Showing posts with label P8 Button Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label P8 Button Art. Show all posts

Sunday, November 4, 2012

P8ButtonArt is closing; 50% reduction !

SHOP IS NOW CLOSED





Going to close my P8ButtonArt shop on Etsy; so grab the opportunity and get 50% reduction !!! 

Buy the item(s) you like and at the purchase cart, 
use the following coupon code: P850percent



Sunday, February 6, 2011

Etsy : New Brooches & Industrial Sewing Machine




This week I made more pieces in my "double buttoned embroidered" jewelry line. But this time I used the small branches, so I made a type of toggle buttons. Embroidered them again with silk floss and a lovely button. I so like making these girly woodland pieces !

Most of the new creations are now in my Etsy shop: P8 Button Art, but there is more to come !

And I played the whole week with my industrial sewing machine, hubby bought it for me from an old man in Kiel who buys and repairs those monsters as his hobby. I had to get used to the speed of the machine and how to get it even, and learned a lot about threads, tension, and spooling. There's no tutorial handbook, so I had to find it out for myself. And I am still very careful for my fingers because it is a real monster, it goes easily through 2cm (almost 1") thick leather like butter....
Here some pics of my new playmate:



Saturday, January 15, 2011

Etsy : New Jewelry Line




This week I made more pieces in my "double buttoned embroidered" jewelry line. I love the work; drawing the embroidery plan, drilling, sanding and oiling the wood, looking for a fitting button, choosing colours for the floss, and then the embroidery itself ! I am pretty happy making and seeing my new line. I made brooches, rings and pendant necklaces so far, but more ideas are continuously popping up.


Most of the new creations are now in my Etsy shop: P8 Button Art, but there is more to come !

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Etsy : New Business Cards




This week I did not do much, did not sew a thing, but got a good idea for the EST winter swap. So, that's what I will do next week, working on the winter swap. Back to this week, I did some necessary administration and was happy about the fact that Etsy transformed my P8Accessories shop from dollars into euros. And I got my new business cards and postcards for my P8 Button Art shop on Etsy ! I think they are fantastic, and will tell you the story a bit. Some time ago I got a lovely email from Stacey DeLooze that she liked my button creations and if she could use them for a photo-shooting of her UK based music band DeLooze. I listened to their music and liked the idea very much, wanted to see my creations in a completely different setting and we had a deal. And here's the result; I think they are extremely cool. Buy something in my Etsy shop and you get them in your own hands :))

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Button Wednesday : Big Flowers



It is Wednesday again, so it's BUTTON DAY on my blog. It would be great if you could do the same; make your Wednesday a button day too. Have you seen a lovely, beautiful, stunning, crazy button or button-related thingy, or did you make something with a button / buttons, or did you even make buttons yourself, blog about it on your blog on Wednesday, and give the link here via Mister Linky at the end of this post.


Last year I had a biking tourist in my shop who came from the south of Germany and she bought a set of earrings from me. If that's not happiness enough, she sent me a little parcel this year with some very unusual buttons ! She wrote that she found these buttons and had to think of me, and because she had my card, she decided to send them to me. Is that not super cool !!!

So, what makes these buttons so special ? In the first place they are big, you can see that on the pics with my fingers. In the second place they are flowers, so they are goofies (and I always like goofies). In the third place they are a construction set of three parts; two disks with petals fitting into each other, and a bud with shank that fits into the hole of the petal disks. Very ingenious !


I would love to paint these buttons; they are made of white plastic. Does anybody know what kind of paint I need for this ?


!!!!!!!!!! If you have something for The Button Wednesday, give Mister Linky your name and the link to your button post !!!!!!!!!!!!!


Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Buttons : achtmalacht


I am so happy to announce that my button creations are now for sale in a real, non-virtual, shop ! My friend Annette from PaperPower, who is one of the initiators, asked me kindly to be part of this adventure. This Saturday is the grand opening from achtmalacht (i.e. 8x8) in Eckernfoerde, Germany. When you happen to be in the area, come and have a look, and a glass of champagne.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Tid Bits: Flickr Favourites


Inspired by the European Street Team challenge of last week for which I made wooden buttons (sawing, sanding, drilling & oiling) and made those into a necklace, my flickr favourites of today are all about wood.
For more flickr favourites see here.

1. Banksia Ring -1, 2. Stairway to Heaven , 3. Biscuit box angular jasmine leaf wooden necklace, 4. Wood Shawl Pin & Ring

And here's a picture of the wooden buttons and the necklace I made of it for the challenge:

Friday, July 24, 2009

Tidbits : Lawnsign


I ordered a week ago a lawnsign at VistaPrint and it arrived today. Had no idea what to expect, but for the money it's a very clever solution. It's from plastic and has metal legs. I think it looks pretty cool along the road before my house; hope that tourists like too what they see and come into my little shop/atelier !


Monday, July 20, 2009

Traditional costume : kraplap


After making my bodice / kraplap for the traditional costume challenge from the European Street Team on Etsy, I thought it would be interesting to show you some pictures of bodices / kraplappen from traditional costumes in The Netherlands. Originally the kraplap was a part of the underwear, but in many parts of The Netherlands it has developed into an important decorative part of the outerwear; often very visible and showy, but also sometimes hidden under shawls only revealing a small part under the chin.




In Marken it is worn above all other clothing parts and made from antique pieces of the most beautiful chintz (calico cloth printed with flowers and other devices in different colors).



In Urk the kraplap is more voluminous, mostly made from satin and often embroidered with flowers.



The best known kraplap is the one from Volendam, tucked under the typical short sleeve jacket, often with the most beautiful flower embroidery.



In Walcheren, it is also tucked away in the short sleeved jacket but with lots of folds and more visible because of the more open form of the jacket.



The kraplap of Bunschoten-Spakenburg is the most striking one; it's made of a handpainted cotton and fully stiffened, which makes it look like a giant collar; the red checkered vertical stripe in the middle, is the shawl folded into a strip only in such a way that the kraplap is fully visible.



In Staphorst it is often made from a black woollen muslin with flowers or from black satin handpainted with "stipwerk"; a special painting technique only used in the Staphorster costume. The flowers and stipwerk is dark coloured when the wearer is in mourning (blue and purple on black), otherwise the colours are pretty bright (red, green, yellow etc.). The checkered shawl is covering quite a part of this stunning piece. Which is very much the same situation on the Veluwe, where the kraplappen are not so very brightly patterned.




In Arnemuiden and on Zuid-Beveland the kraplappen are very similar, and also very much covered by the shawl. Often the shawl is made of the same fabric as the kraplap.




The most decorated kraplap is the one of Axel; it's ingeniously embroidered with glass beads and sequins leaving almost no space of the fabric to be seen. The scarf, which is folded and stuffed like a pair of wings, is covering the fabric, leaving the embroidered part visible as one big front jewel.


I hope you enjoyed this little tour through some of the traditional costumes in The Netherlands. All the pictures are postcards in my possession.