What do these two items have in common?
Part of an old book...
...and a colorful calendar?
I'm betting you'll never guess!
They can both be made into..................hats!
This particular creative adventure started with an announcement that the Ontario County Arts Council was having a fundraiser, and they were inviting people to make 'fantastical, imaginative' hats. Those hats would be sold at an event to raise money. I have almost never been motivated by such an announcement, but for some reason I was this time.
So I grabbed a few old paperbacks that had been stagnating in my little free library, deciding that I'd make some altered books into a hat somehow. I've not done this before, so spent some time online learning. My hat theme, which seemed fitting for this event, would be The Mad Hatter's Tea Party. I began by folding a book into a lovely, rather fancy teapot. Before I was half done, I realized this wouldn't work. The teapot alone would weigh a bit over a pound, and with everything else that would be needed to make it into a hat, that would be too heavy.
Started again with another, smaller book, and a smaller design for a simpler teapot. This was working, and here's my finished teapot.
Then I made a cup to accompany it. Twice, as I didn't like the first one. But....how would I put these things together to create a hat? After I'd done a lot of thinking about options, I spent some time wandering the aisles of a local dollar store. Without further ado, here's the finished hat.
Um....okay. It looks decent sitting on a table, but how could that be worn?
I must say, it's a bit tippy, and someone who moves more smoothly and gracefully than I will have to model it for the show at the fundraiser.
Now, I was satisfied with that hat, but somehow wasn't done yet. I had another, completely different idea for a second hat. I wasn't at all sure it would work but wanted to try. Someone in my BuyNothing group was getting rid of some calendars with large color photographs, so I took them off her hands. Spent some time trying out cutting, folding and gluing them into spikes before I got the look I had in mind. The second hat, titled I'm Fascinated, makes me really happy. The spiky part is tied and glued onto a narrow headband, so it's easy to wear.
This is my (ahem) artistic take on the fascinators that I first saw on the Royal Family at a wedding. I've since seem lots more of them. I'm sure none are made from an old calendar. :-)
The fundraiser will be held next weekend. I'm excited to see what creative things others have come up with, and hope the Arts Council raises a good chunk of change with this event.






6 comments:
These are amazing! I’ve wanted to try the book folding, but didn’t have any motivation for what I would do, let alone how to do it. Your creativity really shines with these!
These are fantastic.
Thanks, Andrea. Between YouTube and library books it's easy to learn. Some things are just for fun, others, made using very different techniques, are show pieces for your mantle. Until they get too dusty. :-)
Thank you
You, Peg, are amazing!!
Not so much. A little odd, a bunch OCD, and a woman with time on my hands.
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