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printable thanks cards

thank you and note cards

  • October 18, 2017October 18, 2017

The only thing complicated about communication with friends is choosing how. Do I send a text, an email, a Facebook message or a message on Whatsapp etc? It’s great that there are many ways and it is very easy to connect. But there is something about the physicality of a thank you or note card, nothing quite beats receiving a card in the post! Maybe because it is so rare these days, receiving a note brings a type of pleasure that is almost vintage. Mail that isn’t a bill or a catalogue is almost to be treasured in a nostalgic way. It’s a slow form of communication, to think that someone took the time to handwrite a message and put it in an envelope makes the message feel more weighty and significant! In some way it is more personal.

Of course writing a note is a form of simple creativity. Today I’ve made it even simpler for you with printable thank you and note cards, perfect for the autumn season of gratefulness. One simple way to make time for creativity is to write some one a note, oh and don’t forget to practise your hand-lettering on the envelope!

Printable thank you and note cards

There are two sets of cards with 8 designs in total, thank you cards and plain cards with an autumnal floral design.

printable thanks cards

printable floral cards

Download your cards here:  thank-you-cards.pdf (280 downloads)

3 steps to creativity today

thank you note cards

Up-cycling and recycling

  • October 17, 2017November 5, 2018

So you want to be creative, because you know that you feel better when you are being creative. One way to be creative is through up-cycling and recycling, it’s often an inexpensive way to be creative because your materials are low cost or even free. Up-cycling or recycling is a form of creativity that can be simple. Of course it can get complicated too but I’m on a mission to help you keep it simple! But it has a bad reputation for being a bit hokey, and sometimes the results look more like junk than treasure, but it doesn’t have to be that way.

I think there are two ways to be intentional about up-cyling or recyling and they are:

  1. Seeing something and imagining it better, glammed up, made-over. Usually considered an Up-cycle
  2. Looking for something unthought of that will do particular job. Usually considered a Re-cycle.

Upcycling

I take intentional trips to the charity shop to find items that I could change, up-cycle to make more usable or pretty. I found this lamp in a charity shop:

Mask the hardware and the cable where it joined the lamp with masking tape. Using a disposable plastic dust sheet on my lawn, I sprayed the lamp according to the can’s instructions. It took about 3 coats of paint but was touch dry within half an hour between each coat, as you are supposed to recoat within 4 hours or after 36 hours. The shade was reduced because it was dirty, I covered it with some cotton dust sheet fabric. I rolled the shade on the fabric and cut out a slight curved shape with a 5 cm hem top and bottom. I trimmed down the hems and glued them to the lampshade rim just inside the shade. I used small pegs to hold the fabric in place until the glue held.

I added some ribbon trim. Here’s the finished item.

upcycled lamp


I also found this bookcase in a charity warehouse store,

upcycling

I painted it with Annie Sloan chalk paint and now looks like this:

upcycling and recycling

Re-cycling

The second way of approaching upcycling and recycling – looking for something unusual for a purpose that it was not originally designed for, happens usually when you have a problem to solve. You can use items you already own, such as when I needed pen pots and used old golden syrup tins. I’ve used them covered to suit decor and uncovered because I love the iconic British design.

Or a picture frame as an earring holder.

earring frame

I found some odd curtain pole ends / finials that along with a shallow crate,

painted hooks upcycled

I recycled into hooks:

upcycled curtain pole ends

Charity shops or thrift stores can be great resources for large amounts of fabric too. I recycled a double duvet cover into a play tent:

re-cycled duvet cover

1 tip and 2 questions to ask yourself before you start

If you are looking for a creative project and want to try up-cycling or recycling, here’s one tip and two questions to ask when you don’t know what to look for.

Tip

Look at the shape of an item, the structure, the bones, don’t worry about colour or frills, or things that can be changed.

Questions

1. How could I make this item look better – more to my taste?

2. Could I find something that will do the job it wasn’t originally intended for but suits the shape I need and might add some quirkiness?

Simple creative changes that can be made when up-cycling or recycling

Colours can be changed with paint – wall paint, chalk paint, spray paint, even dye.

Adding something to an item to make it work/look better. Such as fixings like mirror screws I added to mini drawers to work as handles. Adding a ribbon trim or changing the shade on a lamp. Adding lace to a picture frame for earring holders.

Could I take something away from an item to make this work/look better? Like using the frame of the picture frame without the glass or backing. Unwanted trims or overly fussy details that can be removed.

Up-cycling things that are your friends

Paint

Ribbons

Fabric

The hardware store

So next time you are looking to get creative consider a simple up-cycle or recycle!

 

Want more free resources and encouragement to be creative?

Get access to my best pretty phone lock screens, e-mags, printable note cards and calendars here.

 

tidying up

How tidying helps creativity

  • October 15, 2017October 16, 2017

I skipped writing for the 31 days of simple creativity yesterday. I doubt anyone will notice though bar me! Do you spend your weekends cleaning and tidying? I spent some of my day tidying and thought that it fits perfectly in this simple creativity series. Tidying helps creativity. Tidying is simple creativity.

tidying helps creativity

I spent the majority of the day tidying a space where I store my creative stuff. It’s a space where I could go to to make or write, but it has become a bit of a dumping ground. Yesterday though I tidied it so my son could use it. It is now his space, he shares a bedroom with his much younger brother and he needs another space to study, do his homework and play on his playstation.

I loved being able to make this space work for him, I had not been using it in the best possible way and it brought me much pleasure to turn it over to him and make it work for him. And he loves it, there is something so pure in creating something for someone else that brings them so much joy.

Simple creativity is tidying up.

Mess inhibits our creativity. Clutter is a visual stimuli that clouds our minds and invades the space that we need to create and think with. It makes it hard for us to relax mentally with the guilt and signifier that the work is never done. It draws our focus away from the creative work or creative time and becomes a distraction.

tidying up

As creatives we are not known for our tidyness! I know that I can sometimes move quickly from one idea to another, I can keep things because I might be creative with them one day. It can be hard to focus and narrow because we are curious and there is so much we want to do. But I know every now and again I need to ‘clear the decks’ to get a fresh start, re-focus and clarify my priorities again.

If you feel stuck in your creativity, take some time to tidy up or re-organise an area. It may help with your creative flow.

3 steps to creativity today

tidying helps creativity

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