Sunday, May 20, 2012

Body Drawing

Personalize a wall hanging with pictures of your favorite things!


Acquire paper grocery bags by any means necessary. Cut open the bags. Tape the ends together to make a piece of paper that is a little longer and wider than yourself.
Some may need more bags than others.

Lie down on the paper, and ask a friend to trace around your with a pencil. Cut out the shape.
 

Cut out pictures of things you like from magazines. If you don't know what a mag-a-zine is, then just print out images of things you like. Full color. On an inkjet printer.

Take your images and glue them to the shape. Did I mention that each full-color page will cost you an average of 32 cents? Assuming it takes you 20 pages to cover the shape, that adds up to $6.40. What else, other than feeding  a hungry person for 33 days, can you get for that price? Thank you inkjet companies for making this possible!

Hang up your body drawing. Awesome! I hope you like cats and dogs!

Also a fun way to decorate your drunk, passed-out friends!

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Wearin' O' the Green

 Does this look fun? Comfortable? You bet it does! From James Perrin:





Shamrock shapes are cut out and pasted onto this Saint Patrick's Day  mask, which is really a super-sized shamrock! Outline mask with green yarn; use more yarn for ties and to keep it in place.


Remind those who have trouble cutting a shamrock that three hearts overlapped at the points make one shamrock.








Thank you, James! This mask certainly looks cute on this child! I bet she enjoyed making it, and who wouldn't? It's fun and harkens back to youth! I bet anyone who made this mask would look just as darling wearing it!

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Flying Witch


From Bernadette Cutler:

FLY a cut-paper witch this October or place her on your hand for a novel paper puppet. Fold from a nine-by-twelve-inch piece of black paper as follows:

Crease paper vertically and overlap two top corners so their center point falls on the vertical fold line. Glue overlapping parts together. Then insert neck of cutout head in a slit, cut near the point of "cape." Glue on other cutout details such as legs, arms, brooms, and so forth. Notice this witch's "flying hairdo."

No, Ms. Cutler, I wouldn't call it "flying hairdo." Based on the expression on the witch's face, "electrocuted" or "terrified" are better descriptors.

I know cackling witches are an age-old stereotype, but this witch's face tells a different story. Her mouth doesn't seem to be cackling as much as frozen in a state of disbelief or stunned agony. What about those eyes? Those tormented eyes... her eyebrow depicts someone more exhausted or distressed than mischievous or hysterical.


Adding to my suspicion that this witch isn't merely flying around having a good time, as Ms. Cutler would like me to believe, is that one of her legs appears to be twisted awkwardly in the wrong direction. I doubt this is in error. As I show here on the left, if Ms. Cutler wanted the witch's legs to not be purposefully twisted out of shape, she could have easily chosen to do so.


Based on these observations, I can only assume the witch's black dress is concealing a horrific leg injury.

A final complaint I have, Ms. Cutler, is that your witch's costume is too simple. This coupled with the flaws I mentioned above makes it easy to turn this witch into a caricature of a 19th century Christian missionary meeting his fate in the bubbling cauldron of some previously undiscovered cannibal tribe.

"Flying harido," Ms. Cutler? For shame.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Larry


You may think this is a clever idea for putting everyone's names on their drinks during a Halloween party, but oh how wrong you are!

Before said party, prepare. Cleanse your body thoroughly. Remove all earthly impurities. Then draw and cut out a ghost shape from paper. Draw eyes and a round mouth. At the party, find that asshole Larry's drink and impale "Larry" right through the mouth. Message sent. Leave party. Back home, imagine Larry's reaction upon returning to find his drink. Cleanse yourself again.

To crank it up a notch, see below.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Miser Bags

These are Miser Bags, a down-and-dirty craft straight from the 1970s. I know what you're probably thinking, missy. "Those look an awful lot like... something useful that I want!" Well go for it! You'll probably like miser bags!
Nice Miser Bag!

Cut a 16" x 12" piece of material (preferably something latex-ey), fold in half lengthwise and sew the ends together. Then sew along the side, leaving a 3" opening in the middle. Watch Silence of the Lambs. Turn the sack right side out. Slip two poultry or small plastic rings over bag. To fill one end of bag, slide the rings to the other end. When full, slide rings over and fill other end. If it falls on the floor and gets lint and hair all over it, that's ok. Show others your miser bags. Your miser bags may be so impressive that they stare in disbelief!

Hold your miser bags whilst looking for treasure on hikes and field trips. Hang them from your belt or the off the side of your hat. Every miser bag is different, and they float in water!

Friday, September 2, 2011

Have a great, tar-blood year!



Ah, September! When children return to school a year older and wiser! Or, in the case of this young girl, scared shitless... and who could blame her? Her sterile, tree-less school is apparently one large room lined with windows and one lookout tower. There is no escape from school, children! See that black around the school? It's a hole. One more peep out of you and we'll send the entire precariously hanging building into the yawning abyss!
Have a Great Year!