We decided to start the year right and create a project where you choose what you want to create, as long as your project incorporates at least 50% recycled products. For example, a chipboard album or embellies made from a cereal box; a candy or trinket gift jar using a recycled food jar; or home décor using an old hardcover book covered in patterned paper, etc.
Below is what our design team members came up with. This is the debut of some of our newest design team members and they did not disappoint! We hope you have fun with this challenge. Please remember to use Mr. Linky to link us to your projects!
Denise created this awesome mailbox, so if you missed the cute mailboxes at Target, you can use these, which are even cuter! Denise made an svg file for the box and cut it with SCAL (check out the video on her blog). What did Denise recycle? The box itself is cut from a gift box, and the flag is a piece of plastic from gift packaging. Her family laughed at her on Christmas morning because she kept saying "don't throw that out!" Way to go green!
Below is what our design team members came up with. This is the debut of some of our newest design team members and they did not disappoint! We hope you have fun with this challenge. Please remember to use Mr. Linky to link us to your projects!
Denise created this awesome mailbox, so if you missed the cute mailboxes at Target, you can use these, which are even cuter! Denise made an svg file for the box and cut it with SCAL (check out the video on her blog). What did Denise recycle? The box itself is cut from a gift box, and the flag is a piece of plastic from gift packaging. Her family laughed at her on Christmas morning because she kept saying "don't throw that out!" Way to go green!
MsDee created this beautiful Valentine's Day card using the new Cricut Love Struck Mini Cartridge to die cut pieces from recycled aluminum cans, her Cuttlebug to emboss the recycled aluminum can pieces for the hearts (clever!), and Ranger alcohol inks to color them. Isn't this fabulous? I never would have thought the can was thin enough to die cut and emboss!





