Birthday Blog Hop



- cardstock: black from Hobby Lobby
- patterned paper: We R Memory Keepers
- cake diecut and phrase: Smiley Cards cartridge
- DMC floss (2 strands)
- glossy accents on flames and cake frosting
- ribbon: We R Memory Keepers
- brads: stash
Sizes:
- Card base is standard A2 size – 5 1/2″ x 4 1/4″ (5 1/2″ x 8 1/2″ folded in half)
- Cake: 3 1/2″
- 3 strips for front: 1 1/4″ x 5 1/4″ each
- green paper: 3″ x 3 3/4″ with the top corners rounded
- (Inside) rectangle: 5″ x 3 3/4″ with corners rounded
- (inside) strip: 1 1/2″ x 5 1/2″
- (inside) circle: 3 1/4″
- (inside) “Ha-p B-day” 2.87″ wide x 1.72″ tall (on gypsy)
Thanks so much for hopping through! Your next stop is Cherie at www.CherieScraps.blogspot.com
Happy Birthday Cricut Mug
Yesterday was my Daddy’s birthday. I bought him a gift card to his favorite place to eat. He’s a beer drinker, so I thought a beer mug would be perfect.
The mug and the “cheers” is from the Smiley cards cartridge. I welded the mug shape into a card and then attached patterned paper inside to make a pocket for the gift card. I made the ‘beer’ inside by cutting the mug smaller than the original. I then cut the handle off and made it wavy at the top with scissors. I embossed the foam with the swirls in my Cuttlebug. The word I printed from my computer on white cardstock.
I would love to make one again but with acetate so it is clear like a real mug. I didn’t have any, so cardstock had to do.
Thanks for visiting! I will be participating in a blog hop starting this Saturday.
“Be Mine”: Slumber Party Lite Cart
Better late than never, right?!….
I’ve been under the weather a bit. Swinging from sunny to blizzard back to sunny has sent my sinuses haywire. Feeling a bit better now but for a couple days I didn’t wanna get out of bed. I even took a pillow and slept in the car during Cali’s basketball practice last night!
I made this little card from the Slumber Party Lite cartridge.
Supplies:
- My Minds Eye paper (not sure which line) 8″x4″ folded in half
- Bazzill Bling (pink heart and behind the numbers)
- Cut from Slumber Party Lite at 3 1/2″
- “Be Mine’ rubon from a Basic Grey card kit
- Ribbon and bling from stash
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Don’t forget… You have until the end of February to let me know if you are interested in sharing your work in my ‘secret” (for now) project. brandigore (AT) hotmail (DOT) com.
Cricut Design Studio: Welding Basics
One of the most basic things you will want to do with the Cricut Design Studio is to weld letters together to form a single word. There are two ways to weld letters together. The first is to work with the word as one image that can be manipulated all together. The second way is to bring in each letter as an individual image that can be manipulated by itself.
As you type the letters in your word, you will notice that they show up on the cutting mat one right after another. When you select the group of letters by clicking on one of the lines, any changes such as size will be applied to all the letters at the same time. Another method is to type one letter and then hit enter before typing another. This makes each letter separate so that you can manipulate each letter individually.
To weld a word when the letters are all one group, follow these steps:
- Click the word with the mouse so it is selected.
- Kerning is the space between letters. Set this at -.005 or leave at zero. Hit apply.
- The letters will move together, some may be touching while others may not. Select each individual letter in the word . It will become a dashed line when that particular letter is selected. Move it using the nudge arrows until each letter is slightly overlapping.
- Select the whole word again and check the welding box under shape properties.
- When you preview, the word will have dark lines showing where the cutting will be, while a lighter line will represent where it has been welded together.



There are times that you will need to work with each letter or image individually. This is particularly useful when you may want one letter one size and another letter a different size. To weld letters that are individual, follow these steps:
- Select the first letter you will want to use. Make sure you hit enter to deselect the letter before adding a new one.
- Select the second letter you will be using. Notice that when you select each letter, it is it’s own individual letter. It can be manipulated in any way and not effect the other letters.
- Continue adding letters making sure to hit enter after each one.
- In this welding method the kerning feature is not used. Simply select a letter, manipulate it to the size and look desired and check the weld box.
- Select the next letter and manipulate it as desired. Move it to where it overlaps the first letter. The amount of overlapping is your discretion according to your design. Check the welding box.
- Continue until all letters have been manipulated and the welding box is checked for each.
- Preview the word. The letters that have had the welding box checked will appear as a dark line that will be cut with the lighter lines showing where they are welded.
- If any letter is a solid filled letter instead, the welding box was not selected for that particular letter. Simply go back and select the letter again and check the welding box.



Welding is one of the most basic and most used functions in Cricut Design Studio. Follow the steps above and you will be on your way to using the Cricut in a whole new way. If you are more of a visual learner, many step by step guides to welding including screenshots are available online.
A Couple Tips for Newbies
I received an email from one of my subscribers, and I thought it may help some others too.
Brandi,
I just purchased a Cricut Expression. I am still trying to undertstand the sizing of characters.I saw some video on youtube where a lady was explaining it, but I cannot find it again. Any ideas would be appreciated.
-Linda
My response:
Hi Linda,
I’m working on a comprehensive manual right now. Hopefully I’ll be able to have all the Cricut info someone would need within one place. Until then, I’ll do my best to help:)
One thing to know is that all images are in proportion to a “key height character”. Every cartridge has a key height character, and the size of every other character in that cartridge is based on the size of this key character. Which basically means in an alphabet they’ll take a tall letter and it will actually be 3 in if you select 3″ for the size. But, a smaller letter, like an s would actually be smaller than 3″ because it would look silly to have all the letters the same height. Where this is frustrating is if you go to your Cricut, punch in 3″ because you want an s that is 3″. When it cuts you get frustrated because it isn’t 3″ at all!
The same is true with images. A paper doll is the best example in my opinion. You may want the doll 4″, but if you want the shirt that goes on the doll and you cut it at 4″, it will cut a smaller size-the size to fit on the 4″ doll. All that to say…if you want something a specific size, use the REAL DIAL SIZE button.
Another tip is that when you are standing with your Cricut in front of you, the blade loads to the top right corner of the mat. It is then going to cut “down” to the bottom. The images will be sideways if you look at it head on. Also, to know which direction an image will cut, simply turn your handbook to the right, where the spiral is up and down on the right side. This is the direction the images cut.
YouTube and the Cricut Message board are all great resources too!
Hopefully that helped some of you . Feel free to message me anytime. I’ll always do my best to help!
Autumn Layout Kit with Instructions
We are gearing up for the pumpkin patch, my favorite thing of the entire year! It made me remember this layout I designed a while back. One of my “one day” things is to make kits again. I love making kits and have really missed it since I quit teaching classes a few years ago.
If you would like the instructions for this layout click HERE to download the pdf…All of my kits are extremely detailed with supplies, sizes, assembly instructions, cutting charts and even images of the keypad overlays so you know what button to push!
I almost returned my Imagine…
I seriously contemplated returning my Imagine because of some posts I had read about “flood fill”. When using the Imagine with older cartridges, if you change the color, it floods out all of the details on the screen. I never thought to go ahead and cut it to see what it actually cuts like.
To save others the frustration of thinking all the detailed cuts are lost, I took a couple pictures to show what it looks like on the screen and how it actually cuts. I hope this helps someone just discovering their new Imagine!


MPS Challenge Card and Checklist Winner
My Pink Stamper has started having Wednesdays be “Imagine That Wednesday“. Yesterday she had a challenge to use an Imagine cart and bling up your project. So… I used the Imagine Best Friends cart and added some Stickles.

Also, the winner of the Cricut Checklist App is Lisa Malcom. I combined comments from the blog and the post on Facebook since most people seem to read the blog posts from Facebook. Congrats Lisa!
Have Your Cake and Eat It Too…
Happy Monday! I hope you had a wonderful weekend and are refreshed for the week ahead.
This weekend I made a masculine birthday card using the Sweet Treats cartridge and some old KI paper. You know you’ve been scrapping a long time if you recognize that paper!

































