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Flip-Pal? Mobile Scanner Blog Hop Week # 1-- How to Make Crystal Ice Centerpieces
It starts here. This is the first week of a series of blog entries that will be featured nationally on the Scan Your Heart Out Blog Hop with Kathy Peterson flip-pal.com . It will begin on January 6th, 2011 and continue every Thursday until February 3rd, 2011. How it works: I, along with 6 other creative designers will create 6 clever projects for 6 weeks using the Flip-Pal? mobile scanner! The best part is the makers of the Flip-Pal? Mobile Scanner will be giving away a scanner a week to a reader! Please register for a chance to win your own Flip-Pal? mobile scanner by leaving a comment Here. I want everyone to have one of these. Meet the The Flip-Pal? mobile scanner Scan Your Heart Out design Team: Kathy Peterson is a Design Expert, Best Selling Author, TV corespondent on LIFETIME TV, Product Developer/Licensor and Master Gardener. Linda Peterson is a wonderful multi-talented designer of jewelry and mixed media projects! Chef Stephanie Petersen baker, food display artist, and cooking instructor. Christy Tomlinsonis a fabulous paper and mixed media artist and more! Amy Andersonis a delightfully talented decoupage queen, knitter and loves to sew! Melissa Langer is a fun and energetic pug artist. Her art is all about crocheting and painting pugs! Pat Sloan is a very talented designer and quilting expert! Shall we get started then? With the base of ornate ediblepainted bread, it stands about 3 feet tall in the center of the table. It's a nice dramatic piece to add to a buffet or to use on several tables at a reception. It works with almost anything in the ice. There are a few exceptions to this of course. Hand grenades...live animals... Before we get started, it's always good to read the story behind the scenes of Our Crazy Anniversary . It's a perfectly sappy love story. Now. The Centerpiece of glory, laud and honor. (Pause for effect). Now... Have you ever done something and then a week later realize how totally lame it was? I won't lie...I've been wrong. This is one of those dork-fest things I wish I could take back. Who in the freakishness actually glues the last copy of their wedding invitation to a scrap book? At the time it seemed nice... Until I realized I might have children and grand children who would like to see it...or at least the picture inside. One copy?! Really?! My kids fight over the last Life-saver in the roll...I'm not seeing this end well. Ironically I mounted the invitation right next to the rings. You know what that means? Not able to scan it on my regular computer scanner. Lame. The Flip-Pal? mobile scanner was awesome for this. Unlike my regular computer scanner that takes a long time to load one picture at a time...I was able to scan 100plus pictures in a few minutes. It was amazing! In the middle of the night without perfect lighting like I have to do with my camera...it was perfect for the spy-like ninja operation I was taking in hand. There it is folks. Right from our invitation. Sigh. No more fighting over Life-Savers...or pictures of mom and dad. ![]() I also used Flip-Pal? mobile scanner to scan some of the finer details of my wedding dress. The dress that my husband used to proposed marriage to me when buying it at an antique store. He got a tear in his eye when he handed me that glorious gown from the 1920's. It's an epic dress. I'm not cutting it up into tiny nuggets of lace to put in a centerpiece. I'm wearing it when they bury me at the end of my life. I love it. However...in the meantime, details must be preserved. I'm talking about the hand stitched satin roses with pearl centers. I loved playing with this photo until it looked like a post card...or wedding wrapping paper. The delicate ivory lace that cascaded from the waist... original color and every timeless detail. Once all the details were scanned, it was time to print and press the images onto white fabric for the picture not to bleed. I tried it several different ways and so far, this was the only one that didn't end with my wedding dress images smeared purple after freezing in a block of ice. Regular photo paper would work I suppose, but I also wanted to put a light in the middle of the ice so that it would shine through or image. Picky, picky. Amen for fabric though. It was just the ticket. Did I just say "it was just the ticket"? Who says that anymore? I like this stuff. Be sure it's the print and press or that it says "washable" on the package. I read quite a few labels before I found what I wanted. All the instructions for this part of the project are in the package. Usually runs about 8$. It took me about half an hour to iron everything. That may be the most ironing I've done in the last fifteen years. Sorry Ace. One of my other many flaws is that I'm not so big on the ironing of the shirts. We do own an iron though. How odd. I used a half gallon flat sided plastic container. In the past, I've used clean empty paper milk cartons, plastic ice cream jugs (emptied of all the contents of course). I've also used flat loaf pans...2 liter pop bottles (cut off the spout part first)...any container that has straight sides that will allow a giant ice cube to fall out of it later are perfect. I find a clear glass jar that comes within 2 inches or less of the outside bowl. This not only allows the water to freeze faster, but also gives a great location for a battery powered votive candle or light inside the ice to illuminate the final project. Slide the photo as close to the edge of the outside as possible. The closer it is, the better the final image is to see through the ice. I lined 4 pictures along the outside of the jar and then filled in the remainder with crystals, and floral that were the same colors that we used at my reception a zillion years ago. Give or take a few years. Now you have this ice cave...like the one Luke Skywalker was dragged into and hung upside down in by the horrible snow beast. That was scary. This one is pretty. (I cock my head to the side and say "pretty" like a 5 year old girl. Yes...I am weird that way.) This loaf had an open center. I made a slit in the back side of the loaf to allow the base of the tiered bowl to slip into it. We can do this right? Replace the bread like a puzzle. Stuff a few flowers in there. Er...delicately arrange some fluffy nice accent there... These run about 3$ and last 7 hours. Perfect...the ice will melt long before the lights go out. With second tier on top... and a second light inside the ice cave on that one as well. Repeat after me (in heavy French accent) "It's time to commence wiz zaaa wooooing." (that's "the wooing" for you who don't speak goofball. In all seriousness however, we've worked really hard on our marriage to get this far. It's not ever going to be perfect...but it's perfect for me. I'm so grateful my sweet husband asked me to be his wife all those years ago. Thanks again Kathy! www.KathyPeterson.com/Wordpress/ related searches : Flip
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