Are you looking for your next big product for all your customers to love? These Dollar Store crafts to sell will be perfect!
I've become a bit of a connoisseur for dollar store hacks. Here are 100+ of the best ones that are simply ingenious!
Have fun making a DIY flower tealight! Use faux flower petals and recycled plastic spoons to create these beautiful flower tea lights. Transform a flameless tealight candle into stylish home decor. These flower tea light candles glow and flicker so beautifully, and they make great homemade decorations for parties or weddings! This post contains affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something we may earn a small commission which helps us run this website. How to Make a Flower Tealight Have fun making a flower tealight candle! This DIY craft is perfect for spring and summer decor. ScissorsGlue
These DIY dollar store crafts are so creative and look absolutely amazing. If you're looking for dollar store hacks, you're going to love these easy dollar store craft ideas.
We all love having beautiful homes, but sometimes it's just not in the budget. That is where some good DIY Dollar Tree crafts come into play.
Who would have thought you could craft with basic kitchen items? Check out these surprising dollar store cutting board crafts that are totally genius.
Are you looking for beautiful DIY Dollar Store Christmas decorations you can make for with your kids? Try these stunning 30 Dollar Store Christmas Decor Ideas to decorate your home in 2022 on a small budget!
Try some of these dollar store crafts and diy on a low budget. Try these dollar tree projects and enjoy crafting with dollar tree products.
From container fairy gardens to DIY fairy garden accessories, there are plenty of dollar store fairy garden ideas for kids and adults here.
If you're looking for DIY Dollar Tree crafts, then you've come to the right place. Whether you're looking for dollar tree projects for yourself or for home decor, we have plenty of fun and creative DIY craft ideas that you're sure to love.
These DIY dollar store crafts are so creative and look absolutely amazing. If you're looking for dollar store hacks, you're going to love these easy dollar store craft ideas.
This trendy decorative and farmhouse DIY Dollar Tree Arched Lantern is made with a box and race car tracks from the dollar store.
Best dollar tree crafts to sell in 2024 for extra money. Try these dollar tree crafts to make and sell for extra cash.
So grab your glue gun, and let's start with best-selling DIY Dollar Tree crafts to make and sell.
From DIY centerpieces to wall art, these cheap and easy dollar store DIY home decor ideas will give your home a stylish makeover on a budget.
I've become a bit of a connoisseur for dollar store hacks. Here are 100+ of the best ones that are simply ingenious!
If you are looking for the perfect way to decorate your home on a low budget you must make this Dollar Tree lantern. This dollar tree craft for the home is great if you are looking to save money with upcycled crafts.
The ultimate list of the 50 best Dollar Tree items to hack, transform and makeover! #dollartree #dollartreefinds #dollarstorediy #dollartreemakeovers #dollartreestorage #dollartreehaul #dollartreeprojects #dollartreecrafts #dollartreehacks
We love this easy and quick diy boho decoration you can make for cheap for your living room coffee table or entryway console. Check out the step by step tutorial for a diy dollar store boho tray. #bohodecor #bohotray #bohoonabudget
These whimsical DIY Dollar Tree Solar Lights are not only easy to make but also budget-friendly. Grab your mason jars and let's illuminate your world!
These DIY dollar store crafts are so fun to make - all you need to do is use frames. So get into making these DIY projects with dollar store items.
Turn ordinary tin cans into beautiful craft room storage or vases with this easy tutorial. These decoupage cans make a wonderful centerpiece for a party too!
You gotta love a store where everything costs $1 or less.
Get the farmhouse look on a budget with these dollar store DIY farmhouse decor ideas. From wreaths to accents, there's plenty of DIY ideas.
I've got a super fun DIY for your next craft night, gang; this was a huge hit with my group, and I think my favorite thing we've made all year: Hobbit Door Wreaths! Or alternatively, Fairy Door Wreaths. In fact that's what I love about these: they're infinitely customizeable. And - AND! - you can buy everything you need from Dollar Tree, so they only cost a few dollars each to make. Here's my Friday Night group hard at work on theirs: I'll show you all their finished wreaths as we go along. First, let's talk materials: I found the wreaths, flowers, rope hangers, moss, and I think even the wood beads all at Dollar Tree. The only thing not from DT on mine are the tiny mushrooms and the insulation foam we used for the doors - but here's a handy foam substitution you CAN find at Dollar Tree: Did you know you can peel off the paper backing from DT foam board? I just learned this trick from Studson Studio, my new favorite Youtuber. You can stack the foam together to make thicker pieces, and just like pink or blue insulation foam, this stuff carves & textures like a dream. Perfect for woodgraining. Again, we used pink foam because we have so much in the garage, but everything I'm about to show will also work on DT foam. Last thing: be on the lookout for things you can turn into tiny door handles. Wooden beads, jewelry pieces, or these finger puzzles from Dollar Tree all work great: A little gold paint, and you can turn that into this: Calvin went with a homey swamp aesthetic for his door, and had an elaborate backstory of the crotchety hermit who lives there, ha. (Yes, basically Shrek.) I LOVE the moss growing out of the knots in the wood. Oh, you'll also need hot glue and basic craft paints, btw. Make sure everyone has their own work station, including the cats: Check. First things first, trace your wreaths onto the foam and cut out your door circles. Make them a little big, because we'll be pressure-fitting them into the wreath later. Now, we woodgrain! This is the fun part. You don't need special tools for this, but if you HAVE carving tools, give them a go. Practice on the back of your door or a separate scrap first. I tried out a bunch of tools, so let me show you my 3 favorite, and what they do: This fat wooden knife made thick jaggedly lines, perfect for the seams between the wood planks. (You can also use a butter knife.) Make these seams first. Next, this metal loop makes fantastic wood knots: Just drag down, and you'll get a roughed-up patch. If you don't have a loopy tool, try dragging a craft blade horizontally for a similar effect. Do these knots second. Finally, I used this sharp needle tool for all my grain lines: You can use anything sharp and pointy for this, like a toothpick or pencil. Don't be afraid to carve deep; too light and the grain won't show up after painting. The hardest part with woodgraining is knowing when to stop, but by the end you should have something like this: Next paint the entire thing with flat black craft paint. (Spray paint dissolves this foam, so that's a big no-no.) Really scrub the paint into all the grain lines; you don't want ANY foam showing. The paint will take a while to dry, especially if your grain lines are deep, so this is a fantastic time to break for dinner. Behold our build-your-own baked potato bar, with both sweet and regular potatoes, all the regular fixings, plus barbecue pork and spicy chicken with ranch dressing. Aw yeah. SO GOOD. P.S. BBQ on a sweet potato will rock your world. Right, back to crafting or whatever. ;) Next is the fun part. OK, another fun part. DRY-BRUSHING. Grab at least 2 shades of the color you want: one darker, one lighter. Start with the darker shade, pounce most of it off your brush onto a paper towel, and then lightly brush it over your door. It helps to brush against the grain like I'm doing here, so you only hit the top peaks. For my blue door I used both a cobalt blue and turquoise craft paint for my base coat. You can see that was still pretty dark after my first coat: I kept layering up the blue and the turquoise, then added a bright blue highlight, which eventually gave me this: Once your door is done, it's time to squish it into your wreath. Ours took some trimming because John cut our foam into perfect circles, and the DT wreaths are anything BUT perfect circles, ha: Don't worry if there are gaps or crunchy edges; you can cover a lot of that with moss and flowers later. Now another fun part: DECORATING. Gratuitous pretty picture I took while picking my flower colors. Shades of a blue hydrangea, right? At those point you may hot-glue on all the moss and flowers and whatnot your hobbity heart desires. There's no right or wrong way to do this, so let me show you the rest of my group's for more inspiration: Kelsey used hot glue and beads to make this incredible doorknob, then decorated with big chunks of moss. She and Calvin made theirs a co-ordinating set: Calvin was so proud of his test scrap of foam that he made sure I got that in the photo. :D Kari - who's actually BEEN to Hobbiton in New Zealand, so we're all insanely jealous - made two almost identical wreaths so she could give one to a friend. The doorknobs are wood beads with little filigree pieces on top. Kari is a professional faux finisher, and it shows, because peep that incredible woodgrain and highlight! I shamelessly tried to copy her for my first door, but I'm terrible at "random" and made my highlight way too even: ::Stitch voice:: "It's small, and not highlighted well, but still good. Yeah. Still good." I added a little piece of craft foam at the bottom to look like a flagstone - did it work? I also added teeny plastic mushrooms I already had from Amazon: I originally bought them for a Wonderland teacup garden, which I still want to make someday. That's on the list for a future Craft Night. More wreaths! Here's Karen's blue door: And Traci's red one: Traci carved in an extra door trim around the edge on hers, which I really like, then the doorknob is more little pieces from my jewelry stash. Forgot to mention it, but our hangers are just a piece of DT rope hot-glued to the backs: One pack of rope was enough for at least 8 or 9 wreaths. For something completely different, here's John's non-wreath Hobbit door: I told him he made a haunted Hufflepuff Hobbit hole, ha. This is made entirely out of pink insulation foam and a little moss. We're watching Lord of the Rings this week for the first time in ages, and after Bilbo's "Concerning Hobbits" John and I've decided all Hobbits are Hufflepuffs. Any seconds? Are we all in agreement here? And finally, here's my finished blue door wreath, which I'm super proud of: I really love these colors together, and I think I did better with the highlight this time. I spent too long making that fancy doorknob, but I think it was worth it. Here's an extreme zoom of the top handle piece: I rounded a filigree in my doming block, then glued on a gem I cut and filed from a scrapbooking brad: I finished with a light coat of gold Rub N' Buff, then fitted it over a wooden bead. I hope this inspires some happy craft nights of your own, 'bots! After spending most of my life crafting alone, I can tell you it's SO much more fun with friends and laughter around. Sometimes the distraction of other people helps me break out of my perfectionism, plus you get to bounce ideas off each other and ask for advice, which I love. Then when you're done, you get one final art project left behind: There's something about the enormous mess after a group project that makes me so happy. Though vacuuming up moss dust for the next week makes me... less so. (How. HOW does it get everywhere??) Love y'all, go do something that would make Bilbo proud this weekend! You know, like bake a pie, plant some flowers, or have a nice cup of tea snuggled up with a good book. Mmm. That's the stuff. ***** P.S. My Squeegineer winners for the month of June are Mely J. & Mara P. Congrats, you two, and please check your inboxes for a message from John, so you can pick your prizes!
Here are smart Dollar Store organizing hacks you can use to organize your home on a budget.
Dollar Tree Home Decor Ideas you can get on the cheap to transform your home today! You’ll love these easy crafts that will impress your guests with your style.
When you're ready to get your home in order, dollar store organization ideas will help you do so on a budget. And we have lots of ideas for you.
Displaying beautiful flowers to brighten up your home decor can be more affordable when you use supplies from your local Dollar Tree. Enjoy using your DIY decor skills to create these stunning DIY Dollar Tree vases. This is a great Dollar Tree craft.
Want dollar tree farmhouse decor at home? Try these dollar tree ideas and improve your home design on a small budget.
Declutter your home with these dollar store organization hacks! Use items from Dollarama and Dollar Tree to organize your whole home!
If you're here it's because you want to know 33 different ways to craft with Dollar Tree's Jenga Blocks (Tumbling Tower blocks), and I can't wait to show you these
These DIY Christmas ornaments are easy crafts for kids to make and elegant enough for adults to admire. They're customizable and make great DIY gifts.
Currently, I’m obsessed with rustic home designs. The natural style feels so cozy, especially when displaying handmade crafts all around the house. And you know what the rustic vibe is best for? Christmas! You can’t
Add some coastal charm to your home with these Dollar Store Coastal DIY Home Decor Ideas. From shell candles to nautical wreaths, there are plenty of ideas.
Are you looking for your next big product for all your customers to love? These Dollar Store crafts to sell will be perfect!
Want dollar tree farmhouse decor at home? Try these dollar tree ideas and improve your home design on a small budget.
Have fun making a DIY flower tealight! Use faux flower petals and recycled plastic spoons to create these beautiful flower tea lights. Transform a flameless tealight candle into stylish home decor. These flower tea light candles glow and flicker so beautifully, and they make great homemade decorations for parties or weddings! This post contains affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something we may earn a small commission which helps us run this website. How to Make a Flower Tealight Have fun making a flower tealight candle! This DIY craft is perfect for spring and summer decor. ScissorsGlue
Everyone will want to know where you got these cute farmhouse decor pieces. You don't have to tell them they are Dollar Tree Farmhouse DIYs!
The ultimate list of the 50 best Dollar Tree items to hack, transform and makeover! #dollartree #dollartreefinds #dollarstorediy #dollartreemakeovers #dollartreestorage #dollartreehaul #dollartreeprojects #dollartreecrafts #dollartreehacks