Making Crafty Fridge Magnets 
Food comes in all kinds of shapes, sizes, and packages. Your kitchen
cabinets, pantry drawers, and refrigerator shelves are already filled
with marvelous little boxes and baggies of goodies. Some of these are
cultural icons, others are silly modern wonders of neo-retro design. You
may even have your own little collection of interesting little
containers in the form of left-over little boxes of candy from
Halloween. What can you do with all these things? Make them into an
awesome array of fridge magnets! 
This is what lives on our refrigerator: A collection of, well, things.
There are boxes of cream cheese and raisins, a tin of Altoids, a wheel
of brie, and various types of chewing gum. There are sippy-boxes of
yoo-hoo. There is rice candy, a squishy Rocky Road bar, and there are
boxes and boxes of Dots. And then there is the slightly odd trio of
Nerds, Good & Plenty, and Sugar Babies. 
You can make magnets like these yourself. The first step is to pick some
appropriate boxes to use. Most anything will work. Things that are
small, recognizable, and come in (large sets of) small packages are a
good choice. Right after halloween is a particularly good time of year
for little boxes of things. Depending on your age, you've probably just
been out trick-or-treating, or at home handing out little boxes of
things to trick-or-treaters, so you may already have some cute boxes on
hand. Even if you haven't gotten involved in the sugarfest, it may not
be too late; you can sometimes find discounts the week after Halloween. 
Beyond the box, you'll also need some magnets and some glue to hold the
magnets in place. I used magnets extracted from plastic toys and hard
drives. For small, light boxes (like most of these), one of the little
magnets from plastic toys is fine. If your box is bigger, needs to hold
more to the fridge, or you just like overkill, it's good fun to use one
of the monstrously strong magnets from an old hard drive, preferably
still attached to the bracket. There's one of those in the Yoo-hoo
magnet, and it takes a lot of work to get it off of the fridge. 
          If you've chosen to use a mint tin or
other ferromagnetic box, your life will be easy: Just drop your
magnet(s) in the box, shut the lid, and stick it to the fridge.    
Otherwise, welcome to the trickiest part of the project: Opening your
boxes without making it look like they've been opened. If you've got
large boxes, like the cream cheese box shown here, start with those.
Most cardboard boxes used for packaging are assembled with glue. Find a
flap that's held down by glue. Using a sharp knife, carefully cut
through the glue that holds one of the flaps down. Be sure to not bend
the flaps as you open the box this way. 
          Remove the contents of the box, drop in a
magnet, and glue it in place.     A hot glue gun is great for this.
Drizzle in a little hot glue, and drop the magnet in on top of the bead
of hot glue. Quickly place the box on a horizontal ferromagnetic surface
(like the top of the fridge) so that the magnet is pulled down, flat
against the side of the box and is then held in place when the glue
cools. 
            Optional extra step: Once the magnet
is in place, add some weight to the box. Dried pinto beans are cheap and
are the right size to substitute for many candies, such as sugar babies.
For less rattly things like Dots or raisins, you can use additional hot
glue to hold most of the beans in place. That one in the middle that
rattles adds a lot of realism! 
          It can be a little bit tricky to seal up
the box without making it obvious that the box has been opened and
resealed. Your best strategy is to try and put a small drop of hot glue
exactly where the original glue was, right beneath that flap that you
cut open. If you do this correctly, it will leave no trace whatsoever
that the box has ever been opened.     Once you've put that last
drop of glue in place, fold down the flap and firmly hold it in place
until the glue is cool, around one minute. 
Source: http://www.evilmadscientist.com/article.php/fridgemagnets 
Posted by: Tonya

(`´·.¸ (`´·.¸ *¤*
 ~Angelique~ 
(¸.·'´ (¸.·'´ *¤* 


--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Access the Recipes And More list archives at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/recipesandmore%40googlegroups.com/

Visit the group home page at:

http://groups.google.com/group/RecipesAndMore
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to