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Thursday, September 7, 2023

DIY How to Make Your Decorate Plain Headbands How to Decorate a Headband๐Ÿ˜‰ Crafting with Joan

 

DIY How to Make Your Decorate Plain Headbands How to Decorate a Headband

 

Choose the ribbon or trim. Craft stores are full of cute ribbons and trim. For decorating headbands, choosing a thin ribbon or trim measuring 1" wide or less is best. Ideally, it will be the same width as the elastic you use.

If you choose ribbons or trim with embellishments like beads and sequins, ensure they are only on one side of the ribbon. This way, it won't get caught in your hair.

When possible, choose trim and ribbon that contains a bit of elastic in the fabric to make wearing decorative headbands more comfortable. Tug on the ribbon or trim to see if it stretches. If it does, then it contains some elasticity. You can also use elastic-free ribbon or trim with no issues, though.

Most fabric and craft stores offer spools of elastic in different colors and widths. You will want to find elastic that is thinner than the ribbon or trim you have chosen, so make sure you know the measurements of your ribbon.

Elastic usually comes in black and white, but you may be able to find other colors as well. Remember that the elastic will be on the bottom half of the headband, but it may still be visible when you wear it.

Next, you will need to cut the ribbon and elastic so that the ribbon is long enough to wrap around most of your head, and a few inches of elastic connect the ends of the ribbon. Measure them around your DIY decorative headband first to determine how long you need your ribbon.

Wrap the ribbon you've chosen around your head from the top of your forehead to the nape of your neck or where you would like your DIY headband to sit. Place your finger on the end of the ribbon where it begins to overlap and mark it with a pen or chalk.

Measure five inches inward from this spot that you have marked, and then cut the fabric here.

Next, cut four inches of elastic band. This material will connect the two ends of your ribbon. It is essential to leave an inch off the total measurement of elastic so that the headband will sit tight enough on your head to prevent it from sliding off. You can always use a little less elastic if you want an even tighter headband.

Wear your new DIY decorative headband. After you finish sewing the elastic to the ribbon or trim, your headband is complete. You can layer it underneath your hair or wear it in the popular bohemian style wrapped over your forehead.

1 Decorating with Simple Ribbon Bows.

2 Decorating with Corker Bows.

3 Embellishing with Crystals, Pearls, and Beads.

4 Making a Ribbon Woven Headband.

5 Make a Duct Tape Bow for Your Headband.

6 Decorating Fabric Headbands.

Thank you for joining Lucy and me today. Hope to see you next time.

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Thank you for joining Lucy and me today. Hope to see you next time.

Contact Information

Joan@CraftingWithJoan.com

www.CraftingWithJoan.Com

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Copyright © 2023 Crafting with Joan All rights reserved.

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Wednesday, September 6, 2023

Your 4-Month Marathon - Keep Up the Pace!

TIME TO SET YOUR PACE In any marathon race, setting your pace is all important. If you watch professional marathon runners, they are running at the s

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TIME TO SET YOUR PACE

Marathon runners

In any marathon race, setting your pace is all important. If you watch professional marathon runners, they are running at the same pace nearly the entire race: at the beginning, in the middle, and at the finish line. They quickly get up to the speed they know they can maintain, and they just keep at it, mile after mile, and hour after hour. They know the race will be over after a few hours, and they are content that until that time, they will just keep on keeping on.

This is what you must do as well. Set your pace of low-carb eating, a narrow (six-hour) window of eating, and the end of all between-meal snacking, and then just do it, day after day and week after week. Christmas will be here before you know it, and you can look forward to vastly improved blood sugar scores and your A1c score. Until that time, you will just keep putting one foot in front of the other, running the race that is set before you!

BE CAREFUL!

In my previous email I warned you about the danger of hypos (dangerously low blood sugar) when you switch from a high-carb diet to a low-carb diet. This is especially true for those taking powerful diabetic meds or insulin. So keep watching your glucose levels by testing with your blood sugar meter.

Do not allow your glucose to drop below 80. If it does, immediately eat some carbs to bring it back into range. And by all means keep your doctor in the loop, and let him/her know exactly what you are doing, and what your blood sugar levels are reading. If you are taking meds or insulin you will probably have to have your dosage lowered. TALK TO YOUR DOCTOR!

The Wednesday Videos Are JUST FOR YOU!

On Wednesdays, for the rest of this year, the Lord willing, I plan to target my videos especially for the 2023 Challenge Participants. You cannot afford to miss a single one of them. So please subscribe to Beat Diabetes, and make sure and watch every single Wednesday video that is posted! Click on the thumbnail below to see the latest Wednesday video.

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Month 1 Meals
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Nigerian Keto Meals
000 Vegan Keto for Beginners
16 Best Veg

Here are Links to Videos Featuring Keto tortillas/chapatis/flatbreads

Get An Approximate A1c

To figure your A1c at home, test your glucose 5 times in one day:

Fasting glucose in the morning
One hour after lunch
Three hours after lunch
One hour after dinner
Before you go to bed
Average these five numbers (divide by 5)

Plug that number into the calculator ON THIS PAGE

This will be a pretty close approximation of your A1c at this time.

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