7 fun ways to get creative with SVGs

7 fun ways to get creative with SVGs | H is for Home

SVGs or ‘scalable vector graphics’ to give them their full name are easy and convenient to use in crafty activities of all types. They’re especially suitable for designs that incorporate simple line drawings and text.

Many of the popular (and some free!) design programs can handle svgs, including Photoshop, Illustrator and Inkscape. They are also compatible with crafting software such as Cricut, Silhouette, SCAL and Scan N Cut.

An svg is scaleable, i.e. the image can be created to be as small or as large as you need it to be and it won’t loose any of its detail and definition. There’ll be none of that unattractive pixelation or fuzziness in your finished product like you do with jpeg or png files. So, whether you’re doing something small-scale or need to blow it up to billboard poster size, this is the type you should use.

SVG files can be viewed and downloaded from the internet or sent and received as an email file attachment. Compared to the aforementioned jpeg and png, an svg is a smaller file

They’re the ideal starting point for creating personalised gifts for friends & family and decorative items for yourself and your home. Here are just a few of the ideas that we’ve come up with for using svg files for your inventive projects.

Card making

 

 
 
 
 
 
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Celebratory events such as birthdays, Valentine’s Day, Easter and Christmas are often marked with the sending or exchange of cards. You can produce your own with that extra special, personal touch. Also, they’re perfect for designing DIY wedding, party and shower invitations – business cards and flyers too.

Framed wall art

 

 
 
 
 
 
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Do you have a favourite quote or are you or someone you know famous for your catchphrase? Create an artwork incorporating this or an inspirational phrase or saying. And then there are word clouds which could be devised via a favourite subject. Print them up and pop them in a frame to make a great wall display.

Stamp making

 

 
 
 
 
 
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Carving your own rubber stamps is a great way of creating bespoke designs. Think of those regular multiples such as manually printing your logo on business stationery or stamping your return address on the outside of envelopes and packages.

Fashion & textiles

 

 
 
 
 
 
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The scope of fashion and textile items that can be transformed by embellishing them with svg illustrations is almost endless. Add decals produced using svgs to T-shirts, baseball caps, tote bags or baby clothes. Aprons, tea towels and cushion covers can be customised to coordinate with your décor.

Journaling

 

 
 
 
 
 
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There are some beautiful examples of Bullet journals on Instagram. Some journal-keepers are blessed with a talent for calligraphy and drawing freehand images. But what if you’re not that lucky and you want to start your own journal? You can decorate it beautifully with colourful washi tape, stickers and paper-cut SVG illustrations.

Embroidery

 

 
 
 
 
 
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SVG image files are perfect for use as patterns for creating intricate decorative embroidery hoops. If you’re an embroidery newbie, you can learn by starting with a simple monogramming SVG image template.

Body art

 

 
 
 
 
 
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A post shared by Kareen Singh (@kareen_sing_h)

Tattoos are incredibly popular; have you been inked? If you’re not ready to commit to a permanent tattoo, you can toy with semi-permanent henna. Find a SVG file you like and use it as a stencil for your one-of-a-kind henna body art.

Can you think of other projects in which you can use svgs to create something attractive, imaginative and custom made?

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3 Home projects that can make your life a lot more interesting

3 Home projects that can make your life a lot more interesting

Basically, everyone wants to have an interesting life and to be able to find pleasure, entertainment and insight in their everyday routines, hobbies and practices.

After all, how often does anyone really daydream about doing a boring office job that they hate and that seems about as exciting as watching paint dry?

Depending on your particular interests, engaging in different DIY and decoration projects around the home may or may not seem particularly interesting or fun. But, you may be surprised to discover that when you actually apply yourself to various home improvement tasks, they can truly become really enriching.

Here are a few home projects that you can do, that can make your life a lot more interesting.

Pile of magazines and periodicals

Try to set it up so that every room has a particular, meaningful function

It’s already obviously the case that the different rooms in the average home do actually have set ‘functions’, right? After all, the kitchen’s for cooking, the bathroom‘s for ablutions, the bedroom is for sleeping and so on.

In practice, though, we often end up using the different rooms in our homes in a more general kind of sense. We’ll nap in the living room, surf the web and watch TV in the bedroom and just treat most of the home as one general and undefined space for hanging out in.

Making an effort to actually set it up so that every room in your home has a particular and meaningful function can be a really enriching and positive exercise to undertake.

The key here is that you’re going to actually try to structure the different rooms in your home so that you use them in a unique and engaging way, rather than just for the usual, necessary, everyday functions of cooking, eating etc.

Instead of just setting up your living room as a place where you can relax and watch TV, make a point of trying to turn it into the best possible place for having meaningful conversations and social interactions with your guests.

How about including interesting picture books and magazines on the coffee table, keeping a chessboard set up for an impromptu game or keeping a record player and vinyl collection in the vicinity; just to make things a bit more interesting?

Eaves bedroom with a woodland cabin theme

Set yourself an ideal home template, and work to transform your home in line with that ideal, room by room

Setting yourself an ideal home template can be a great thing to do, because it gives you an interesting and exciting goal to work towards and helps you to direct your home decoration efforts in a meaningful way.

When you’re setting your ideal home template goal, make it really big, bold and ambitious. Take the time to look through different home design magazines and let your imagination run wild.

If you could have your fantasy dream home tomorrow, would it be something like a romantic French castle, a rustic cabin in the woods or a hyper-modern apartment in the heart of a bustling city?

Once you set yourself this goal, work on transforming your home in harmony with that ideal; room by room and stage by stage. Don’t expect to have these home projects completed in the near future – but treat them as an ongoing adventure. Look for discount deals for furnishings from websites such as NetVoucherCodes.co.uk, visit antique centres and second-hand shops and take pleasure in the process of transforming your home bit by bit.

Simply having a big and ambitious target like this to work towards can make your life significantly more interesting and can give you a fun hobby in which to engage at the same time.

Sewing room

Use your home as the setting for more ‘Do It Yourself’ hobbies

Thanks to the abundance of entertainment options available to us all today – ranging from Netflix to on-demand TV – it’s a bit too easy to spend all our free time idly amusing ourselves and passively absorbing information rather than actively creating things.

One great thing that you can do with your home to make your life more interesting is to turn a spare room – or even just a corner of a room – into a setting for exploring a DIY hobby that you’d be interested in adopting.

This could mean having a room in your house dedicated to woodworking, sewing, creating artworks or even recording your own music in pursuit of the ambition of becoming the next rags-to-riches DJ sensation.

When you have an area of your home dedicated to some hands-on pastime like this, all sorts of doors can open up to you and things can get a lot more interesting.

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3 classic hobbies you can do from home

3 classic hobbies you can do from home

Quick question – what would you do to occupy yourself if you had to spend the weekend at home, and couldn’t leave for any reason? If you’re like most people, you’d probably end up dedicating an inordinate amount of your time to catching up on your TV watching, surfing the web for random bits of trivia and making sure to obsessively log in and out of your social media accounts every 10 minutes like a true, dyed in the wool addict.

If you’re a more enterprising and proactive sort, however, you might decide to fill your time with something productive, whether that means writing a book, painting the next Mona Lisa, or engaging in any number of old-school, home-based hobbies that have little or nothing to do with the digital world.

If that sounds like something you’d be interested in, here are a selection of just those sorts of hobbies that you might enjoy taking up.

Hammer and tape measure

Furniture making and upcycling

Once upon a time, it was fairly tricky getting your hands on the raw resources to build your own furniture, or to upcycle existing pieces. Today, thanks to the internet (yeah, not very old-school) and delivery services like Shiply, you can get all the required bits and pieces dropped off at your house with minimal fuss.

Creating your own furniture can be an incredibly fulfilling way of venturing into the world of DIY. You’ll need the right sorts of tools, of course, not to mention some space, and a good selection of books and resources to point you in the right direction.

Once you’ve acquired all of these prerequisites, however, you can fully devote yourself to building a new bookcase for the living room, or upcycling an old wardrobe and turning it into something truly worth taking up space in your home.

Stamp collecting items

Stamp collecting

Stamp collecting may not be the most glamorous hobby in the world, but it can be surprisingly engaging and fun, even in an age where probably fewer people send letters than pretty much ever before (at least, since the widespread introduction of the postal service).

Stamp collecting is an entire art-form in and of itself. There are specialist magazines to read, special books for cataloguing rare stamps, special books for keeping your stamps in, and various paraphernalia for obtaining stamps in the first place, and safely removing them from envelopes and postcards.

Stamp collecting is a very relaxing, therapeutic kind of hobby. Perfect if you end most days exhausted by your day job.

Collection of vintage radios

Starting a collection

While stamp collecting is, of course, a form of ‘collecting’, it’s a bit more specific and prescribed than the hobby being outlined here.

Starting a collection involves deciding on a particular type of item that you find especially fascinating, and beginning to collect those items.

This could mean starting a mineral collection, or a knife collection, or a pocket watch collection, or just about anything else you could imagine!

You’ll find that many forms of collection are well-represented by hobby groups, hobby magazines, and so on. Once you feel your collection is well-stocked and organised enough, you might want to get in touch with other enthusiasts to compare notes.

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