Fig. 126.
Fig. 127.
Corn-husk Basket.
Like the sweet-grass mats the
are for perfuming clothing and household linen. They are pretty little trifles, and make most acceptable birthday and Christmas gifts.
The Lavender Stick.
Gather your lavender stalks (each one having a blossomed top) while they are fresh and green, and use them as soon as possible after cutting, as they grow brittle when dry. It will take about twenty-five stalks for a large lavender stick, less for a small one, but in both cases there must be an uneven number. You will need, also, some narrow lavender ribbon. It is best to buy the ribbon by the piece, or roll, as it is not easy to calculate the exact amount required for the sticks. Bunch your lavender stalks together, with the heads at the top, and tie securely just below the blossoms (Fig. 128) with linen thread. Bend the stems over carefully, bringing them down over the blossoms (Fig. 129). A little raw cotton may be used to fill out the bulb or, if you have them, extra lavender blossoms. Pin one end of your ribbon at the top of the bulb, where the stalks are tied together, pushing the pin through the ribbon down into the bulb, then begin to weave it under and over the stalks as in Fig. 129. Weave about two inches, widening all the time, then draw the ribbon a little tighter, bring the stalks closer together, and narrow the bulb gradually. When the stalks are bunched again, stop weaving and begin to wrap, lapping the edges of the ribbon as in the illustration. Have the wrapping tight and firm and, when about an inch or two from the ends of the stalks, fasten with needle and thread, then tie the ribbon in a bow of many loops. Finish the top with a bow also, making it quite full.
Fig. 128.
Fig. 129.
Away down in Florida, where the palms and palmettos are as common as are the most ordinary trees and shrubs in the North, most of the children wear hats made of the strong and durable leaves of these beautiful trees; and all the children know how to braid the palm in a number of ways. Indeed, it was a little girl not more than eight years old who taught me just what I am going to try to teach you. She was “keeping house” with a number of other children on one of the fine, shady streets of Daytona, Fla., and, stopping to watch them at their play, we were made welcome in their “house,” and one little hostess gave me the lesson I asked for then and there.
You all know how a palm-leaf grows, tall and straight,
and closed tightly like a fan until it is time for it to open,
Fig. 130.
when it slowly separates and spreads its fingers
wide. It was the unopened leaf of the cabbage-palm
which was chosen for the braid, and very
pretty the tender leaf is; white, soft, and pliable,
and edged with light green. It is beautifully
adapted to braiding, and the fingers of my
little teacher flew deftly, as the braid lengthened
in her hands, and my mind sped along
almost as swiftly, as I tried to adapt the process
to materials to be found in the North, so
that Northern, as well as Southern, girls might share with
me this little piece of handicraft.
I am sure wide, flat grasses can be braided in this way, and corn-husks and—well, a number of other things which you will find if you keep your eyes open; but I must return to the palm and tell you just how I was taught to braid that.
Fig. 131.
Fig. 132.
Fig. 133.
First I tore the leaf into strips about one-quarter of an inch wide, then taking two strips, I folded one end of each as in Fig. 130, and lapped the folded ends as in Fig. 131. Bending the right-hand strip (A), I pushed it through the loop formed by the other (B) as in Fig. 132, and pulled B down tightly (Fig. 133). Bending B, I pushed that through the loop A had formed, and drawing A tightly, left a loop of B at the top (Fig. 134). Each time a loop was formed I pushed another loop through it and drew the first down snugly, and so braided a strip like Fig. 135.
Fig. 134.
Fig. 135.
Fig. 136.
My little teacher forgot to show me how to piece the strips, and I was obliged to work out the problem for myself and for you. When one of the strips had dwindled down and grown too narrow, I cut it off, leaving a little over an inch below the loop. I then inserted another strip over B, pushing it under A, as in Fig. 136, bringing it over the B loop and again under A on the other side, pulling it down until the two short ends were even. After that I continued to braid as before, the first two B loops being double, of course.
It is not well to have the piecing of both strips come together, therefore one should be longer than the other at the start, and the strips should be always of the same width in order to make the braid uniform and even.
This is regular hat braid you have learned to make, and perhaps having done so much you will feel inspired to continue the work and make a hat, if not a large one, at least one for your own or your younger sister’s doll. Or you can make it into a basket by sewing the braid together, lapping one edge over the other.
The braid should be back-stitched for both hats and baskets.
Most materials require damping before they are braided, for even when soft and pliable they are apt to separate when dry, unless they have first been soaked for a while in water.
Fig. 144.—A Girl’s Collection of Pictures.
CHAPTER V
COLLECTIONS
Every girl can have her own gallery of famous artists’ pictures, and the searching for and finding of treasures to form a home art collection are a constant source of interest. When once the supply is started it grows rapidly, for the fascination increases as the work progresses, and the nucleus of a fine assortment is soon gathered. Daily papers furnish valuable material in this line through their reproductions of paintings, and the market is flooded with beautifully illustrated magazines giving the art of our own land and that of foreign countries; then there are unmounted photographs of masterpieces which may be purchased for a very small sum; many can be bought at a penny each.
If new magazines are not to be had, old ones can be found at bookstalls for low prices, which contain reproductions of paintings and excellent accounts of them. Carefully take the magazines apart, removing the wire fastenings by straightening and drawing them out before attempting to separate the leaves; then cut out the chosen pictures, allowing as wide a white margin as possible. Only those prints which represent the work of eminent artists should be selected.
Decide upon some definite line of art, for the field is a large and varied one. Better results can be obtained if you devote your efforts to the paintings of only one nation, such as American, English, French, or Flemish art. Again, the collection might embrace the works of but one artist or school of painting, or be restricted to famous caricaturists or mural decorators. Having made your choice and collected two or three designs, buy low-priced medium-weight card-board for
Fig. 137.
Select a kind not brittle or liable to tear; get either a soft
gray tone or white, the former often harmonizing best with
black and white pictures. Your material being ready, turn
the pictures on the wrong side and mark the
centres. The easiest way of doing this is by
laying a ruler diagonally across the back of
picture, Fig. 137, and drawing a line on the
Fig. 138.
paper along the edge of the ruler. Be sure to
have the ruler precisely at the corners; if
placed either to one side or the other, the centre
will not be found. Fig. 138 shows the first line
drawn; cross this line by another running from
the remaining two corners which will give Fig.
139; the point where the lines intersect is the
exact centre of the picture. Cut the
mounting board in portions large enough to
allow a surrounding margin of four or five inches
Fig. 139.
on each picture; then mark the centres on the
right, not wrong, side of the mounting board.
It will be unnecessary to extend the line from
corner to corner of the mounting board; lay the ruler across
and mark it merely at the centre, Fig. 140. Take the print
Fig. 140.
you intend to mount first and carefully place it upon the
blank piece of paper so that the centre of the picture will
be exactly over the centre of the blank
paper; lightly mark a line in lead-pencil
around two corners of the picture, remove
the print and the blank paper resembles
Fig. 141. The last markings
are a guide in pasting the picture on
the sheet of paper. First dampen the
wrong side of the print with a wet
sponge. Have ready some strong paste
and spread it lightly on the wrong side.
Be careful not to get too much paste
lest it smear the mounting-paper. Lay
Fig. 141.
the mounting-sheet upon a perfectly
clean, level surface and place the print
on it according to the guiding marks.
Have the picture absolutely smooth,
without a suspicion of a wrinkle or
blister, and with a clean cloth again
smooth it gently, pressing it down here
Fig. 142.
and there as seems necessary to make it
adhere firmly (Fig. 142). Then place
a weight upon the mounted picture
and leave it to dry. After having
been successful with one picture no
difficulty will be found in mounting
the others.
It often happens that it is impossible to separate a picture from the article treating of it, for the reason that one side of the page gives the print and the other side the description. This difficulty is remedied by
which will give two layers of uniform thickness, and if there are pictures on each side of the paper they may both be preserved. Cut two pieces of perfectly smooth muslin a little larger all around than the sheet of paper to be split. Dampen one of the pieces of muslin and lay it out smooth on an even, flat surface; cover one side of the paper to be split with a thin layer of very strong paste or glue and carefully place the paper, paste-side down, on the muslin; lay it out flat and be sure it does not wrinkle; then cover the other side of the paper with paste and place the second dampened piece of muslin over it. Be certain that the muslin adheres over the entire surface of both sides of the paper. Should it fail in places, the spots of paper not clinging to the muslin will tear out during the splitting. See that the paste extends to the outermost edges of the paper, and do not forget that muslin, paper, and paste must all be smooth. Use a rolling-pin to secure uniform adhesion. When the pasting is done, let it dry, and after it has dried perfectly, separate the two pieces of muslin at one corner, and the paper will begin to split if the work has been properly done. Continue opening the edges until all four sides are partially separated, and the fission of the paper just beginning; then a firm pull will entirely separate the two pieces of muslin and, at the same time, split the paper. If you experiment on a small piece of paper before attempting the picture you will better understand the process. To remove the muslin from the paper, soak it in hot water; place the water in a basin large enough to admit of the muslin lying out flat. Let the paper side be underneath, so that the muslin may be easily removed when it detaches itself from the paper. Should any bits of paste remain on the paper, soak them off; move the paper gently in the water back and forward, until the paste is washed away; then lift the paper from the water by placing a thin stick of wood under one edge and carefully drawing the wet picture out; it will hang like a curtain from the stick. Let the water drip off; then lay the paper down flat and smooth on a piece of blotting-paper, picture-side up. When nearly dry, place the picture between two sheets of pasteboard, and leave it under a weight until quite dry. Mount split pictures on white card-board; gray will show through the thin paper. On the back of each mounting-board fasten two small brass rings by which
Fig. 143.
Slide a ring on a short piece of tape and glue the ends of the tape at one side on the back and near the top of the picture to form a hook (Fig. 143, H). Do the same with a second ring and tape. When both tapes are securely fastened on the mounting-board, paste over each a strip of tough paper or muslin (Fig. 143, P). If a wire be fastened on the rings, the pictures may hang from the picture-moulding around the room, or the collection can depend upon nails for support. If desirable, the rings may fit over tacks driven in the wall.
Fig. 144 at the beginning of the chapter gives a girl’s collection of reproductions from famous paintings. The pictures can be kept in
made expressly for the purpose, should there be no wall-space on which to hang them. Make the portfolio of two strong, stiff pieces of pasteboard, cut large enough to extend one inch beyond each of the four sides of the mounted designs so as to preclude all possibility of damage to the edges of the work. Sew a length of brown tape at each corner of the two sides of the portfolio, making in all eight pieces of tape, four on each pasteboard; then lay each cover down on a piece of denim and mark four spots on the cloth, corresponding to the places where the tapes are fastened on the pasteboard.
Remove the denim and punch holes through the cloth at the four places designated on each piece; button-hole stitch the openings, and run the tapes through, drawing the cloth down tight and flat upon the pasteboard; smooth the brown covering out evenly and turn the four sides neatly over the edges where they can be securely fastened by long stitches of strong thread taken from edge to edge of the cloth. Cover the wrong side of each piece with heavy, rough, brown paper; paste it on carefully and put them under weights to dry; the paper forms the inside and the cloth the outside of the portfolio. In such covers any number of mounted pictures can be kept secure from harm.
It is only necessary to pile them up evenly on one cover, lay the other cover on top, and tie the two together over the pictures by means of the tapes at the four corners. The portfolio is not intended to stand on edge; it must be laid flat.
Another and different collection is very precious, though the best part is not visible. It is a collection that is sure to be always a comfort, and one with which the more familiar you grow the better you will feel. Such a collection is called the
Fig. 145.
The book may be one of the usual styles of diaries sold
in the stores, or an ordinary blank-book; better still, a
home-made book. The latter requires forty-six sheets of
writing-paper (Fig. 145), and for a
cover stiff brown paper or card-board—the
kind used for making
passe-partouts and which comes in
all colors—will be excellent. Cut
the cover a trifle longer and broader
than the writing-paper, so that it
may extend beyond the leaves of the
book on the sides, protecting the
edges (Fig. 146). Fasten all together
by means of a strong brown or yellow
cord laced through holes made
in the cover and book (Fig. 147).
Fig. 146.
Should you be unable to cut the holes as neatly as you desire,
send the book to
a shoe store or a harness-maker’s
to have
the holes made.
Decorate the cover
in gilt. Make a circle
for the sun and use a
ruler in marking the
rays. Draw the top
and bottom rays first.
Begin at the top of
the centre ray and run
the lead-pencil down along the edge of the ruler as far
as you wish the ray to extend; then raise the pencil, but
Fig. 147.
not the ruler. Hold that down
firmly with the left hand, while
you again place the pencil
down below the circle and
draw the lower ray. Make
the two horizontal rays in the
same way (Fig. 148). After
this it will be easy to draw
the remaining rays by laying
the ruler diagonally between
the top and bottom and the
side rays. Beneath the sun
mark the title in plain lettering
(Fig. 149). If you cannot
make the letters even and
straight, do the best you can,
and they will look very well—better, in a way, than if another
had made them for you, because that will be your own
Fig. 148.
work. When the design is
finished in pencil go over it
with liquid gilt, painting the
sun a solid gold disk, the rays
mere lines of gold, and the lettering
slightly heavier. On the
first page of the diary write in
ink your age and full name and
under this the year and day of
the month. Then turn over the
leaf and on the right-hand page
rule a line exactly across the
centre with red ink. At the
top of the page write in red
ink the day of the week and
month and under the red line write the next day of the
week and month (Fig. 150). Put down all dates and divisions
in red ink. The book is
now ready for the record of
January 1.
Fig. 149.
Before making any entry
try to think of the kindest and
pleasantest things said to you
and done for you during New
Year’s Day, and with black ink
write these, and these alone,
for each day must reflect only
beautiful thoughts and acts—nothing
else is allowed in the
“Sunshine Diary.” On the
second day of the month make
a similar record on the lower
half of the page; the third day
turn over the leaf and carefully rule the next two pages as
you did the first, which will make four equal divisions for
Fig. 150.
four more days. Date each
half of the page correctly
and proceed with the journal.
Continue in the same
way until the end of the
year and you will have a
treasure well worth keeping
all the days of your life.
The very act of carrying
out the “sunshine” idea
will tend to strengthen all kindly feelings and cause you
to be on the watch for happy items to jot down in your
book.
Fig. 151.
Another work is the “Guest Book”—one in which each friend who calls to see you can write his name, with the date and a few remarks. One boy might draw a simple little pencil sketch under his name; another could write a joke in reference to some mutual experience. From one of the girls might come an apt quotation; from another an original rhyme—in fact, anything that would be interesting. Let the grown people also have the privilege of leaving their autographs with a few remarks in the “Guest Book,” for they, too, are your friends. The book itself should be at least seven inches long and five broad; larger would be better. The common blank-book of good paper will answer the purpose; it can be covered with stiff linen, which is sold for dress lining and may be found in the shops. Cut the cover to extend beyond the book two or three inches (Fig. 151). The dotted line indicates the book. Adjust the cover evenly and crease it slightly along the edges of the book in order to know exactly how it will fit. Still holding the book in the left hand, carefully cut two flaps, in the extension at the top and bottom of the back. Remove and unfold (Fig. 152, A and B); turn down the flaps as in Fig. 152, and again place the linen on the book. Fold over the linen at the top and bottom of one side of the book binding (Fig. 155); do the same with the other side, then turn in the outer edge (Fig. 154). Again remove the cover and, after creasing the folds, cut the four corners out, as in Fig. 155, C, D, E, F. Keep the flaps (Fig. 152, A and B) folded in, and place the cover on the book (Fig. 156). Paste the corners G and H firmly to the underlying piece of linen, do the same with the other side and the cover will be finished.
Fig. 153.
Fig. 154.
Fig. 155.
Fig. 156.
Letter the outside in deep, rich red, using paint and brush. If you cannot print the letters, write the title “Guest Book” in a bold hand with the brush.
Fig. 157.
Calendars are always welcome
and appropriate on New Year.
Make yours of twelve pieces of
heavy unruled, tinted writing-paper.
Decide upon twelve persons whom
you would like to think of often and
cut twelve slips of white writing-paper
of exactly the same size.
Send one to each chosen individual
and ask that the friend’s name and
some sentiment be written on the
Fig. 158.
Fig. 159.
paper and that it be returned to you. Having received all
the slips, paste one near the top of each sheet of writing-paper
(Fig. 157); below
paste one leaf of a printed
calendar representing one
month (Fig. 158). Use a
Christmas card for an outside
cover and through the
two top corners of the calendar
make round holes
large enough to allow a
silken cord, matching in
color the tint of the paper,
to pass through. Then
fasten all the pieces of the calendar together in order,
January being the first and December the last (Fig. 159).
As each month passes by slide that leaf back on the cords,
bringing after January, for instance, February to view.
Hold the two loops of cord together at the top and hang
the calendar where it may be readily seen.
You can also
Do not be surprised! No knowledge of drawing and painting is necessary in order to illustrate in the new, easy fashion. Decide upon some short story you wish to embellish; then look among your scraps for appropriate pictures. Should you not find exactly what you want, make the pictures over to suit.
If the story introduces a jolly little maiden full of fun, and describes her as feeding her pet dog and laughing at his antics, and there is no such maiden in your collections, look for one with the style of face you think the girl in the story ought to have. When this is found and the body is not satisfactory, cut off the head and hunt up an appropriate body to fit it; that obtained, paste the pretty head on the new body and cut out the entire figure. Find a dog, in the correct position, in some old magazine or newspaper, cut out the animal, and before pasting the group in place try the effect of both on a blank piece of white paper. Slide the figures together and apart until you have them where they look best; then paste the girl and dog neatly in position on the white paper, and the full-page illustration is ready for insertion in the book.
Fig. 160.
Always leave a wide white margin on all illustrations; never crowd the picture up to the very edge of the page if you desire it to look well, and be sure to dampen the wrong side of each picture before attempting to paste it in your book, that it may be smooth and not wrinkle. The new leaf for the picture should be cut wide enough to allow a quarter-inch projection or more over on the opposite page, as in Fig. 160, OO, where it can be pasted down on the inner margin of the other leaf. The dotted line indicates the centre of the book.
Bound books will not admit of many extra leaves being inserted, so you can select only a few of the incidents in the narrative for illustration. Use care that the picture shall express your idea of the event or place you desire to represent. Sometimes it may happen, by lack of suitable material, that you cannot finish certain pictures for days or weeks after they are begun. In such a case bide your time until the wished-for designs appear, and in the meantime go on with the other illustrations.
If the book is paper-covered, you can take it all apart, insert as many pictures as you desire and fasten it together again. When obtainable use
as illustrations. You may chance to find appropriate colored reproductions from water-color sketches, that will serve the purpose without alteration. Such would give a fine appearance to your book. Unmounted photographs can also be employed, but, if possible, avoid different styles of pictures in the same work. Keep the colored designs for one book, the prints for another, and the photographs for a third. Bear in mind that, whatever the nature of the illustrations, you are to use only such as appeal to you and express your ideas; the scheme will lose individuality—that is, it will not represent your choice—if you select what others may deem best in preference to that which you would have chosen if left unmolested. It is the individuality which gives value to the work.
Never attempt to illustrate a valuable book in this new way, though it would not injure the volume if you found a good unmounted picture of the author and pasted it on one of the fly-leaves in the front of the book. The portrait would add to the value and interest of the volume, as would also items of information on the subject of which the book treats, if pasted on an extra loose leaf and left in the back of the book.
When you have a collection of snap-shots that you wish to preserve, make
Fig. 161.
in which to keep them. Cut two pieces of stiff pasteboard,
each 6¼ inches wide and 5¾ inches high. Use strong
paste to fasten
these on one
side of a strip
of heavy linen
of a soft green
color, 14¼
inches long by
6¾ inches wide.
Leave a space
of uncovered linen three-fourths of an inch wide in the
centre, Fig. 161. This will give the foundation for the
cover of your book. Draw the linen tightly over the edge of
the card-board at the top and bottom, paste it down smooth
and even; then paste the two end-pieces over, thus binding
the four edges of the book. Cut sixteen leaves from heavy
Fig. 162.
dull-surfaced
paper, matching
the green
linen in color,
make each
leaf 6¾ inches
wide and 5½
inches high.
Two of the
leaves serve as lining for the cover, leaving fourteen leaves
or twenty-eight pages for the unmounted photographs.
Paste the first leaf on the left-hand side of the cover, let it
fit over the turned-in border of linen and extend across the
centre onto the edge of the other card-board, LL to KK,
Fig. 163.
Fig. 162; the dotted
lines indicate the
turned-over linen underneath
the paper
leaf which is used as a
lining. Take a second
leaf and turn down the
left hand edge to a
depth of ¾ of an inch, leaving the leaf 6 inches wide. Cover
the ¾ of an inch extension with paste, then lap it over on
the left-hand side of the centre and paste securely. The
place where the side of the leaf should be fastened down to
the lining of the cover is represented by MM in Fig. 162.
Fig. 163 shows the space MM covered by the side of the
leaf, the diagram giving two leaves properly glued together,
the dotted line indicates the centre of the book. As each
leaf is fastened in, turn it over and paste the next one on it
as in Fig. 163. Continue adding leaves,
always allowing the right-hand leaf to
Fig. 164.
overlap the left three-quarters of an
inch. When the last leaf is fastened
in place, paste it down tight on the
right-hand side of the inside of the
cover, where it will form a lining concealing
the raw edges of the linen and
the blank pasteboard as the first leaf
covered the left-hand side of the inside
of the cover. This system of fastening
the leaves together will cause
them to fold in the back where there will be no raw edges.
Fig. 164 gives four leaves, showing the back where they are
folded over after each is joined to the preceding leaf. When
the book is finished the back hinge part of the cover is free
from the leaves, leaving an opening from top to bottom
large enough to run a slender pencil through when the
book is opened. If desired the cover can be decorated
with the title “Snap-Shots.”
Making Valentines.
CHAPTER VI
ORIGINAL VALENTINES
Always alert, chubby little Cupid works hard on St. Valentine’s Day; his duties are many, and his pretty bow sends the arrows flying in all directions. He is a merry little fellow, full of queer pranks and a great favorite. The venerable St. Valentine seems to have merely loaned his name to the fourteenth of February, leaving all the duties to Cupid, who appears to be well pleased with the arrangement. For hundreds of years past the young people have been as anxious to send and receive valentines as at the present time
before valentines were dropped in the mail-box, girls and boys had a great deal of fun sending them to each other. Generally the young folks waited until twilight; then each would sally forth in his neighborhood, lightly step up to the front door of the house where the valentine was to be left, and without the least noise slip the paper under the door, ring the bell and scamper away as fast as possible, to avoid being seen. Valentines to-day bring the same thrill of pleasure, and when the whistle of the postman announces the arrival of the mail on the eventful day, eager fingers are impatient to open the envelope and discover the treasure within. Then the question follows, “Who could have sent such a lovely valentine to me?”
Before making original valentines try to think of some particular study or pursuit in which each friend is interested to whom you desire to send a token on February 14. One may have a talent for painting, another for music; a third may delight in flowers, and so on throughout a long list of subjects which will furnish you with many suggestions for
to be sent to each. As a little practice before using ideas entirely your own, try making the valentines here described. The mystic four-leaved clover (Fig. 165) would be just the thing for a companion who delights in hunting that symbol of good luck. This valentine is very simple and can be made in a short time.
Fig. 165.
Fig. 166.
Cut a sheet of unruled heavy writing-paper in halves and on one piece trace
(Fig. 166). Paint it green; an even flat tint will look well if you cannot manage shadows, but be careful to do the work to the best of your ability. In plain lettering mark the words,
then slide the missive into an envelope large enough to
contain an unfolded half-sheet of paper. In case you happen
Fig. 167.
to have a natural four-leaved
clover which has been pressed, use
it instead of the painted one, and
take a whole sheet of paper so that
the brittle leaf may not be exposed,
but can be secured inside the sheet
on the third page by means of a
little paste. With the pressed clover
the lettering should be made on the
outside of the sheet of paper before
the leaf is placed within.
Another easy valentine to make is
Cut this from stiff paper or light-weight card-board
(Fig. 167). First trace the design on the card-board; then
Fig. 168.
cut it out and paint the easel golden-brown on both sides,
except the part which forms the canvas for the picture and
the cross-piece for the lettering. Leave these white; draw
a line at the bottom of the canvas and letter the strip,
Fig. 169.
Paste any pretty colored floral design you may possess on the blank space or canvas left for the purpose. Bend down the supporting strip (A) projecting from the top (Fig. 167), and the miniature picture and easel will stand alone and be ready to send to some friend who is studying drawing or is interested in art (Fig. 168).
Fig. 170.
To an attractive friend who has no special fancy for any particular avocation, send the valentine shown at Fig. 169. Make it of
of stiff white paper and a small piece of broken mirror. Cut the heart according to the size of the glass (Fig. 170); then with strong paste fasten the mirror on the heart (Fig. 170). Cut another heart exactly like the first, and and in its centre make a heart-shaped opening as large as possible, while leaving it small enough to cover well the edges of the glass. If you do not know how to make a heart-shaped design trace Fig. 169. Decorate the top part with a painted pink ribbon, and on one side write,
and on the other,
At the bottom point of the valentine paste a Cupid; then using strong paste fasten the heart-shaped frame over the glass and lay the valentine under several books until the paste is dry, taking the precaution to put a clean piece of paper underneath, and another over the top of the valentine to keep it perfectly fresh and clean. Any other style of decoration may take the place of the ribbon and Cupid. Small colored embossed paper forget-me-nots could be used.
Fig. 171.
Should one of your friends delight in fireworks displays give her
shown at Fig. 171. Roll together a piece of stiff paper two
inches wide and three inches long (Fig. 172); let the two
sides overlap each other slightly and join them securely
with strong paste, forming a hollow tube. Have the paper
the peculiar red of genuine firecrackers, if you can obtain
such. For the inside take a piece of white paper four
inches long and a trifle less than three inches wide and
Fig. 172.
write on it these words:
In the turned-over edge at the bottom of the paper paste a waxed string, as in Fig. 173. Then roll the paper and insert it in the red tube (Fig. 171).
Fig. 173.
One of the prettiest customs of St. Valentine’s Day was instituted by the daughter of Henry IV. of France, Madam Royal, who built a palace and named it the Valentine. She then gave a grand party in honor of St. Valentine where each lady received a beautiful bouquet of flowers from one who was chosen as her valentine. The same gallantry was repeated ever after on like occasions. The idea of the valentine flowers is very pleasing, and we will use it in a modified form, but instead of cut blossoms in a bouquet we will have
Fig. 174.
(Fig. 174). Trace on reddish-brown card-board (Fig. 175), and
cut it out, also cut the point B and the slits C and E. Bring
the two sides together, sliding the end D over, not under,
through the slit C, at the same time pushing the point B
into the small slit E; and bend back the extension D on
the wrong side to hold the sides together and keep the
flower-pot upright. Cut out the bottom (Fig. 176) and let
it drop down through the top of the flower-pot until it
lodges. Straighten and fit it in evenly; then cut out the top
(Fig. 177) of dark card-board, as it represents the earth. Of
course, one cannot dig holes in paper earth to plant paper
flowers, so slits must be made according to Fig. 177. On
white card-board trace Figs. 178, 179, and 180; paint them to
resemble as nearly as possible natural pinks, and plant them
Fig. 175.
Fig. 176.
Fig. 177.
in the paper earth in this way: slip the rounded extension
of Fig. 178 through the slit F (Fig. 177). Bend back the
angular part K and slide its
extension L through the small
slit T. Turn the paper earth
over on the wrong side, holding
the flowers in position the
while, and bend up the roots
of the two projecting pieces against the
under side of the disk or earth; paste
them in place. Next plant Fig. 179 in the same manner,
sliding its rounded extension through slit G, and its smaller
one through slit O. Plant the last flower (Fig. 180) through
Fig. 178.
slit H; adjust the earth or
top disk, and the finished
work will be a little round
flower-pot filled with growing
pinks standing up separately
from each other and
looking very bright and
natural (Fig. 174). On a
dainty piece of
paper write this
message: