Sunday 4 August 2013

Let's put a smile on that face!


These lollipop lips were just too cute not to make for Rory's party and I added in the moustaches for extra laughs. The problem was, how to display them. So I scavenged around in my kitchen and found a tube from a roll of non-stick baking sheets and the side of a cereal box and turned that into a rainbow lollipop holder.



I used my Silhouette Portrait to cut the moustaches and lips but you could cut it by hand. I have included the patterns so you can print them and if you would like the Silhouette or SCAL files I will gladly email them ( I designed the lips and 'stache so you are more than welcome to use them). The sign on top is also designed and cut in Silhouette Studio. And yes, I used the American spelling of moustache as it just worked better with the saying.



Side note: Anything I make and display on my blog is free gain. If you are able to make any of the items on my blog and are able to make money out of it I salute you. We need to share more in this world and if you can earn money from it then so can I. However I'd love to see any of your creations!



For this project I used:



Red, white and black cardboard

Glue

Water colour pencils

Paint brush

A cardboard tube (about 30 cm)

Strips of a cereal box (about 20 cm long and 1.5 thick x4)

Suckers (I used Fizzpops)

A drill

Scissors

Silhouette Portrait



 
First I cut the lips and moustaches and carefully pushed the sticks through the X in the middle. If you printed them then just use a craft knife to cut a small X (just bigger than the sucker stick) in the centre of the lips or moustache.























The signs are made using lettering cut-outs stuck onto cardboard (21cm x 15cm) but stickers would work just as well. For the moustache sign I coloured white board with the watercolour pencils and used one of the cut-outs as a decoration. For the lips I took the negative of the cut-out and used it as a stencil and coloured rainbow lips onto black cardboard and wrote “kissy” words around them.

 



Then I drew dots on the tube in a spiral about 4cm apart so that the cut-outs won't touch when the suckers are pushed into it. I then selected a small drill bit and drilled on the marks and through the other side. Make sure the drill is going straight or the suckers will go skew.



I coloured the tube in stripes using watercolour pencils and then blended them with a paintbrush dipped in water but any paint would work too.




On the top, cut two slits about 1cm deep at 12 and 6 o'clock. Do the same on the bottom but make four slits of about 1.5cm deep at 12, 3, 6 and 9 o'clock .


Glue two of the cereal box strips together and cut a slit in the middle of the strip about halfway through. Do the same to the remaining strips.






Fit the strips together to make an X. This will fit into the bottom of the tube to form a base.











Push the suckers into the holes and you are done!