Is there anything more traditional than sending a Christmas card? It seems that new technologies are gaining ground over Christmas due to the immediacy and ease of sending an email or WhatsApp. But we are staunch defenders of traditions and surely more than one has changed the greeting by email to later return to the physical greeting, especially when there are children at home. And there is nothing more beautiful than a dedicated and personalized Christmas and if, in addition, it is made by hand, the result is noteworthy. From here, we are going to propose some very cool models of Christmas cards so that you can easily make them yourself at home.
Christmas cards with pearls
Take a cardboard of some color, for example, blue or orange and draw a line and a hanging ball. Then, fill the ball with white pearls that you buy in a bag. Then stick a white satin ribbon on the line, acting as the string from which the ball dangles. Make a little bow with that tape and stick it on the ball. It will be great. You can also do this, for example, by drawing a fir tree on white cardboard and gluing green beads to fill it in and finish off with a red bead that acts as balls. The options can be thousands; you just have to use a little imagination.
Christmas cards with watermarks
Take colored cardboard or sheets of paper, depending on the figure you want to capture on your card, for example, if you want a fir tree, get green and red sheets of paper. Cut thin red strips and roll them up, forming snails and gluing each end with glue so that they do not fall apart. Then cut other green ones and make small cuts on one side and do the same as with the previous one again, leaving the cuts on the upper part -the one that will be seen when it is glued-; in this way, they will look like petals or leaves. Then draw a triangle that forms the top of the fir tree and fill almost everything with green -simulating the top- and insert some alternate red -the balls-. The trunk can be painted or filled with a piece of cardboard. Photo: Video tips.
3D Tree Christmas Cards
Take green paper and cut rectangles of six different lengths and widths (two of each). Then take a piece of cardboard or white paper and fold it into a card. Next, zigzag fold the green strips. Take the larger ones and glue one end to the spine of the card, then glue the other end and fold the other end of the card so that the strip is attached. Do the same by gluing the other longer one above. And so on with each one from major to minor. You can then stick a star sticker on it and decorate the card however you like.
Christmas cards Gama Eva tree
Take colored Eva rubber and cut uneven colored stripes from longest to shortest, cut a longer one in brown to act as a trunk. Paste the trunk on a white cardboard and then go pasting the stripes on top of it from largest to smallest. Then she cuts out strand glue it on top. You can paste a button or colored account
Christmas cards Felt trees
Cut out triangles that act as treetops and glue them onto a felt rectangle that acts as a card, then paste that same card onto another cardboard or cardboard to give it rigidity. Then cut out a square to glue as a trunk and add colored buttons to the tree. Source: educational images.
Christmas card with cloth candles
Cut small strips of fabric in different patterns (you can also do this with paper) and glue them in a row on the card. If the colors are soft, take a black cardstock to make it stand out. Paint the wicks with a white marker. Source: easy.
Christmas cards with fir-tree with wool
Take a piece of paper or cardboard and draw a triangle that forms the top of a pine tree. Make holes on the sides and go through a piece of wool to make straight lines with it. It ends with a bow.
Glitter type. To decorate Christmas cards, glitter can look great. A trick to make it stick is to draw with glue or silicone the letters or drawing that you want to form and then sprinkle the glitter covering it. Then shake the card and only the drawing you wanted will remain shiny.