This will be our first Christmas without Mama. I am making memorial ornaments for me and my sister. They are pink, Mama’s favorite color.






I will share the steps for doing this. You only need plain ornaments, decorative napkins, glue, foam paint brushes, glitter and scissors.

I use paper plates to contain the mess. This is a really messy project. That’s why I love it!

Used yogurt containers, Choboni flip and Qui, are great for glue and water. I labeled my glue containers M for matte and G for gloss. I have used both so you can see the difference.

Peel the back two layers off your napkins. Save these for cleaning up.

Also remove the top hanger of the ornaments. Do not lose these in the mess!
I stick shewers and my fingers in the top holes to hold the balls.

Cut out the central designs to be featured on your ornament. These go on first. Plan your spacing and arranging.

Sometimes parts get cut off and must be replaced, like little paper Frankensteins.

Then either hang or perch them on something to dry. This means leave them alone for a bit. Repeat again until totally covered.

If this were a Decoupage Party it would be time for Mimosas and snacks. Since I am alone, I am using the down time to write steps as I go. Pausing is hard for me.
Now use the napkin scraps to fill in the blank parts of the ornament. Overlap as little as possible. Glitter and glue will cover the booboos.

Lastly, you cover any bare sections with custom cut pieces of plain background from the waste left from the napkins.
Let’s talk glitter. It is possible to do a perfect job of decoupage and ruin it with the wrong glitter. Very detailed designs need white, extra fine glitter. Do not use irridescent unless you want to add color, or there is a simple design, or lots of repetition or you want to cover up some ugly. Some shaggy irridescent glitter totally blocks the design

Party Blend or bling should be used on plain ornaments as a featured texturizer.

I usually save all residual glitter and mix it on the last ornament. I hate the ball glitter. It rolls. Do not buy it…ever.
Let the completed ornaments dry over-night. I usually use clear spray to seal these, but don’t have any here.

Warning, if you sigh alot or sneeze, this may NOT be the craft project for you. I am a sigher and usually send tiny pieces of napkins and glitter all over.

FLOW

A delightful memorial tribute
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Derek I forgot to put MAMA in the post
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wonderful, Flow: both the end product and the process; I admire and am slightly envious of people who are clever at craft —
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I am sooo not clever. During one Decoupage Party, I looked to my left and right and BOTH people were doing it perfectly for the first time!
This also happened when I gave hypertufa trough making workshop.
The ‘student’ had made the perfect trough. I should have suspected something when she showed up with a silver butter knife to use as a tool!
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well, I admire your work, Flow 🙂
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Fellow sigher here too–had to giggle a little at that bit of instruction. I have done this process using 4″ tiles to make lovely coasters and wouldn’t have imagined trying it on a ball shaped ornament–but you did, and with lovely results. Very creative and sweet memorial ornaments–well done! Have a blessed and beautiful Christmas, Flow.
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BFLL I was so busy I forgot to put MAMA in the post. I have been trying too hard. Go look again at my Mama in pink. Miss her so much.
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Definitely pretty in pink.
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This is such a beautiful way to honor your Mama. Pink is such a sweet choice. Wishing you and your family peace, joy, and a Christmas filled with warm memories.
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Mama is missed. She did not embrace
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…her pinkness until dementia kicked in. Pink made her like a babydoll.
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