Spremljevalci

petek, 6. december 2013

Pink girl's card

 Hello my friends!

This is my new pink card. It's a card that is for women. I made it from a pink deco paper. For the center I used the stamp of the shoe. I used embossing sheet with spots for the circle. I also cut the butterfly and flower. In the end, I decorated with deco flowers and stones.
I hope you'll like my new creation. Have fun. Bye

sreda, 4. december 2013

Snowman Christmas card

 Hello!

This is New Christmas card. To make this card I used blue and white paper which I embossed and stamped with stamps. For the center I used snowman embossing sheet. I also cut snowflake from white paper and circle. There is also stamp Vesel božič which means Merry Christmas in my language.

torek, 3. december 2013

Advent wreath

Hello my friends!

It's the most wonderful time of the year and I want to show you my new creation. This is my Advent wreath. This year it's very natural. I used birch and spruce branches, cones. I used also gold candles and other decorations. I hope you'll like it. Have fun making your own Advent wreath.






Some history about Advent wreath:


In ancient Rome, people used decorative wreaths as a sign of victory. Some believe that this is
where the hanging of wreaths on doors came from. The origins of the Advent wreath are found in the folk practices of the pre-Christian Germanic peoples who, during the cold December darkness of Eastern Europe, gathered wreaths of evergreen and lighted fires as signs of hope in a coming spring and renewed light. Christians kept these popular traditions alive, and by the 16th century Catholics and Protestants throughout Germany used these symbols to celebrate their Advent hope in Christ, the everlasting Light. From Germany the use of the Advent wreath spread to other parts of the Christian world. Traditionally, the wreath is made of four candles in a circle of evergreens with a fifth candle in the middle. Three candles are violet and the fourth is rose, but four white candles or four violet candles can also be used. Each day at home, the candles are lighted, perhaps before the evening meal-- one candle the first week, and then another each succeeding week until December 25th. A short prayer may accompany the lighting of each candle. The last candle is the middle candle. The lighting of this candle takes place on Christmas Eve. It represents Jesus Christ being born.