Quilling.
For centuries, people have been quilling — colored papers on edge and formed into shapes.
I began quilling around 2013 when some neighbors formed a Pinterest Craft Club.
I thought it was a logical craft to carry to the neighborhood “ranch house.”
I’ve been cutting, rolling, and shaping paper strips ever since. — Stacy
365-Day Challenge
When I ran across a book by Noah Scalin called 365: A Daily Creativity Journal: Make Something Every Day and Change Your Life! I decided to try something similar.
I decided to quill something each day. I’m a writer and am pantsing this project at the moment. In other words, I began without a plan.
At first, I wanted to see what I can make in 30 minutes. I quickly realized, if I stuck to that rule — I would have 365 UFOs: Unfinished Objects.
To avoid the UFOs, I loosened up my rules.
For January (and who knows maybe all of 2019), I’m working with a few (loose) guidelines:
- 4×6-inch base: pre-cut, random cardboard, card stock paper
- Fill heart shape
- Use variety of papers: text and card stock weight, junk mail, catalogs
- Cut my own papers and use quilling papers I’ve purchased over the years.
- Use shapes from previous UFOs (aka random shapes I made for a project, but never used in a project).
- Share the work, no matter how I feel about the final product.
- If I want to repeat a pattern, that’s cool.
- It’s my project and my rules.
I’ll most likely be a “plotter” for this project as time passes, especially when I travel. I’ll need to make sure I have supplies when I venture from home whether by car, plane, or on a camping trip.
Quilling is a very portable craft and requires a tiny footprint for work. So, here’s to a project filled with heart.