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Make It Monday Week 3: Tea Cosies, Dishcloths & Pantry Wins for a Handmade Christmas

19/1/2026

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One of my favourite things about the Handmade Christmas Challenge is how plans naturally evolve as the weeks roll on. Week 3 of Make It Monday was a beautiful mix of crafting, preserving, and a little bit of bartering – the kind of gentle progress that makes handmade gifting feel joyful rather than rushed.

It all started with a simple question from my friend Wendy: “Could you make me a tea cosy?” Of course I could. I worked up a sample first, and as luck would have it, it fit her teapot perfectly. That’s always a good feeling. I then used some of Wendy’s own yarn to make a second tea cosy in deeper green tones that will suit her kitchen beautifully.

Rather than money changing hands, we traded – the finished tea cosy for some pretty yarn Wendy knew she wouldn’t use. Even better? I already have a plan for that yarn. Handmade Christmas win all round.
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​Once I was in tea cosy mode, I kept going. I pulled out the prettiest soft pink cotton and made another cosy, this time adding crocheted flowers and little leaves for extra charm. I finished it off with one of my favourite wooden buttons, and honestly, I just love how it turned out and I know who it is going to, and I know she will just love it too (and no photo, but I'll a photo after it's been sent).

There was a bit of cotton left over, so I crocheted a matching dishcloth. I’m a big fan of pairing gifts like this – a main handmade item with a small, useful extra makes the gift feel thoughtful and complete.
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Dishcloths became the go-to “sitting activity” this week. Joy had gifted me some gorgeous cotton yarns, and I’ve been slowly working my way through them. I found a new crochet dishcloth pattern and adapted it to suit my crochet ability (because that’s how real-life crafting works).

Once I had the rhythm, I kept going:
• Five dishcloths finished in one run
• Three more made as a gift for a friend, two in burnt orange and one in a softer orange shade. They aren’t colours I’d usually choose, but as it turned out, I had the perfect yarn in my stash. That’s the magic of using what you already have.
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I also started work on the kitchen towels. I have a few to do for the present box, so starting early when I can takes the pressure off. I love the little wooden buttons, they say "handmade with love" and are so cute.
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A hanging kitchen towel for the present box.
Handmade Christmas isn’t just crafts; Handmade Christmas also includes the things that fill our pantries and freezers.

This week:
• The vanilla extract that’s steeping got a good shake
• The canning mats and pot holders I’d cut out earlier were sewn and finished
• I used frozen Costco mince to can 7 quart jars of meatballs and 15 pints of mince for the pantry
• A quadruple batch of bolognaise sauce went into the freezer, giving us six easy meals ready to go

These are gifts to our future selves – and they absolutely count.

​I’ve collected a large glass jar ready to start strawberry vinegar. I’m hoping strawberries come down in price soon so I can get it underway. I already have some beautiful 500 ml dark amber bottles ready for decanting and gifting when it’s done.

And a timely reminder from Wendy: it’s time to set up my MBGS book so I can track what I actually make this year compared to what I planned. Keeping a simple record helps me stay motivated and realistic – and it’s incredibly satisfying to see progress in black and white as well as in the present box.
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110 meatballs ready to go into the oven to bake before pressure canning
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15 pints mince and 6 jars meatballs ready for the pantry shelf (we ate 1 jar of meatballs!)
​That’s Make It Monday Week 3 done and dusted – steady, satisfying, and very on brand for a calmer Handmade Christmas.

How are you going with your gifts?

What have you made this week?

Jump into the comments and share – your progress might be exactly the encouragement someone else needs today 💕
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My 2026 Handmade Christmas Plan

15/1/2026

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A gentle, month-by-month guide to finishing calm, on budget, and on time
Every year, I make a list of the gifts I want to create for Christmas. It’s my anchor. That list keeps me organised, stops the last-minute panic, and reminds me that a handmade Christmas is absolutely achievable when it’s planned gently.

But for 2026, I’ve gone one step further.

Instead of one long list, I’ve broken my handmade Christmas plan down month by month. It’s not written in concrete — it will be flipped, flapped, adjusted, and tweaked as the year goes on — but it gives me a clear guide for what to make, and when. That clarity is what keeps things calm.

The idea is simple: work with the year, not against it.

Why a monthly plan works
Some gifts make sense early. Others are better suited to certain seasons. Food gifts need time to mature. Craft projects fit better into cooler months. Laying everything out across the year helps me:
• avoid rushing
• use what I already have
• keep within my gift budget
• finish properly, not frantically
It also makes the whole process more enjoyable. I always know what I’m focusing on, without feeling pressured to do everything at once.

Starting with foodie gifts
January and February are perfect for foodie-style gifts — especially the ones that benefit from time.

So far, I’ve started 1.5 litres of vanilla extract. By December it will be rich, fragrant, and absolutely gorgeous. I’ve also started thinking about flavoured vinegars. Strawberries are on sale at my greengrocer this week, so 500 g will become strawberry-infused vinegar for food hampers. I already have apple cider vinegar in the pantry, so the only cost will be the strawberries — about $3.

That’s the kind of gift I love: thoughtful, useful, and budget-friendly.

In February, when the zucchini are prolific and we’re sick of eating them (and I’ve preserved enough for the year), I’ll make zucchini pickles. By December, the flavours will have mellowed and melded into something beautifully piquant and ready to eat.
And so it continues, month by month.

Planning crafts around the seasons
I’ve deliberately planned most of the knitting, sewing, and crocheting for the cooler months. That just makes sense. When it’s too cold to work outside, the days are shorter, and the nights are longer, handcrafting fits naturally into life.

That doesn’t mean I’m not touching those projects now — some are already started — but the bulk of that making will happen when it feels right, not forced.

My 2026 Handmade Christmas Working Plan
You’re very welcome to work along with me, or use this as inspiration to create your own plan.

January
Make:
Vanilla extract, coffee syrups, infused vinegars; etch jars for jams and pickles and bottles for the vanilla and syrups.

February
Make:
Mustard, relish, pickles

March
Make:
Soaps, bath gel, soap sacks, shower pouffs, embellished face washers

April
Make:
Kitchen towels, bowl cosies, pot holders, canning mats, aprons, jar openers

May
Make:
Dishcloths, needle cases, scrunchie bags, Edith bags, peg bags

June
Make:
Card packs, stationery gifts

July
Make:
Finish half-done projects; Christmas decorations

August
Make:
Bible bags, prayer journals, garden planners, 

September
Make:
Napkin holders, cutlery rolls, tea cosies, scosies

October
Make:
Jams, marmalade, flavoured coffee beans

November
Make:
Baking — Christmas cakes and puddings, shortbread , caramels and toffees, flavoured popcorn and nuts, Nuts'n'Bolts, White Christmas (these can all be made ahead and frozen), any remaining items, and assembling hampers; etch the bottles for the vanilla and vinegars and decant.
(Tip: keep an eye out for sales at the start of December for any last-minute needs.)

December — Celebrate
Make: Nothing. It's all done for 2026, so take a break and enjoy the celebrations. We'll start again for 2027 on Boxing Day.

A guide, not a rulebook
This plan is exactly that — a guide. It gives structure without pressure. Some months will be more productive than others. Some projects may move forward or backward. That’s okay.

Having everything laid out month by month also supports one of the core ideas behind Handmade Christmas: using what you already have. When you know what’s coming up, it’s much easier to shop your stash, plan supplies sensibly, and avoid unnecessary spending.

If you’re someone who loves to plan (like me), outlining what to make and when to make it can be the difference between hoping for a handmade Christmas and actually having one.

Gently. Calmly. Without stress.
And always — on budget.
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Make It Monday Week 2

12/1/2026

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This week was mostly a planning week for me — and honestly, that’s one of my favourite parts of the Handmade Christmas Challenge.

I did give in to a little temptation during the Boxing Day sales and bought some beautiful fabrics at $4 a metre, marked down from $30. I was thrilled. That’s cheaper than op-shop sheets or doona covers, and the quality is gorgeous.

The big difference this year? Every piece had to have a purpose.

A few very pretty bolts were put back on the shelf because I simply couldn’t think of what I’d make with them. And you know what? That felt really good. Now the stack of fabric at home is fully allocated — no guilt, no “one day I’ll use that.” My goal this year is to mostly use what I already have, without buying anything else.

Over the weekend I cut out some canning mats, matching pot holders, and a few kitchen towel toppers. To mix things up a bit, I downloaded some free patterns and templates from AccuQuilt. If I decide they’re keepers, I’ll transfer them onto plastic so they last longer and are quicker to trace and cut in future.
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I also downloaded a free pattern from Spotlight to make fabric Christmas ornaments. They’ll be perfect for using up scraps as I go through the year — because my plan is simple: no scraps left by December.

What Have I Been Making?
I’ve already started two bottles of vanilla extract. If you’re planning on making vanilla (or other flavoured extracts), start now. It may feel early, but they need time to mature. Most extracts need at least six weeks, but the longer they sit, the better they are. Starting now doesn’t cost a cent extra — and it’s another gift crossed off the list early.
During the Boxing Day sales I also picked up five iron-on transfers marked down to $2 each (from $7.99). This year, I’ve set myself two rules for anything new that comes into the house:
• Have a plan for it
• Use it immediately, so it doesn’t disappear into the “I’ll do that later” pile
​

So on Sunday afternoon, I washed and ironed five little cotton bags I’d picked up for $1 each on clearance, and spent half an hour ironing the transfers onto them. I love how they turned out. They’ll be part of my gift wrap this Christmas — practical, reusable, and pretty.
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​I also restocked my work basket with tea towels and yarn so I can easily pick up some knitting or crocheting while I relax. On top of the pile are the Christmas tea towels Hannah picked up, and I’ve been quietly working on those whenever I have a few spare minutes.
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Made pineapple, corn & black bean salsa for fajitas on Wednesday and it was so delicious. My recipe makes a huge 3 litre bowl full, so there was plenty leftover (and it is even better the next day) for lunch on Thursday when it was so hot. I opened a packet of corn chips, spooned salsa into little rice bowls and let everyone help themselves. It was nice to have something chilled on such a hot day (at lunchtime it was 36C).

I had a good laugh when Sareena said there was no way she was starting this early. But I love getting things done ahead of time. Starting early means I can take my time, enjoy the process, and avoid that frantic rush at the end of the year.

Slow, steady, and handmade — that’s exactly how I want this Christmas to feel.

What have you been making this week?
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Handmade Christmas 2026: The Plan That Makes It Possible

5/1/2026

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A handmade Christmas doesn’t happen by accident. It happens because of one simple thing: a plan.

If you’ve ever reached December full of good intentions—half-finished projects, fabric pulled out, recipes bookmarked—you already know this to be true. Without a plan, time slips away, enthusiasm fades, and suddenly it’s Christmas Eve and the shops are calling your name.
Handmade Christmas 2026 is about changing that story.

By starting in January, you give yourself the greatest gift of all: time. Time to make things slowly and enjoyably. Time to use what you already have. Time to spread the work across the year instead of cramming it into the final frantic weeks before Christmas.

And most importantly, time to finish.

A plan turns a handmade Christmas from a hopeful idea into a calm, achievable reality. It answers the questions that cause stress later on:
Who am I making for?
What am I making?
What supplies do I need?
When does it need to be finished?

Once those decisions are made on paper, everything else becomes easier.

The Handmade Christmas plan isn’t about crafting every spare moment or filling your house with half-made projects. It’s about intentional making. Choosing gifts that are useful or consumable. Gifts that will be enjoyed, appreciated, and then—when they’re used up—won’t clutter cupboards or need dusting or storing.

Think pantry gifts that disappear happily. Kitchen textiles that get used every week. Small handmade items that quietly become part of someone’s everyday life.

The plan also lets you work with the year, not against it. Bigger, more complex projects are started early when motivation is high and time is plentiful. Simpler, quicker projects are saved for later months. Edible gifts with long shelf lives are made first; fresh items are left closer to Christmas. Nothing is rushed. Nothing is last-minute.

Another powerful part of planning is visibility. When your gift list is written down—who it’s for, when it’s needed, when it will be wrapped—you can see progress as it happens. Each finished gift gets wrapped, labelled, and put aside. Each crossed-off item builds momentum and confidence.

And yes, the plan makes it easier to stick to a budget. Listing supplies for each gift quickly shows what you already have and what you genuinely need. It keeps spending intentional and prevents those “quick craft shop trips” that quietly blow the budget.

Handmade Christmas 2026 isn’t about perfection. It’s about purpose. About choosing to give thoughtfully, make calmly, and enjoy the process just as much as the result.

If you’ve ever wanted a handmade Christmas—but thought you didn’t have the time—this is your reminder: you do. You just need a plan.

Start now. One list. One decision. One gift at a time.

By the time December arrives, you won’t be rushing. You’ll be ready—and enjoying Christmas exactly the way it was meant to be.
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Make It Monday Week 1

4/1/2026

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Welcome to Make It Monday 2026 — your weekly place to pause, create, and share what you’re making as you work your way through a calm, organised, Handmade Christmas.
Make It Monday is all about getting ahead gently. It’s not about perfection, pressure, or producing a mountain of gifts overnight. It’s about choosing to start early, planning thoughtfully, and enjoying the process of making meaningful presents for the people on your list.

Every Monday throughout 2026, Make It Monday is your invitation to:
  • Share what you’ve been making (or planning to make) for Christmas
  • Celebrate small wins — one gift, one step, one idea at a time
  • Get inspired by what others in the community are creating
  • Stay motivated without the end-of-year rush

Whether you’re sewing, knitting, crocheting, baking, preserving, crafting, painting, woodworking, or creating in any other way, Make It Monday is for you. Handmade Christmas looks different in every home — and that’s exactly what makes this space so special.

Starting early means choices. It means time to change your mind, try new ideas, use what you already have, and spread the cost and effort across the year. Instead of scrambling in November, you can enjoy December knowing your gifts are ready — wrapped in love, intention, and time.

Make It Monday is also about planning with purpose. Making gifts for everyone on your list doesn’t have to be overwhelming when you break it down into small, manageable steps. One project this week. Another next month. Before you know it, Christmas is sorted — calmly and creatively.

So each Monday, pop in and tell us:
  • What are you making this week?
  • What have you finished?
  • What’s on your Handmade Christmas list?

Big projects, small projects, half-finished ideas, and quiet planning weeks are all welcome here.

Let’s make 2026 the year we enjoy a Handmade Christmas — without the rush, without the stress, and with plenty of joy along the way. 
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Handmade Christmas 2026: Start Now, Finish Calm, Give with Heart, Stay on Budget

26/12/2025

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Who doesn’t love receiving a handmade gift, made especially for them?

And honestly—who doesn’t love giving one?

I adore homemade gifts, especially those that are useful or consumable. They’re enjoyed while they last, and when they’ve been eaten, drunk, or used up—there’s nothing left to clutter cupboards, nothing to dust or store, nothing to feel guilty about later. Truly the perfect gift.

So… have you taken up the challenge to have a handmade Christmas?

​A little history (and why this works)
The very first Cheapskates Club Handmade Christmas Challenge kicked off back in July 2013, and it was a huge success. Gifts were lovingly made, thoughtfully given, and Christmas that year felt calmer, more meaningful, and far less expensive.

Two years ago, I decided to go all in with a completely handmade Christmas. Not only was it a success—it was a whole year of enjoyable crafting. Best of all? Everything came from my stash, so it cost nothing. (You can read more about that experience here → URL placeholder.)

With Christmas only 12 short months away, now is exactly the right time to begin again.

If you’re going to make the gifts you give this year, you must start now. Those months fly by. Blink, and suddenly it’s December. Blink again, and it’s Christmas Eve—and you’re standing in the shops, desperately searching for anything to put under the tree.

If you want to be finished by 1 December 2026, relaxed and smugly organised, then January is where it starts.

Handmade Christmas 2026 is officially starting! 🎄
After the success of the last first two Handmade Christmas challenges (2023 and 2024), I was asked to keep it going—and of course, we are.

Yes, we. Because together we can have a beautiful, meaningful, handmade Christmas in 2026. Starting early ensures:
• gifts get finished
• budgets stay intact
• stash gets used up
• stress stays low
But none of that happens without a plan.

Without a plan, we’re just crafting and hoping things magically turn into Christmas gifts. Hope is not a strategy. A plan is.

Tools & Resources (save these!)
• 2026 Handmade Christmas Chat
• Christmas Gifts You Can Make
• ​Fantastic Edible Christmas Gifts
• ​Gorgeous Gift Hamper Ideas
• Handmade Christmas Gift Planner
​
The Handmade Gift Plan (so far!)
This is my working list—chosen carefully so everything can be made using supplies I already have. Remember, 2026 is also a Use It Up year.

Sewn, stitched & practical gifts
Aprons • Bag Clips • Button Jars • Edith Bags • Bowl Cosies • Canning Mats • Gloverlies • Daisy Dishcloths • Handy Kitchen Towels • Calico Towel Toppers • Needle Cases • Packet Tissue Covers • Playing Card Holders • Pot Holders • Scrunchie Bags • Shoulder Protectors • Bible Bag • Prayer Journal • Tea Cup Pin Cushions • Napkin Holders • Cutlery Rolls • Tea Cosies • Cross-stitched Hand Towels • Food Covers (6 sets) • Etched Jam Jars • Etched Glass Sets • Lingerie Bags • Shoe Bags • Shoulder Covers • Covered Coat Hangers • Knitted Dishcloths • Scosies • Food Covers • Playing Card Holders• Seed Boxes • Duchess Sets • Scrunchie Bags • Pan Protectors • Bunting

Paper, craft & personal
Personalised stationery sets • Card Packs • Monogrammed Travel Cups • Memory Books • Christmas Albums• Bunting

Bath & body
Soaps & Soap Sacks • Shower Pouffs • Embellished handtowels • Sets of Face Scrubbies • Trimmed Face Washers

Edible & consumable gifts
Vanilla Extract • Prepared Mustard • Tomato Relish
Herb Vinegar • Strawberry Vinegar • Flavoured Coffee Beans
Orange Marmalade • Raspberry Jam • Ginger Beer Syrup • Choc Orange Slices • Chocolate spoons • Chocolate Coffee Beans • Iced Coffee Syrup • Zucchini Pickles • Mini Fruit Cakes • Shortbread • Spice sets

The Printable Planner (your secret weapon)
I’ve created a printable planner based on what’s worked beautifully for me over the last three years—and I’m happy to share it. I've already filled mine out and stuck it in my gift book.
• Prints on A4, landscape because it gives me more room to write - the more information the better when it comes to gift giving.  ​
• Space for who, what, supplies, budget, event, due date
• Big enough to write everything (because details matter!)

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Gift Planner
First-time Handmade Christmas? Start here
1. List everything using the planner: who, what, supplies, budget, due date, wrap date.
2. Order by complexity. Big projects first (quilts, coats), small ones later (dishcloths).
3. Stocktake your supplies. Fabric, elastic, paper, dye, beads, patterns—check now.
4. Match supplies to gifts so nothing blows the budget unexpectedly.
5. Schedule regular making time—daily or weekly. Waiting time counts too!
6. Finish properly: wrap, label, and store each gift as it’s completed.
7. Batch-make whenever possible. Assembly-line crafting saves time, money, and sanity.

Ready to begin?
If Christmas 2026 is going to be your first handmade Christmas—or your calmest yet—start today. Print the planner. Make the list. Pull out the stash.
By the time December arrives, you’ll be done, relaxed, and enjoying Christmas instead of racing toward it.
Let’s do this—together. 🎄✂️🧵
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    Why a Handmade Christmas?

    Handmade Christmas is about creating meaningful gifts without overspending, using what you already have to enjoy a calm, affordable Christmas the Cheapskates way.

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