Showing posts with label Pine Cones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pine Cones. Show all posts
Thursday, July 4, 2013
Friday, December 14, 2012
Glittered Pine Cone Ornament
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As I said in my last post, I had a couple ornaments to share, and here is the other one....
This one, follow the instructions of my other Pine Cone Ornament until you get to the step where you paint the tips of the pine cone with color.
With this one though, using a medium size paint brush brush on some glue, everywhere. Everywhere that you want glitter that is ツ I did mine all over, the more the better! This project is super easy and great to do with the kids!! Kids love glitter (and so do I)
Somebody needs to come up with a non static glitter! Every time I work with glitter, its all over the place! I even tried using some furniture polish wiped on the inside of a plastic bowl and it STILL stuck to it. I tried cookie sheets, wax paper, all to no avail. Sticks to my hands no matter what. I am ordinarily a static-y person, I apparently carry so much static in my body you better not touch me till I touch something else! LOL Especially if I have been in my car! I dunno why?? ¯\(°_o)/¯
Anybody have any tricks to use so glitter doesn't have so much static? Please share!!
Here is what you need:
Pine Cones
White Paint
Glitter
Glue
Paint Brush
Small Screw Eye Hooks
Thin Ribbon (for the hanging string) **
Medium Ribbon (for the bow) **I just used the same ribbon that I used for my other Pine Cone Ornaments
First I screwed all the eye hooks in the bottoms then I sprayed them all white, I gave them two coats each.
This time, my husband set up a spray booth for me and I used his air compressor and spray gun. ツ You can use spray paint though.I painted some of my XL large pine cones that I got from a friends yard, and 1 teeny tiny pine cone (see it hanging in the pic? Isn't it cute!?) and a few large cones and a few medium ones. The largest one I have measures 8 1/4 inches tall !!!
Here are a couple pictures of my XL Pine Cone, and one along side of a Medium size
Next step, "paint" glue on the tops and bottom sides of the pine cone. (All over) I can "paint" most of my pine cone except where I'm holding it. (usually about a 1 inch band around the bottom)
Next comes the glitter ツ sprinkle as much as you like, or as much as the glue will hold, you will find the spots that you didn't apply the glue, you can either apply more now or when you go back and apply the glue and glitter where your fingers were holding the pine cone. You will get glitter in your glue and on your paint brush if you do it while its still wet, but I didn't mind, so I filled in while wet.
Put as much or as little as you like. I like a lot!
Once its dried and you have as much glitter as you want on there add your hanging ribbon and your bow....
Isn't that pretty!!??
I can't wait to get the lights on our tree (tonight) to see what it looks like all sparkly and shiny! I'll take more pictures and add them.
Finally added the lighted tree pictures 12-25-12
Glitter on....

As I said in my last post, I had a couple ornaments to share, and here is the other one....
This one, follow the instructions of my other Pine Cone Ornament until you get to the step where you paint the tips of the pine cone with color.
With this one though, using a medium size paint brush brush on some glue, everywhere. Everywhere that you want glitter that is ツ I did mine all over, the more the better! This project is super easy and great to do with the kids!! Kids love glitter (and so do I)
Somebody needs to come up with a non static glitter! Every time I work with glitter, its all over the place! I even tried using some furniture polish wiped on the inside of a plastic bowl and it STILL stuck to it. I tried cookie sheets, wax paper, all to no avail. Sticks to my hands no matter what. I am ordinarily a static-y person, I apparently carry so much static in my body you better not touch me till I touch something else! LOL Especially if I have been in my car! I dunno why?? ¯\(°_o)/¯
Anybody have any tricks to use so glitter doesn't have so much static? Please share!!
Here is what you need:
Pine Cones
White Paint
Glitter
Glue
Paint Brush
Small Screw Eye Hooks
Thin Ribbon (for the hanging string) **
Medium Ribbon (for the bow) **I just used the same ribbon that I used for my other Pine Cone Ornaments
This time, my husband set up a spray booth for me and I used his air compressor and spray gun. ツ You can use spray paint though.I painted some of my XL large pine cones that I got from a friends yard, and 1 teeny tiny pine cone (see it hanging in the pic? Isn't it cute!?) and a few large cones and a few medium ones. The largest one I have measures 8 1/4 inches tall !!!
Hanging Pine Cones...waiting to be decorated :) |
8 1/4 inch Pine Cone |
Next comes the glitter ツ sprinkle as much as you like, or as much as the glue will hold, you will find the spots that you didn't apply the glue, you can either apply more now or when you go back and apply the glue and glitter where your fingers were holding the pine cone. You will get glitter in your glue and on your paint brush if you do it while its still wet, but I didn't mind, so I filled in while wet.
Put as much or as little as you like. I like a lot!
Once its dried and you have as much glitter as you want on there add your hanging ribbon and your bow....
Isn't that pretty!!??
Finally added the lighted tree pictures 12-25-12
Here ya go Di :) |
Glitter on....
Saturday, October 6, 2012
DIY Pine Cone Ornaments
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So I have a lifetime supply of pine cones, that I needed to find something to do with, besides throw them all in our burn pile... We have a ton of pine tree's that produce lots and lots of pine cones! They are sharp little suckers too!! Maybe its just this kind, but I have never seen sharp pine cones before!
I've noticed that there are a lot more pine tree's in the south, and a lot less hard wood trees. One good thing about it, it stays green in the winter!
We were helping my hubby clean up the yard and it seemed like a good time to get some pine cones, so my daughter and I picked out some nice ones, to save for later. I cleaned them up with a bucket of hot soapy water (soaking them for at least a hour) rinse them well, then a vinegar/water soak to kill anything living in them, then let them dry out again...
I never really paid attention that when they get wet, they close up, and when they dry out, they open back up!
The drying out process takes about a week, so I tried to speed up the process a little bit (I'm very impatient for things like this)
I lined a cookie sheet with foil and turned the oven on the lowest setting, mine goes down to 170. I tried 170 for about a half hour and it really didn't seem to dry them, so I turned it up to 200 (which is also the highest I would go or you run the risk of burning them) I kept them in there for 15 minutes, then turned them and gave them another 15 minutes. This gave them a good head start on the drying process. I could see they started opening up. :) Also, with the oven drying, if anything survived the soapy water, or the vinegar bath then, they surely it couldn't live through the 200 degree heat of the oven! This also helps to melt any sap on the pine cones, mine didn't really have any on them so I didn't have to worry about that to much.
*Note* keep a close watch on them as they can burn or start on fire in your oven!!
They still ended up taking about three days to dry completely after the oven, but its better than a week!
I left them on the foil lined cookie sheet and put them in the sun to dry and brought them in at night so they wouldn't get dew on them.
When they were finally dry, I borrowed some wire from my hubby to wrap around the pine cones when painting so they could hang and he also set me up a mobile paint booth/drying station (better known as a dolly, or some people call them hand trucks,with a piece of plywood ) and I did this outside of coarse!
Here is what you need:
White Flat Spray Paint
Clear Spray Paint (Matte, Satin, or Gloss - which ever sheen you would like)
Paint colors of your choice
Glitter (I mostly used the Iridescent as it "went" with all the colors)
Small Screw Eye Hooks
Glue
Thin ribbon for hanger (I used 1/8" wide white with Iridescent edges)
Ribbon for bow (I used 3/8" wide white with Iridescent edges)
So, first I sprayed them all white, I gave them two coats each.
Then I used my accent color (your choice of color) and painted all the tips (shark teeth lol), tops and bottoms. I used a lot of the metallic paints, they look really nice! I liked how they turned out!!
After you have all the tips painted let them dry completely, make any touch ups after the first coat, that you need to do, then let it dry again.
Add screw eye hook in the center bottom (I used the smallest hook I could find)
Tie your hanger ribbon on the eye hook
Then using a hot glue gun, or if you have a favorite craft glue, glue your bow onto the pine cone.
I wish you could see just how pretty these are with the glitter, I wish the camera would pick it up better! Or maybe its the camera operator? ;)
The pictures don't do them justice! They are so much prettier in person. I'll have to see if my hubby can take some with his camera that the glitter will show up.
Tips
* I found it was better to paint with a flat white paint rather than a gloss paint (learn from my mistakes) the highlight color covered much better on the flat paint.... (when I did the high gloss white I had to do two coats of highlight color, not just touch up) So flat white paint worked best for me and I was clear coating them anyways, so it didn't matter much.
*Don't spray clear after you have put on the iridescent glitter as it makes it not so sparkly (another learn from my mistake) :) It might not matter on colored glitter but it does on the iridescent!! It made it cloudy looking.
I'm not partial to the color green, but the metallic green is almost my favorite one. Again, the picture doesn't do it justice!
In any case, they will look pretty hanging in the tree....
If anyone has some cute crafts made with pine cones, and would like to pass them along,send me a email or make a comment below.
Edit 12-15-12I did a post on a Glitter Pine Cone Ornament on 12-14-12, you can find it Here
Added a picture of the painted tip pine cone on my tree 12-25-12

So I have a lifetime supply of pine cones, that I needed to find something to do with, besides throw them all in our burn pile... We have a ton of pine tree's that produce lots and lots of pine cones! They are sharp little suckers too!! Maybe its just this kind, but I have never seen sharp pine cones before!
Sharp!! looks like shark teeth, doesn't it?! |
We were helping my hubby clean up the yard and it seemed like a good time to get some pine cones, so my daughter and I picked out some nice ones, to save for later. I cleaned them up with a bucket of hot soapy water (soaking them for at least a hour) rinse them well, then a vinegar/water soak to kill anything living in them, then let them dry out again...
I never really paid attention that when they get wet, they close up, and when they dry out, they open back up!
Hot soapy water. |
Bubble Bath |
Vinegar/Water soak |
I lined a cookie sheet with foil and turned the oven on the lowest setting, mine goes down to 170. I tried 170 for about a half hour and it really didn't seem to dry them, so I turned it up to 200 (which is also the highest I would go or you run the risk of burning them) I kept them in there for 15 minutes, then turned them and gave them another 15 minutes. This gave them a good head start on the drying process. I could see they started opening up. :) Also, with the oven drying, if anything survived the soapy water, or the vinegar bath then, they surely it couldn't live through the 200 degree heat of the oven! This also helps to melt any sap on the pine cones, mine didn't really have any on them so I didn't have to worry about that to much.
*Note* keep a close watch on them as they can burn or start on fire in your oven!!
They still ended up taking about three days to dry completely after the oven, but its better than a week!
I left them on the foil lined cookie sheet and put them in the sun to dry and brought them in at night so they wouldn't get dew on them.
When they were finally dry, I borrowed some wire from my hubby to wrap around the pine cones when painting so they could hang and he also set me up a mobile paint booth/drying station (better known as a dolly, or some people call them hand trucks,with a piece of plywood ) and I did this outside of coarse!
Here is what you need:
White Flat Spray Paint
Clear Spray Paint (Matte, Satin, or Gloss - which ever sheen you would like)
Paint colors of your choice
Glitter (I mostly used the Iridescent as it "went" with all the colors)
Small Screw Eye Hooks
Glue
Thin ribbon for hanger (I used 1/8" wide white with Iridescent edges)
Ribbon for bow (I used 3/8" wide white with Iridescent edges)
Wire wraps around so it can hang |
mobile paint booth/drying station ;) |
White painted Pine Cones |
I like the view from the top, they look really cool! Half way painted. |
Carefully wrap the wire back around the pine cone and spray with a clear coat, matte, satin, or gloss, its your preference. At least two coats of clear.
I then used Elmer's glue and a paint brush and painted the glue on anywhere where I wanted the glitter, let dry over night, or at least several hours.
Add screw eye hook in the center bottom (I used the smallest hook I could find)
Tie your hanger ribbon on the eye hook
Tie hanger ribbon on the eye hook. 1/8" wide ribbon |
I made my own bows...3/8" wide ribbon |
You can almost see the glitter in this picture. |
Tips
* I found it was better to paint with a flat white paint rather than a gloss paint (learn from my mistakes) the highlight color covered much better on the flat paint.... (when I did the high gloss white I had to do two coats of highlight color, not just touch up) So flat white paint worked best for me and I was clear coating them anyways, so it didn't matter much.
*Don't spray clear after you have put on the iridescent glitter as it makes it not so sparkly (another learn from my mistake) :) It might not matter on colored glitter but it does on the iridescent!! It made it cloudy looking.
Other colors I've been doing. Back row, L to R - Gold, Dark Purple Base with white tips Front row: Metallic Green, Metallic Red and Glitter Lt. Blue. |
In any case, they will look pretty hanging in the tree....
If anyone has some cute crafts made with pine cones, and would like to pass them along,send me a email or make a comment below.
Edit 12-15-12I did a post on a Glitter Pine Cone Ornament on 12-14-12, you can find it Here
Added a picture of the painted tip pine cone on my tree 12-25-12
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