Wednesday, January 11, 2017

Vinyl crafts

I know I've been slacking on the crafting posts and honestly I knew that would happen. It's the whole reason I made this blog, to talk about my lack of crafting. The title of the blog may throw you off a little but it speaks the truth. I'm an ordinary mama who loves to craft. That being said I don't always have the opportunity to let out my creative juices. Being a mama and wife take priority. I will however do my best to give any crafty tips and will post any projects I do get a chance to create. So on to this post.

Vinyl, oh beautiful vinyl. I have found a new expense in my crafty journey and it is vinyl. I made my first vinyl project over a year ago and I got hooked. However I didn't get a chance to do much more with it. This past year though I have made 3 projects so far.

Heat Transfer


Heat transfer vinyl is very easy to use. Placement on the material is also fairly easy. One thing to remember when cutting your heat transfer vinyl is to have the image or wording be a mirror image. I made that mistake when cutting out the big cousin shirt. Luckily I had enough vinyl to complete the project.

So I use my Cricut and Cricut Design Space to make my images. CDS does have a feature that allows you to choose the mirror image option so you don't mess up. I forgot about that feature in my hurry. If you purchase quality heat vinyl (I got mine from bogovinyl.com) the cut will be easy and so will placement. There are tons of videos on YouTube to tell you how to cut and place heat vinyl so I will just give you a quick rundown.
  1. Create image in your cutting program.
  2. Size the image 
  3. Place heat transfer vinyl shinny/plastic side down on mat
  4. Load mat to machine
  5. Set blade to vinyl or a low depth. You want to cut through the vinyl but not the plastic
  6. Press cut
  7. Remove mat from machine
  8. Remove excess vinyl and weed out any small pieces
  9. Place vinyl on material, plastic side down
  10. Iron following vinyl recommended heat setting for iron. This may vary. I also don't iron directly on the vinyl but add a small piece of cloth (pillow case) on top of the image I'm going to iron on. 
  11. Slowly peel up plastic. This may take a few times as you need to make sure the vinyl gets ironed on properly.
And that's it. Make sure to follow washing instruction for your vinyl. My vinyl was recommended to wash the item inside out

Cling Vinyl

Sorry for the low light photo but this was the largest cling vinyl I did. It was really easy and honestly I loved making it! Now this vinyl is Oracal 631 and it is a matte and removable/indoor vinyl. There is Oracal 651 that is a glossy and permanent/outdoor vinyl but I have yet to use it. I went with removable because I knew in the future this vinyl would be removed/replaced. Again I purchase my vinyl from bogovinyl.com and I can honestly say the quality is amazing.

One of the things to remember with cling vinyl is to always use transfer paper to transfer your image. BUT make sure it is good quality transfer paper. I had purchased some transfer paper from Michael's Recollection brand and it almost ruined my cut. I was pissed. Luckily I had some quality transfer paper from Bogo Vinyl so my cut was saved.

The steps are fairly easy to make cling vinyl. They are very similar to the heat transfer except you are not doing a mirror image. Here are the steps:

  1. Again, you want to place the vinyl shiny/plastic side down. 
  2. Set your machine to vinyl or a low depth then cut. 
  3. Weed out the excess and place your transfer paper over the image. 
  4. With a bone folder or scrapper tool or anything that you can rub, rub over the transfer tape to add the image to it. This can take a few tries
  5. Align image to surface
  6. Rub with bone folder or other tool you used
  7. Slowly peel away
And that's it! Layering is very easy as you just put one vinyl color on top of the other. I hope you guys enjoyed this post. I have more crafty things coming just need to find the time.