Painted Stitch Cards

This post is sponsored by Plaid Enterprises.

Painted Stitch Cards

We LOVE practicing new skills with our kids, and there’s no question that this includes sewing! Of course, we’ve long relied on stitch cards to help with this process and over the years have shared some super fun printable projects here on the blog. Today we’re over the moon to be making our very own custom stitch cards, and you can too! Grab some recycled cardboard and your favorite colors of Delta Ceramcoat® Acrylic Paint and get crafting!

Painted Stitch Cards

We kept our stitch cards nice and small, but you can absolutely make them as big or little as you want. What if you painted a whole scene on some cardboard and turned that into a giant stitch card? Talk about cool kid-made art to display! We loved using all these bright and fun colors to create these adorable cards – you can find all 22 shades and 6 brand new Flash Metallic colors in the craft aisle at Target!

Painted Stitch Cards

what you need:

Painted Stitch Cards

how-to:

Painted Stitch Cards

Step 1
Start off by cutting your cardboard into postcard sized rectangles. The cardboard we were using was already white on one side, so we used that as a starting point. If you also want a white surface, you can give each rectangle a quick coat of white paint at this stage too.

Painted Stitch Cards

Step 2
Next we applied a coat of paint to add a pop of color. On all of the 9 stitch card we made, we used 3 colors as the base coat on all of them so that they’d have a cohesive look. Let dry.

Painted Stitch Cards

Step 3
Now it’s time to get creative! Paint whatever you like onto the cardboard rectangles – we were inspired by a bunch of shapes from nature including leaves, flowers, snails, clouds, etc. You can seriously paint anything you and your little ones like! One thing to keep in mind is where you’d like to add the stitch details later. Curved details are a little harder to work with, so geometric shapes are a great place to start. Let dry.

Painted Stitch Cards

Step 4
Use a screw punch to make holes in the cardboard, following the lines of your design. If you don’t have a screw punch, you might be able to use a regular hole punch depending on your design, or a large nail and hammer being sure to make the holes on a scrap of wood.

Painted Stitch Cards 

And now you have a whole collection of fun stitch cards for your kids to practice on!

Painted Stitch Cards Painted Stitch Cards Painted Stitch Cards

Find all 22 shades of Delta Ceramcoat® Acrylic Paint at your local Target along with the six new Flash Metallic shades in the craft aisle or at Target.com. It would be so cute to add some metallic details onto these stitch cards, don’t you think? The gem especially would look great in metallic!

Delta Ceramcoat Flash Metallic Paint 

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Painted Stitch Cards

Painted Stitch Cards 

Happy crafting!