're kind of like two Lucys without an Ethel. I count her among my most treasured compadres and she's one of the few people in my industry I can call mid-career crisis for some straight up, no holds barred conversation and advice. I simply adore her, and I'm not alone. Everyone adores her. She's absolutely adorable!

When Kathy first started talking about writing a Crafty Lit novel, I knew then she'd do it, she'd get it published, it would be fabulous and it would sell like mad. Kathy has the Midas touch. She is the ultimate example of manifesting your dreams into reality. She knows how to dream big and she's willing to work harder than anyone else each and every day to make her dreams come true. Plus she generously encourages others to explore their creativity and pursue their dreams. I ordered her book on Amazon last week, sat down and read most of it before bed and the finished it the next night...and I loved it!

Book Review
Waking Up in the Land of Glitter

by Kathy Cano-Murillo

Hachette Book Group
March 2010

Craft celebrity and design guru Kathy Cano-Murillo has written one of the most glittery feel good craftacular debut novels in memory. It's a fun filled romp through the wild world of crafting and the bustling arts and craft scene in Phoenix, Arizona. Main character Estrella "Star" Esteban is a lovable hot mess of a girl with plenty of energy but little direction. As the novel opens, Star loses her one true love, her job and the respect of her family through an ill-fated and ill advised drunken spray paint rampage and spends the remainder of the novel working to get back all of the things she's lost. In the process, she finds true friendship, the meaning of true love and most importantly she finds herself.

Ms. Murillo is a wonderful writer with a breezy style that is easy and enjoyable to read. She has a playful sense of humor and fun and a vivid imagination. This isn't a novel for the terminally serious, it's filled with copious amounts of whimsy and wonder and lots of crafty references. Ms. Murillo has created larger than life characters that manage to be entirely believable and even the most outrageous scenes in the book feel totally real. It's impossible not to fall in love with the introverted and craft challenged Ofie who longs desperately for acceptance but is saddled with an unnatural love of glitter and a horrific sense of design. You'll find yourself cheering out loud when she accidentally finds her true craft calling. You can't help but be drawn to Crafty Chloe, a wannabe Martha Stewart who can't craft her way out of a paper bag, especially once she gets her well deserved due and rises to the occasion with grace and dignity. You'll root for Star to find her true calling and win back rising artist Theo, her charming and handsome former flame. We all know people like the characters in this book and that makes it easy to relate to them.

What happens when you take 350 pounds of accidental glitter, 3 strong women in search of themselves, a huge project for a major craft event and a series of seemingly insurmountable crises and you mix them up in the mind of a craft industry insider like Murillo? You get crafty gold! Ms. Murillo is hard at work on a series of Crafty Lit novels and I'm personally looking forward to the next one with glittered breath.

Margot Potter
Author
The Impatient Crafter Series, Beyond the Bead, Bead Chic

Book Review: The Big Ass Book of Home Decor by Mark Montano


There are plenty of home decor books with perfectly perfect ideas offered on perfectly designed pages with perfectly polite instructions and quite frankly, I find them perfectly boring. If you want perfectly perfect, buy your decor at Pottery Barn. Creativity isn't about perfection. Creativity is about the willingness to roll up your sleeves and make glorious messes. TV Host and author Mark Montano gets that. How could you not love someone who fully embraces the beauty of imperfection and encourages you to design without a net? How could you not love someone who names his book The Big Ass Book of Home Decor? Mark Montano's fantabulous new book is a crafty revelation!

This irreverent tome is simply bursting at the seams with fresh approaches to traditional techniques with a generous dollop of totally new concepts that will leave your brain spinning. Mark throws so much stuff at you on every page you're going to need a thermos of espresso, a sketch book and an oxygen canister at the ready. He fully exemplifies the mantra 'It ain't what you do, it's the way that you do it' and Mark does it with such flair and panache it's positively mind blowing. You may have decoupaged or texture painted or used plaster of Paris before, but I can guarantee you that you've never done it the way Mark does. If you love to dance on the edge of good taste, if you love a heaping helping of kitsch in your decor, if you are a frugalista who needs solutions to help you take your el cheapo finds and make them el fabuloso, this is your book.

What impressed and intrigued me the most was the abundant array of aesthetics Mr. Montano explored on every page. Nothing was the same old, same old and everything had it's own unique design appeal. Whether you're a mid century maven, a shabby chic sophisticate, a Deco doyenne, a graffiti guru or a Belle Epoque believer...Mark gives you a plethora of fun techniques and concepts and shows you how you can tailor them to suit your personal sense of style. There are over 100 projects in this book to explore using affordable and easily accessible materials, which means there literally is something for everyone. If you can't find something to love here, might I suggest one of the aforementioned perfectly perfect home decor titles. Snore.

Some of my personal favorite projects include: Garden Side Table, Mirrored Glass Candle Holders, Tramp Art Cardboard Frame, Silhouette Wall Treatment, Modern Office Flower Art, Circus Tables...and the list goes on and on and on. So many of these ideas make you smack your forehead and say, "Why didn't I think of that?!" For those of us who've grown weary of cookie cutter furniture with names like Flargensnorp and Gertlesnark, Mark works his design magic on those Ikea staples along with charmingly imperfect and dated flea market and thrift store finds. The projects are straightforward and easy to recreate, but rife with potential for further embellishment and personalization. You can take them as far as you like, mix and match ideas to make them your own. Mark makes even the entirely technically challenged feel empowered.

I'm simply mad for Mark Montano and I'm quite sure after reading The Big Ass Book of Home Decor, you will be too. Perfect, schmerfect. Take a walk on the wild side, you'll be so very glad that you did.

Margot Potter
Author, Designer, TV Personality
The Impatient Beader Series, Beyond the Bead and Bead Chic

ILoveToCreate Teen Crafts: 'Let Them Eat Chocolate' Tampon Case


ILoveToCreate Teen Crafts
'Let Them Eat Chocolate' Tampon Case
Copyright 2010 Margot Potter
"Mom crafted, teen approved."

My husband and I used to own a gallery where we sold a variety of fair trade handicrafts, jewelry making supplies, vintage clothes and fun gift items. One of the items we carried was a wonderfully subversive Tampon Case created by an innovative young fella named Vinnie. Vinnie and I spoke a few times over the phone and I told him I'd love to see a more girly version. So I made a pink and felty one for my second book The Impatient Beader Gets Inspired (there's a pic below this post of that case.) My embroidered tampon case almost didn't make it into the book, but I fought for it and it stayed. Here's a new upcycled version made for the eco-conscious young lady who needs a stylish place to keep her feminine hygiene products and prevent them from getting destroyed at the bottom of her purse or book bag.

I'm of the mind that we need to be a little less weird about these things. Girls have periods. Got a problem with that?

Get over it.

So here's one for the girls! Being a girl is the best thing going. We should celebrate every aspect of what it is to be a girl and not be ashamed or afraid or uncomfortable. It's up to us moms to help our teens do that. This is a great project to do together and you can find fabulous old ties at the thrift stores for pennies. Aleene's Liquid Fusion glues turn this into a no sew project! Ya gotta love that. You can use the skinnier ties for iPod and cell phone pouches too. Vintage ties also make super cute skirts, bib necklaces, lamp shades, accents on purses...so get thee to the thrift store!


Materials

Vintage Tie (for this project a wider tie works best)
Coordinating Buttons
Large Heart Shaped Acrylic Charm
Metal 3-D Crown Charm
1" thick black grosgrain ribbon
Snap
Thin cardboard
10mm SP jump ring
Aleene's Fabric Fusion Glue
Aleene's Liquid Fusion Glue
Archival ink jet black
"Eat Chocolate" stamp Inkadinkado Amy Smyth 97479-MM

Tools
2 pairs chain nose pliers
Wire cutters
Chasing Hammer
Snap Setter
Steel Bench Block
Bench Block Pad
Disposable nail file or sand paper
Fabric Scissors
Crop-a-dile or 1/16" hole punch


1. Find a tie that's wide enough to create a sizeable pouch. You'll need to determine your needs based on the products you use. Measure tie taking into account a hem at the bottom and cut.


2. Use a seam ripper to open center of tie. Trace body of tie (not including top flap) on a thin cardboard or thick card stock.


3. Insert card stock into body of tie, cut off any excess card stock.


4. Fold bottom edge of tie and add a line of Fabric Fusion glue. Fold flaps over and add glue to secure. Add glue along seam of tie to secure closed.


5. Measure and cut bottom end of tie to wrap around bottom of pouch. Use Fabric Fusion glue to secure closed.


6. Attach snap to top of tie and corresponding area on pouch so it can be secured closed. I used a steel bench block, chasing hammer and bench block pad with the setting tool that came with the snaps.


7. Cut off and sand flush any shanks on the backs of your buttons using wire cutters. Glue layers of embellishments together with Liquid Fusion. Allow to dry. Glue to fabric surrounding snap using Fabric Fusion. Allow to dry. Add a second layered button accent to bottom tie flap on pouch with Fabric Fusion (see finished photo above.)


8. Use stamp and ink to stamp "eat chocolate" sideways on body of pouch. Allow to dry.

9. Glue a length of ribbon tucked into the tie accent at the bottom along the center seam to hide it.

Auntie Flo's Pretty Little Tampon Case from The Impatient Beader Gets Inspired
(Use Aleene's Fabric Fusion to glue layers after adding embroidery floss edges)

Serpentine Earrings

Serpentine Earrings Copyright 2009 Margot Potter

Here's a quick and easy elegant earring design I created for Beadalon I called Serpentine. You can get the step-by-step instructions here.

You can easily whip these puppies up at a moment's notice in a variety of color combos and bead configurations. If you're an "impatient crafter" like me, this is your daily dose of instant gratification!

I'm not feeling very musing motivated today, so Madge's Monday Musings will return next week. Let's just say I had a lovely weekend and I'm really missing it already!

Cheers,
Madge

How To Raise A Flock of Chickens-Part One

We are so cute we are burning a hole in your brain. Mwahahaha!

We got new baby chicks this week. This is our second batch of baby chicks. Our hens are about five years old now and they're not laying as much any more. The farmer's approach is to slaughter the old for stew and make way for the new, but I'm not much of a farmer and I can't eat my friends, even the feathered kind. They don't usually live past six years old, so what's one year more? I figure if they've served me for five long years going through the arduous process of laying a delicious egg every 1.5 days or so, the least I can do is to take care of them in their golden years. I'll get my free range chicken from the market, thank you.

Yes, I might be a snarky panties sometimes, but underneath I'm just a big ol' softee.

I really like our chickens, and like our pigs, I've named them, gotten to know them and grown rather fond of them.

Alright, who let the owl in here? Everyone look away and pretend you don't see it.

A lot of people are getting into raising chickens these days. It's tres chic or tres chick, if you will. You can have a small flock of hens in many of the major cities in the US as long as you keep them in a caged run and you don't get a rooster. Roosters crow constantly, not just at the break of dawn. I didn't realize that until I got one. It can get old fairly quickly, but we keep our windows closed and our walls are made of stone, so he doesn't bother me. My Amish neighbor claims to love listening to him crow, so that works out for us. You don't need a rooster to have eggs, you just need a rooster to have fertilized eggs, which you need if you want to incubate or brood new baby chicks. Fertilized eggs will not turn into baby chicks unless a hen sits on them and activates them by keeping them warm for a specific number of days in the process known as incubation. We've given our eggs to a few folks who've brooded them into chicks. We wanted all Ameracaunas this time, so we're starting from day old peepers delivered via mail. This hybrid breed of chickens, is by far my favorite. They're docile, friendly, hearty and they lay well. Plus who doesn't like having blue and green chicken eggs? It's fun!

Peepo, I don't think we're in Missouri anymore...

There is a lot to do to prepare for our new little pullets. We have to set up a bin for roosting (we use the top half of a large dog crate) and a chick friendly heat lamp. We have to get special baby chick food and break out the chick waterers and feeders. We're going to brood them until they're older in my husband's office, then we'll move them out to the pig house and when they're big enough we'll sneak them in to the hen house at night. The next morning the other chickens will accept them into the flock. Weird, but true. There will be a little adjusting of the 'pecking order', but that usually takes care of itself fairly quickly.

Look! Look! We can peep, we can peck, we can poo and we can drink water! For our next amazing trick...watch us sleep!

They just arrived this morning after two days travel from Cackle Hatchery in Missouri. We got a call at 6am from our post office and my hubby and daughter hurried down there to pick them up. We weren't quite fully prepared, but a quick trip to our local feed store and we were ready to rock and roll. I was worried all night about them and worried that they might not all arrive alive and I had a most disturbing dream about that, but lo and behold there was a box filled with happy little chicks and not a sad one in the batch. We even got an extra chick they sent just in case, we've named her Bonus. Our dog Mrs. Fellerbee was all kerfuffled until we showed her what all the peeping was about. She's seen baby chicks before so it was anticlimactic at best.

I'm ready for my close up, Mr. Chickmille

Romantic as it all seems, baby chicks aren't always sweet little peepers. In fact, they can be downright cruel. There are theories that chickens are descended from feathered dinosaurs, which might explain their propensity for cannibalism. Yup. They will, if bored or cold or simply wired that way, start pecking at each others hind quarters. If they draw blood, they'll peck until they seriously injure or even kill the wounded bird. You can help prevent this if you get them as day old chicks, use a red heat light and the right combination of food, heat and space. Our first batch of chicks were a few week's of age and came from a hardware store. There were two chicks in the batch who already had it out for the others and acted as ring leaders in picking on a few of the chicks. It took three bins to end the situation. A bin for the regular chicks, a bin for the injured chicks and a bin for the two bullies we named Jeffrey Dahmer and Hannibal Lecter. After several weeks of this circus of multiple baby chick bins, a relentless flea infestation we were battling on first moving into our little school house, unpacking and working on my second book...I had a little bit of a breakdown. Okay I had a major meltdown. I'm wired a little tight, in case you haven't noticed.

So we fitted the two demon chicks with some tiny backpacks and we sent them on their way. Metaphorically speaking, of course. Two bad chicks really can spoil the whole batch. Methinks they were roosters. The sexing of baby chickens is not 100% accurate, so even when you think you're buying pullets (baby hens) you may have a cockerel (baby roosters) or two in the mix. So if you do order chicks, be prepared to face that problem and have a solution worked out in advance. No matter how cute and cuddly your little cockerel may seem when he's a baby, once that testosterone kicks in, he's gonna be mean. It's the design. His job is to protect those hens at all costs from anything. The only person our rooster won't attack is my husband. Roosters have big spurs on their legs and will leap up and try to slash you with them. Seriously! I carry a big stick when I go into the coop. If you do decide to get a rooster, don't get more than one. They'll fight each other, sometimes until death.

Green Acres is the place to be!

Our big chickens live in a converted out building we lovingly call 'the yard shack.' My husband used plywood to section off the back of the building. He built nesting boxes with hinged doors we can easily access from outside of the coop area. We keep the boxes filled with straw and the floor of the coop is scattered with a layer of wood shavings. The hens roost on wooden dowels (there is a specific thickness you need so their feet don't get injured, it's important to follow that rule.) We have a metal watering fountain with a heater underneath for the cold months (keeps the water from icing up) and a red light that we run in the winter months on a timer so they'll keep laying and they stay warm. Once the days get shorter, chickens will 'go on strike' if you don't provide them with light. Every chicken only has so many eggs, so it's either a matter of getting more up front, or getting them over a longer period of time. We have a run (fenced in area) outside where they can peck in the dirt and get some sun. Chickens like to roll around in the dust to remove mites from their feathers. The run has bird netting on top to keep them from flying out, but we've got a few hens that are persistent escape artists.

You lookin' at me? You lookin' at me? I didn't think so.

We let them out in the evenings for an hour or two to peck around the yard and they do stay on the property even without a fence, though it's important to be aware that chickens are quite tempting to a variety of predators. Once it starts to get dark, the chickens really do come home to roost. Then we close the door to the fence and the exit door to the coop and let them out again in the morning. We've been lucky to only have lost one chicken to a predator. We've had a few others die of natural causes. Chickens are susceptible to a variety of illnesses. It's important to get a good guidebook so you can be on the lookout for things that might go wrong. One of our hens was egg bound, but by the time I'd figured that out it was too late. That was a sad day. It's important that you feed them a good quality layer feed, provide them with fresh water, access to the outside or some grit in their food for their gullets and oyster shells for protein and keep the coop and nesting boxes clean.

Word of warning on backyard chicken eggs. They do not come out clean and perfect like the ones at the grocery store. They can be goopy and icky and covered with...well...for lack of a better word...poo. We had an amusing mother/daughter book club moment when we first moved here. We went to all of the fabulous houses one by one and I was hoping we'd get to skip ours since we'd not renovated yet, but alas our day arrived. Everything was going swimmingly until the other mothers' jaws hit the floor when their kids came racing into the house with icky chicken eggs in their hands! OH MY GOD! WASH YOUR HANDS! WASH YOUR HANDS!

Suffice it to say, that was our last mother/daughter book club meeting. We keep an egg cleaning scrubby and icky egg dedicated strainer under the kitchen sink. I wash my hands after handling the eggs and the chickens. Just so you know, backyard chickens are not for the squeamish. If you like pristine eggs, might I suggest the grocery store?

Chickens, pigs and tiaras...just a regular day at the Potter Homestead

All in all, having our own little flock has been a truly wonderful experience. Chickens may not be the smartest animals, but they are certainly some of the sweetest. Back in the Great Depression, women kept a small flock of chickens in their back yards and they fondly referred to them as "the ladies." I quite like being a part of the resurrection of that tradition. Nothing beats fresh from the hen house eggs.

I'll share more pics, stories and information as our little chicks grow. Until next time...peep on with your bad selves!

Love
Madge

It's a Bead Chic Sneaky Peek!

Pssst...guess what?
You can see inside of my new book! YAY!
Hey Howdy Hey Boys and Girls

Thank you to everyone who left such nice comments on my book post yesterday. I think one of the hardest things in life is learning to embrace and to celebrate our own success. Let's face facts, it's uncomfortable to toot our horns and to make a big splash in the pool and it can make other people who are insecure or unhappy feel threatened when we do. Ultimately, that's their problem. When we embrace our own joy, we are able to give it more freely to others. We all deserve as much bliss and as much success as we can imagine...and then some. When we create success, we are showing others that it's possible. Then we have to remember not just to celebrate our triumphs, but to celebrate the triumphs of those around us. It is imperative that we pay it forward. So thank each of you for allowing me the space to embrace my joy and for celebrating it with me, I had a lot of tough years and struggles along the way and it took me a long time to learn to love myself and feel worthy of love and success. This career began precisely when that happened. It feels really good to grow up.

And on that note, I have some exciting news! If you go to Amazon, you'll be able to Look Inside of my new book Bead Chic! I haven't even seen it in full color until today! I'm so excited, I just can't hide it and I'm not gonna apologize for it either! I really hope you're going to be excited too. The design team at FW did an amazing job on this book. There are 30 fashion forward base projects with variations including stunning variation projects from some of the biggest names in the jewelry making world. This is a book for folks who have the basic techniques down, but want to learn how to think like a designer. This is about learning how to take an idea and make it your own and that is the crux of my entire crafty message. Everyone has something to say and I want to inspire you to say it. Out loud! In technicolor! Without shame!

xoxo,
Madge

How to Write and Publish a Craft Book Part 4

Photo Credit Andrew Potter 2008 (I just noticed the impromptu dandelion bracelet!)

I've got some big news I can finally share. I've sold my seventh book! Insert trumpet flourish here! I can't share any of the details of the contents, but I can say that it's a jewelry focused book with a fresh twist on what is already on the market. My book projects and instructions are due in house by July 30th. So I have my work cut out for me. It's not a lot of time, but I can do it. I work well under pressure, like most designers I tend to work to the deadline anyway. Might as well make it sooner than later to avoid the inevitable procrastinating. Plus, this is the fun part! I get to create something new!

I would like to branch out and write some books that aren't jewelry focused, but for now that's the niche for which I am known and in which I do well. In a rough economy when publishers are really taking a hit financially, they're unlikely to take too many risks. People spend a lot of time being absurdly stubborn and relentlessly specific about what they want to do and how it has to unfold. Then they make a litany of excuses for why things aren't working out. More often than not it's because they're not willing to be a little flexible. Take some yoga. Bend a little. Or you can just dig those pretty little heels in and keep insisting that you're way is the only way and see how far that actually gets you. Publishing a book is all about the fine art of compromise. I wish I could say it was just about fine art, but that would be a lie. It's about making money. Money pays the rent. Then you can make all the fine art you like and not have to worry if it sells because it's not feeding your family, it's feeding your soul. There is nothing romantic about starving. You can't eat your conviction for dinner and your kids can't wear your stubborn pride to school.

Once you've sold your book, you'll be presented with a contract. Do not sign the first contract. DO NOT SIGN THE FIRST CONTRACT. Period. Read every single word and go over all of the math with a calculator and a fine tooth comb. Make sure you understand what it all means and ask a lot of questions if you don't understand. Set up a time to meet with the contracts person over the phone to talk about the contract in detail. Ask for specific clarification of anything you don't understand. Ask why you can't have more, why this has to be like this or that, go over every line for specifics. You can negotiate a better deal, but you have to ask for what you want. You need to know what you want first to do so, so you'll need to figure that out for yourself. I can't tell you what you want. Ask to remove anything you don't like, they may say no, but you should ask anyway. Ask for more money, ask for fewer restrictions, pay attention to what rights you are signing away and if you don't want to say, give the TV and movie rights away, ask to remove that clause. Be willing to walk away if the deal isn't good. Even if you are desperate, do not negotiate from a place of desperation. They liked your idea enough to buy it, so you should get paid well for it. The first contract is not a good deal. Trust me.

Making a craft book is a huge undertaking. You will likely be spending countless hours on the designs, instructions, text and concept. Then you will spend countless hours on the editing and organizing. Then you will spend countless hours on PR and Marketing. Make sure you get paid well for your time, but remember that your craft book is only part of the equation for making money, the other part comes from the notoriety you create that you can parlay into other paid opportunities.

I like to take a Sharpee to a printed copy of the contract and start marking out things I don't like. It's fun. Whee! Just keep a fresh copy so you can see what you've slashed out when you talk with the contracts person. Everything is negotiable. You may not get everything you want, but you will have to ask to get it. Ask, ask with conviction. This is not the time to be shy or timid or flaky. Be a diplomat and a pirate. If you don't negotiate a better deal I can guarantee that you won't make much money. If you don't make much money, you have only yourself to blame. The person who creates the contract does so with their best interests at heart, that's called good business. Now you respond with your best interests at heart and get a good deal. Negotiate.

It took me six books to finally get a really good deal. Had I hired an agent, I'd probably have done better sooner. You can also opt to show the contract to a lawyer. You may want to do that because they'll probably find things you won't. Craft books don't make a lot of money, so it can really eat into your royalties if you have to give a percentage away to lawyers and agents, but on the other hand it might make all the difference in your profits. It's a balancing act. You have to make some big decisions, so educate yourself.

Once you've signed the contract, the work begins. You need to take this seriously. Meet your deadlines, do quality work, focus on the tasks at hand. I recommend that you make a plan. Figure out how much time you have, how much work you need to do, double that because things will always take longer than you expected. Once you've signed your contract, been assigned to an editor and you've got a solid plan, it's time to start making a craft book.

I'll be back with some advice about that soon in my fifth installment in How to Write and Publish a Craft Book.

Cheers,
Madge

ILoveToCreate Teen Crafts: Totally 80s Pollack Inspired Tote Bag


ILoveToCreate Teen Crafts
How To Make a:
Totally 80s Pollack Inspired DIY Tote Bag

Margot Potter The Impatient Crafter™
“Mom crafted, kid approved.”

Sometimes you make crafty gold and sometimes you make...this purse, but whatever you do, own it fully and more importantly, enjoy the journey. By the end of several hours of earnest crafting, I was convinced I was staring at a full on craft fail. Then the buzzer sounded and I was staring at this tote bag, thinking...really, Madge? Is this your teen craft project for this week?!

All in all, this just might be a bit of a hot mess, but Avalon came home from school and absolutely loved it. Who knew?! I have to remind myself sometimes that my focus here is 'teen crafts', which means the projects can be quirky! This has definitely got a modern art meets the 80s appeal. It’s fun to let all propriety go and squeeze paint with abandon on a canvas. I can see why Jackson Pollack enjoyed it so much. In this case, the canvas is a tote bag and the paint is Tulip dimensional fabric paint. It’s the perfect medium for this kind of design because it won’t run and stays dimensional after it dries. After layering on paints, I carved out some floral shapes with the tip of a paint tube and embellished them with metal chain and the foil side of some old faux gemstones. Aleene’s glues make it easy to stick just about anything to just about anything else! The floral trim is from Prym-Dritz, I gave it an edge using a Tulip Fashion Graffiti Big Phat marker.

I think other teens will dig this too. (Yeah, I said dig it.) Send them outside with some canvas totes, markers, stencils, trim, adhesives and a bin full of fabric paints and sprays and let them make some glorious messes of their own!


Materials

Fuchsia Canvas Purse
Raveled Rosettes Fabric Trim
Tulip Fashion Graffiti Big Phat Marker
Tulip
Dimensional Fabric Paint Metallic Silver, Matte Black, Slick Fuchsia
Ranger Alcohol Ink Mixative Silver
Aleene’s Liquid Fusion Glue
Aleene's Jewel-it Glue
Flat back silver faux gems or the foil side of old faux gems

Tools
Scissors
2 pairs chain nose pliers


1. Layer Dimensional Fabric Paints on canvas by squeezing the tubes about 8 inches from canvas and moving the paint stream into circles and lines and squiggles. Keep making layers until you’re pleased with the results.


2. Use the tip of one of your paints to carve floral swirls out randomly.

3. Squeeze and shake silver mixative over paint layers randomly. Squeeze into the center of your carved floral areas (a little goes a long way.) Allow the paints to dry.


4. Use the marker to darken the frayed edges of the flower trim.


5. When the paints have dried, use Aleene’s Jewel-it to add gems to center of carved flowers.

6. Place chain around flower to determine length needed. Remove segment from core chain using pliers. Add a line of glue around flower and glue down chain. Repeat for each flower.

7. Glue the flower trim across the top of the purse using Liquid Fusion Glue. Allow to embellishments to dry.

Book Review: Steampunk Style Jewelry by Jean Campbell


Book Review
Steampunk Style Jewelry
Jean Campbell

Creative Publishing International


A while back I was contacted by Jean Campbell and invited to participate in a compilation book she was working on called Steampunk Style Jewelry. Of course, I leapt at the chance. I love this genre and I'm very fond of working to a theme, plus Jean is respected colleague and I like her immensely. I was so excited to finally get my copy of the book, I immediately sat down, opened it up and dove in!

Jean has done a brilliant job of capturing the spirit of the Steampunk movement through extensive research, the book is filled with gorgeous photographs and detailed information. If you've been intrigued by this genre and unsure about it's roots, you'll discover a long standing tradition of costumes, accessories, decor, film and literature that explores and celebrates the concept of the romantic Victorian era aesthetic married with the cold mechanics of modern technology. Think of the books of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells, the films of Terry Gilliam and even classic films like Metropolis or Chaplin's Modern Times. Man has struggled uncomfortably with the complexities of technology since its arrival. Perhaps this movement is a way of coming to terms with what has been lost and what has been discovered since we ushered in the era of industrialization. Steampunk is an amalgam of anachronistic approaches to artistic expression and this book explores and illuminates it beautifully.

Inside the lovely rustic cover are a series of beautiful mixed media infused step-by-step designs created by some of the biggest names in the DIY jewelry making world. From lace and metal festooned cuffs to rings, earrings, necklaces and bracelets made from a plethora of gears, chains, ephemera, watch parts and found objects, you'll find something to excite your imagination on every page. Jean has liberally sprinkled information, images and historical fun facts throughout the book. It's a truly fascinating read even if you don't intend to recreate the designs. There is a comprehensive front section with materials and techniques needed to explore the projects and a generous gallery section with photographs of extraordinary Steampunk style designs by noted artists like Richard Salley and Justin Giunta.

Steampunk continues to be an influential design movement and if you've wanted to explore it further, this book is an excellent guide. Hit the flea markets and the thrift stores in search of found objects and forgotten treasures you can use to create your own Steampunk masterpieces with the inspiration you'll find in Jean Campbell's wonderful new book Steampunk Style Jewelry.

Margot Potter
Author
The Impatient Beader
Series, Bead and Wire Jewelry Exposed and Bead Chic

ILoveToCreate Teen Crafts: Funkadelic Flip Flops


ILoveToCreate Teen Crafts
Funkadelic Flip Flops

Margot Potter

"Mom crafted, kid approved."


Designing a teen craft project every week presents unique challenges and inevitably fills my mind with a series of questions as I sift through ideas. Is it too old fashioned? Is it too grown up? Is it too weird? Is it too funky? Have I lost my ever loving mind? This week’s project is no exception to the rule. It began with an innocent pair of acid green flip flops. Then I dug up some acid green fun fur I got from my friend Jenny Harada (monster maker extraordinaire.) From there I toyed with a garden/lawn theme...fuzzy pom poms were ceremoniously created and unceremoniously rejected. Daisies were contemplated with extreme seriousness. I mulled extensively over dimensional fabric roses. Then I threw all caution and good taste to the wind and went straight to funky town.

Sometimes you err to the side of Audrey Hepburnville and sometimes you go straight to Lady Gagaland. I think you can guess where I went this week. Are they hideous? Perhaps, yes. Okay probably, yes. Okay, yes. Do I love them anyway? You bet your sweet bippy I do!

I think teens will love them too, my daughter Avalon did. Let your teen modify this project to suit her style. She can glue fun fur, yarn, rick rack, zippers, ribbon or whatever tickles her fancy to the straps. Then layer up a fun focal piece using Liquid Fusion glue and a variety of Tulip Fabric Sprays and let that pedicure shine!

Life is short, why be boring when you can be outrageously fabulous? Why indeed.


Materials
Rubber Flip Flops
Acid Green Long Nap Fun Fur
2 wooden stars
2 open center scalloped foam hearts
2 yellow plastic vintage gum ball machine skulls from Sacred Kitsch Studio
Ranger Archival Ink Jet Black
Inkadinkado 99531 Animal Skins Clear Stamps
Fiskars Clear Stamp Base
Aleene’s Liquid Fusion Glue
Tulip Fabric Spray Paint in Neon Pink, Yellow and Orange
Crafty Chica Little Paint Pack in Yellow and White
Elasticity Clear Stretchy Cord

Tools
Foam or Regular Paint Brush
Fabric Scissors


1. Measure and cut fun fur strips. Jenny showed me a trick for cutting the fun fur, if you keep the point of the scissors in the base of the fur as you cut, you won’t end up with choppy fun fur or what she calls “a bad haircut.”


2. Mix a little white paint into the yellow and paint stars. Allow to dry. Add a spritz of orange fabric spray to the top. Allow to dry. Stamp using archival ink and leopard fur stamp.


3. Use a thick business or 3x5 card to mask off sections of the foam heart and spray with orange fabric spray. Allow to dry.


4. Remove spray nozzle from fabric spray bottle and use the end to flick pink and yellow paint on heart. Allow to dry.


5. Glue layers together, foam heart followed by star set to the right or left for each flip flop and skull on top of star. Allow to dry.


6. Use Elasticity to tie the heart to the flip flop strap. Use a double knot to secure and cut off ends. Glue the heart down to the fun fur on the flip flop strap using Liquid Fusion glue. Allow to dry.

Stay tuned for more fab flip flop ideas for ILoveToCreate this summer!