How to Make a Christmas Card Star – wikiHow

Posted By on December 10, 2010

Archiving a Christmas Star ornament that was forwarded by a friend; my daughter might enjoy making one? (Thanks Wolfgang)


Steps

  • 1

    Print out this pattern

  • 2

    Copy the pattern onto the interior of your cards (so that the cover design is on the other side) by cutting it out and tracing it. Then draw in the fold lines with a ruler. See the Tips for how to score the fold lines.

  • 3

    Cut the pattern out and start folding! This would be a great time put on some music and invite the family to help. To make this Christmas star, you’ll need to cut 20 cards.

  • 4

    Close the triangles. Use your favorite glue along each of the long flaps to seal the point of each star.

  • 5

    Print out this pattern. Use heavy card stock or print your pattern onto regular paper and then paste the pattern onto a cereal box or other light cardboard. This will be the body of the star.

  • 6

    Cut, score and once again fold along all the lines.

  • 7

    Glue together carefully.

  • 8

    Glue the points onto the star until it’s done! Give it time to dry and you’ll have a beautiful decoration made out of recycled Christmas cards.

  • Posted via email from RichC’s posterous

    It was a cold day for Encore’s haulout, seatrial & survey

    Posted By on December 9, 2010

    encoreafterseatrial101207
    Encore – and UK built 1986 well equipped 36’ Westerly Corsair CC

    I’ve been offline and a bit out of kilter the last couple of days … I could say I was busy Christmas shopping, but then what I’m doing sort of stretches any Christmas present budget that I’m aware of? palm_2010-06-12_183048I headed to sunny Florida for a haulout, seatrial and survey of a sailboat that Brenda and I have been ogling. We’ve probably lost what few marbles you may have thought we had, but I’m sort of classifying my lack of judgment on reaching ‘mid-life.’ My brother-in-law asks, “why not just buy a sports car?” Others just jump from airplanes, rock climb or dangle from a bungee cord … or some have affairs (that one off limits for me) … but its hard to beat returning to a first love – sailing or perhaps more appropriately, cruising.

    Not to fear, the ink hasn’t dried on the contracts just yet, but we’re significantly closer to owning the proverbial ‘hole in the water’ than we were when we were just traveling to sailboat shows and spent our time looking at boats.

    For my part on this trip, I flew from chilly Ohio to the chilly southeastern Florida. One would think my packing shorts and tee-shirts would have guaranteed some warm weather for our survey and seatrial – it was not to be. Upon arrival the temps were right at freezing! By the time we hit the haulout pit I think the sun may have warmed us up to 40 degrees F – although it was hard to tell with that north wind blowing down the intercoastal waterway.

    encorehauled101207All went well and my experience surveyor, Brian Galley, tapped the hull and electrically measured whatever he could finally pronouncing the hull ‘sound.’ From his years as a South African boatbuilder he was helpful in pointing out a few things to watch for such as the external cast iron keep rust seeping through the bottom pain and odd sized 250mm prop shaft (US corrosion zincs are fitted for 1” shafts = 254mm). He was also helpful in discussing rigging advice and changes he would make to the existing set-up – someday. Back in the water Encore and our merry crew of frozen brokers, surveyors, owners and yours truly, the potential buyer went. Next was a little channel navigation out of Taylor’s Creek and into the intercoastal with skipper Larry behind the wheel and his first mate firing up each piece of electronics equipment for our testing. The only two failures that we found were the Autohelm autopilot and steaming/running lights … although Encore is equipped with a tri-color single bulb masthead light – appropriate for use under sail, but not under power. Enough to be aggravating but not a deal breaker.

    encoreheadingoutforseatrial

    As we prepared to set sail for a downwind course, it was my turn behind the wheel … something that felt good after a decade of being boat-less or sailing Hobies or dinghies. In fact my kids have trouble remembering going sailing – sad. We thought we were doing the right thing putting them in baseball, soccer, rugby, figure-skating and gymnastics? Hindsight … who knows, but maybe I can still make up for lost time?

    lloydsregisterofshippingNevertheless, the sail was good and the condition of the standing and running rigging as well as the sails were excellent for a older boat. One expects sine wear and although there was some, it does not need immediate attention or replacement. We ran the Volvo diesel up to full throttle on the way back, noting that the temps and oil pressure stayed safe, but that the tachometer seemed off. Hopefully this will be just a small adjustment that can be made on my part to get the readings correct (it reads about 1000 RPM high at full throttle).

    All in all I was pleased with the performance and comfort … and the nice bimini and fixed dodger helped to keep the cold wind off at least the helmsman. On deck forward was a different thing. I really didn’t have time to play with the ‘new-ish’ GPS, something we sailed without back in the 1980 or even 90s … although I had (still have) a Garmin 175. Some other new toys on this boat will be SSB and Radar. Lots to learn. For now … its figuring out the logistics including homeport, time and money! Wish me well.

    Westerly’s have a solid following in the UK, but I probably should have scouted out a Westerly grouplist or forum here in the US and asked some questions … but in case some reader has advice, please let me know. BTW, for those American sailors asking “What’s a Westerly” … only need to know that their UK based “owners association” claims to be the “largest yacht owners’ group in the world.”

    Upgrading WordPress again … this time to 3.0.3

    Posted By on December 8, 2010

    wordpressupgrade303
    Here’s crossing my fingers that WordPress 3.0.3 will be as solid as previous upgrades.

    Enjoying Free Google offered AirTran WiFi

    Posted By on December 6, 2010

    While my Palm Pre’s battery holds out I’m appreciating playing with the free ‘Google’ offered wifi on AirTran flights until the end of the year. So far all the Internet apps on the Pre are working well including audio streaming, web browsing, app catalog downloads and email. Twitter client Tweed is working well too, although the GPS location indicates Atlanta (I suspect the IP for the ISP). Sent a photo as well and speeds aren’t bad (amazed at how many eReaders and iPads are being used).

    Posted via email from RichC’s posterous

    How’s your credit score doing? Check out CreditKarma.com

    Posted By on December 5, 2010

    Most people realize it is important it is to keep an eye on what the big three credit reporting agencies say about one’s personal credit history … creditkarmalogoparticularly in this age of identity theft. (Equifax, Transunion and Experian) So, if you haven’t requested your once-a-year free report, do it now and be sure your credit report is free from errors, but that’s not the point. One of the items sorely lacking from the ‘free’ reports are the much talked about and used “credit score.”  They are available for an extra fee, which might be important if you are planning to apply for a new mortgage or refinance, but not so important (or worth paying for all three) if you just monitoring your credit. Enter CreditKarma.com … a place to get your credit score for FREE (well, for registering on their site and reading ads and advice scattered on the page). Give it a try.

    Volkswagen New 2012 Beetle video appears on the Internet

    Posted By on December 4, 2010

    newbugtowingmachineVolkswagen New Beetle lovers received a video glimpse of the new 2012 VW bug now that a spy video is on YouTube. The smooched down redesign looks less bug-like and a little more Porche/Audi TT-ish. Personally I’m not rushing out to to put an order in… even with a TDI engine.  It’s hard to imagine sales being all that strong in the U.S. unless its price point beats other econo-boxes or the performance resembles Volkswagen’s GTI – I could be wrong, there’s always the Oprah effect? (spy video below)

    Misfires, fuel efficiency drop and check engine lights

    Posted By on December 4, 2010

    Last20fuelups101203My 2006 Honda Pilot has been rock solid for 120,000+ miles, but it looks like all good things come to an end and it might be time for some overdue maintenance. Oh, I’ve done the routine stuff, but I have neglected to replace the plugs at about 100K and haven’t tackled the belts including the dreaded $700 timing belt with waterpump, tensioners, etc.

    The warning sign arrived about a month ago  after boasting on my blog when I noticed the fuel economy slipping from its normal 20-21 mpg number to about 18 mpg (see mid-November on my Fuelly chart right). I didn’t think much about it since the weather was turning cold until the check engine light popped on. A quick run to my buddy with a scanner and he noticed a misfire … to which I ‘optimistically’ thought … “maybe I filled with some bad gasoline?”

    After adding a little Heet (methanol) in hopes to dry out any water and driving another tank after clearing the light, the check engine light along with a couple other idiot lights popped back on. Hmm … I think it’s time for at least a tune up … but the expense of a timing belt  will just have to wait until after Christmas.

    Tech Friday: posting etiquette and email signatures

    Posted By on December 3, 2010

    Admit it, you’ve been pretty annoyed receiving emails with extensive signatures or while reading in forums where regular users post distracting, offensive or just plain long-waste-of-screen-space signatures. This practice is one of my pet peeves when visiting certain‘permissive’ forums that allow ‘spam-vertising’ byflea_ani user signature or avatar. This becomes doubly irritating when the same user posts ‘one-line comments’ multiple times in the same thread requiring page feed after page feed just to sift through the same signature information in order to read the content. That said, some of the items in sigs or avatars can be interesting and amusing. In fact, this little flea had me distracted and brushing my screen for a second (image right)…

    My advice is don’t distract readers with obnoxious signatures looking a bit like the nauseous MySpace pages of the past … or current but can’t say I’ve visited one recently (BTW, there’s a plugin for browsers call SanitySwitch to clean up the reading of MySpace pages).

    On the off chance you are a sig offender, take this suggestion to heart and consider cleaning up your email and forum signatures.

    —–
    Sent from my Palm Pre (I added that annoying sig just for the humor; pick a phone)

    Replaced my Palm Pre with a duplicate today

    Posted By on December 1, 2010

    While closing in on 2 years with my webOS Palm Pre, I’ve opted to replace my original Pre smartphone with one of the last of the original Sprint Palm Pre phones before they are gone. (I’m crossing my fingers that Sprint will eventually get the Pre 2)palmprecrack100107 Thankfully my insurance plan replaced the defective (but still working) model without any additional dollars out of my pocket.

    Over a year ago the screen crack in the photo began working its way along the side of the phone about and inch in each direction, but still didn’t impact the touch sensitivity. About a month ago I lost the ability to charge using the Touchstone wireless charger and thought perhaps the battery needed to be replaced. After purchasing a new battery I realized that the tiny copper pin that makes contact with the special Touchstone backplate was missing, so that was issue two. The final straw came when the corner power switch gave out … so it was either time fix or replace.

    Unfortunately I exchanged phone while traveling this week and have been scrambling to get the webOS install on the Pre back to my liking. As I type this during lunch, I’m running the Palm Pre Backup/Restore homebrew app and am hoping everything appears magically as it was before – I’m probably overly optimistic.

    Wrapping up the busy 2010 hurricane season

    Posted By on December 1, 2010

    igorjuliakarl100916
    Hurricanes Karl, Igor and  Julia  (from left to right on Sept. 16) were part of
    the onslaught of Atlantic storms this season.
    Download here (Credit: NOAA)

    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) closes the book on one of the was busiest hurricane seasons on record which is in contrast to the eastern North Pacific season which had the fewest storms on record.

    atlantictrackmap2010

    According to NOAANews, the United States was spared impact by the majority of the storms, although Mexico and Central America were not as fortunate and suffered heavy rain, mudslides and deadly flooding.

    In the Atlantic Basin a total of 19 named storms formed – tied with 1887 and 1995 for third highest on record. Of those, 12 became hurricanes – tied with 1969 for second highest on record. Five of those reached major hurricane status of Category 3 or higher.

    These totals are within the ranges predicted in NOAA’s seasonal outlooks issued on May 27 (14-23 named storms; 8-14 hurricanes; 3-7 major hurricanes) and August 5 (14-20 named storms; 8-12 hurricanes; 4-6 major hurricanes). An average Atlantic season produces 11 named storms, six hurricanes and two major hurricanes.

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    1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
    2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
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