For March, I decided to do an easy project and something seasonal. Thus, St. Patrick's Day + freezer paper and paint = Homemade stenciled shirts!
For those people who don't know about freezer paper, it can be found in the grocery store where the saran wrap and tin foil is. I guess you're supposed to use it to wrap up things like meat before it hits the freezer but what's neat about it is that it's waxy on one side and papery on the other...
...perfect for arts and crafts (which makes me smile)!:
To start, I pulled out some freezer paper and used (with consent) a stencil that I found on thisblog . Whatever you do, make sure you either draw your own image or take from someone who is giving. Do not steal images - not okay.
Anyway, using a sharpie I traced my printed image (on the papery side, of course!)
This was my image:
Then you have to choose something to stencil. The craft store offers many options from shoes and hats to t-shirts to baby onesies. I choose the classic white tee.
After ironing the shirt, I took my stencil and ironed it on. This is the fabulous thing about freezer paper - paper on one side for drawing and wax on the other side to stick to fabric when heat is applied.
Move your shirt to a counter or table and grab a piece of cardboard to put inside the shirt. You don't want your fabric paint to leak through to the backside of your shirt.
Now for the fun part, grab your fabric paint and a sponge and start dabbing the paint onto your shirt and stencil. Covering the areas isn't easy and I couldn't get mine perfectly uniform but try your best.
In many cases, I would just squirt the paint right onto the shirt and dab it in.
When you're done, it should look something like this:
Then the big reveal! While the paint is still wet, start peeling the stencil off your shirt. It should come off very easily and leave no residue behind.
You should be left with a cute and funky shirt!
Move your shirt to a counter or table and grab a piece of cardboard to put inside the shirt. You don't want your fabric paint to leak through to the backside of your shirt.
Now for the fun part, grab your fabric paint and a sponge and start dabbing the paint onto your shirt and stencil. Covering the areas isn't easy and I couldn't get mine perfectly uniform but try your best.
In many cases, I would just squirt the paint right onto the shirt and dab it in.
When you're done, it should look something like this:
Then the big reveal! While the paint is still wet, start peeling the stencil off your shirt. It should come off very easily and leave no residue behind.
You should be left with a cute and funky shirt!
To make a second shirt (two boys=two shirts), I ironed on the shamrock stencil that I had cut out from making the first shirt.
I applied a thin strip of fabric paint onto the stencil and then I took my sponge and smeared the paint onto the shirt.
I applied a thin strip of fabric paint onto the stencil and then I took my sponge and smeared the paint onto the shirt.
When I was done, it looked like this:
For the new frugal us of 2012, this project was eye opening! Cute, simple, almost one-of-a-kind t-shirts for less than $2 a piece?! I'll take it!
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