Tuesday, December 18, 2018

Crafting together & and other christmassy things

Last week our little crafting club met again. We had decided to make some Christmas miniatures instead of working on our own projects.
I'd thought it would be fun to make a nutcracker together like the one I'd made a week earlier, and the other girls agreed :)
I had made us little kits with the materials needed, but it was still frustrated - but fun - to put all the parts together and paint the nutcrackers ;)
Together we must have made at least ten noses, which went flying the moment we wanted to dab some glue onto them 😂
But in the end we each had a finished nutcracker. Standing beside a Christmas tree ornament you can see how tiny they are. Approx. 2 cm :)



Since I already made a red one, I went for green this time :)
I think it's fair to say we each had problems with painting the faces, they do look a bit creepy, don't they? :')


But fortunately, you won't notice that when the nutcracker is surrounded by other miniatures (a)
I'd started making a Christmas market stall two years ago but hadn't set it up untill now. Though it's not finished yet, I like the display of - mostly - selfmade miniatures.


Hopefully next year I can add some to the surroundings :)


I've also made these centerpieces last week, and some Christmas cookies which I put on the Christmas plate I've bought in England in May :)
A tutorial for the centerpieces and cookies was shown in the latest Dutch dollshouse magazine P&M.





The Nutcracker is one of the most beloved Christmas stories of all time. It has been adapted into a ballet, as well as many television and movie adaptations.
The story is adapted from a story written in 1816 by E. T. A. Hoffmann called The Nutcracker and the Mouse King, which tells the magical tale of a young girl whose Christmas gift, a nutcracker, comes alive.
Hoffmann's story is of a young man, the nephew of an inventor called Herr Drosselmeyer, who fails to complete the task required to marry a princess. As a result, he is cursed by being turned into a nutcracker with a large head, wide grinning mouth, and beard. She rejects him for being ugly and he is banished. Drosselmeyer gives his goddaughter, Marie, a nutcracker for Christmas and tells her the tale. After various "dreams" in which it comes to life and they defeat the evil Mouse King, Marie tells it that she would never reject him as the princess did but would love him no matter how ugly he was. This breaks the spell and Drosselmeyer arrives with his nephew, magically restored to his handsome self. He marries Marie and takes her away to the magical kingdom.
In 1892, Pytor Ilytch Tchaikovsky set a variation of Hoffmann's story by French author Alexandre Dumas to music. Then, together with renowned choreographer Marius Petipa (working with Lev Ivanov) they created the ballet "The Nutcracker". Source


3 comments:

  1. Hoi Arlette, leuk om je blog te lezen en om je notenkrakers te zien.
    Ik ga je volgen!
    (Een volg widget kan handig zijn).
    Liefs,
    Véronique

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    Replies
    1. Hey Veronique, wat leuk om hier ook een reactie van je te zien :)
      Ik zie dat ik zoals gebruikelijk in de tweede helft van vorig jaar weer minder actief was, maar ik ben er weer klaar voor ;)
      Wat is precies een volg widget en is dat iets van Blogger of een algemeen iets :') #n00b (a)

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    2. Hoi Arlette, ja een volgwidget is iets van Blogger. Als je op mijn blog kijkt aan de rechterkant heb ik er 2.
      Iemand hoeft dan alleen maar op volgen te klikken en als jij dan iets post, dan weet die persoon dat.
      Groetjes,
      Véronique

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