When I was a kid in the 1960's -- a time quickly receding into ancient history, somewhere on a list with 1820 -- lots of those stars were made with strips of colored paper. Usually two colors were used for each star. Sometimes they were dipped in paraffin (wax here in the US) and sometimes glitter and such was added. I was able to learn the first two basket weaves but never had anyone who would take the time to SLOWLY teach me the rest. People that knew how to do it, did it very fast and they got faster with the curls in the middle. I have not seen any of these stars for years. When I remember them, commercially made fluffy ribbon bows -- shiny ribbon impaled upon a plastic spike -- were just becoming common. I think these commercial products were partly responsible for edging out the paper stars. Thank you so much for showing us how these were done.
I also dip mine in paraffin and throw mica glitter on them while they're still wet. We didn't dip them on the video due to time, plus, I keep my wax in a modern crock pot. Not too early anerican, lol!
This was such a nice video! I love Kandye’s “lessons”, and her teaching Justine much like a mother would teach a daughter, that (in the story) Justine never had. And in teaching Justine, she teaches us💕
Hello from Central Florida! Justine, please don't sell yourself short. You are a great lady. You are kind and considerate to people. You are poised. You make and keep a warm, cozy and clean home. You are a wonderful cook. I agree with your friend Anne. Very little waste in times past. I think it's only since the 1980s that most people became wasteful. I think we need to go back to those ways. I'd love to see a tutorial on how to make this star! Maybe it can be a good craft for my grandchildren!
I went to Salem College founded in 1772 by the Moravians in Salem, NC!! Made those stars, the beeswax candles, the molasses cookies and the Love feast buns.
For Justine not being able to “read very well” she’s doing an amazing job. My great grandfather was the oldest son of sharecroppers and he stopped going to school in the 3rd grade. Up until the day he died (2019). He studied the dictionary and when he turned 90 he got his GED
My grandfather (born 1901) was about the same. He had 17 brothers and sisters. They lived in tents growing up. Quit school in second grade to work. He could only write his name.
You are definitely a most elegant lady, Justine, and I love this story line!! I’m from a small farm in Mississippi and growing up we would walk through the woods and collect pine cones and holly and ivy to decorate our mantle at Christmas. The house smelled so wonderfully! Also, there might be some berries that are indigenous to your area that could provide some colors to your decor! Merry Christmas from Mississippi!!
@@explodingkitten3331 As a matter of fact we do! It was my grandfather’s land which was passed to my mom (she was an only child) and now to my brother and I.
Hiya fellow Mississippian. 😊 We have a small farm on family land as well. We also decorate with pinecones and with privet limbs when they put on the berries.
I loved this episode. I loved hearing Kandye's people were from Germany. Ah, yes, the simple days where their American heritage was young and people brought their customs to this wonderful country. I love this about America and I am happy you included it! It shows that the things that we are so familiar with now, didn't necessarily exist for everybody back then, but people found joy in sharing their traditions with each other. This was lovely, thank you Justine and Kandye!
I am Addicted to this Channel - Such A Sweet and Fun Story Line And I Adore The History! The Cooking and Baking is great too. LOVE that Star! Thanks for the work and effort to bring this to us! ❤️👍
This video just warms my heart. I remember my mother and grandmother taught me how to make the stars when I was a kid. It just brought me back. Thank you Kandye for showing how to make the stars.
I don't know why this made me tear up. Just thinking how wonderful to have such a friend and how sweet you are about compliments. This video seems to cross over between real life and story.
I love Moravian stars. I’m going to try copying what Candy did here at home. Especially love the tidbit about sugar cones being wrapped in blue paper. It makes me wonder if that could be a reason friends who have Eastern European heritage have blue stars in their Christmas decorations.
Your new boss, your friend is certainly perfect for her role You and her are very good together It was very interesting I hope you and Ron have a Merry Christmas. God bless y'all 🌲⭐💩♥️😍
I have heard of these beautiful paper stars, the Polish people make something much different, theirs look like sea urchins , and of course Origami comes to mind, thanks so much for sharing !
I live in Germany and we have a lot of those stars, also bigger ones, hanging in the windows, most of them glowing red or yellow. I always wanted to know how to make such a star by yourself, thank you 👍🏻
A delightful glimpse of a lost world..... How the colonials lived.....my own people were English colonials here in Australia and I often think about them and their tenacity to live their lives, raise children,work with only the very basics. However they did, they survived and thrived and here were are to prove the point.
I have made these and they grace my tree each year. My town of Nazareth, PA was founded by the Moravians. You made a lovely star. We also have them made from stained glass.
@@explodingkitten3331 No. Just happen to live in a town founded by William Penn's daughter and then sold to the Moravians. I'm actually Catholic which is a minority here.
Love your videos! This one I really enjoyed. We live very close to "Old Salem" in Winston Salem ,NC. Lots of Moravian history there. Beautiful Moravian stars and wonderful thin spice cookies.
Wonderful gifts for Grand Lady Justine! Hope you master the art of making the stars Justine. They are beautiful! Look for some natural pigments to prepare for dying paper to make different colored stars. God bless y'all!
Justine would know about saving paper. Future gift wrapping. Cut it for writing paper, wadding for ammo, covering windows in winter for extra insulation, making seasonal decorations, temporary fix in winter for chinking falling out (or old rags), packing for sending gifts, toys (paper birds, whistles), signs, notices, fire starting, so much more... Twine for wrapping things, measuring, gardening, hanging things, cutting and charging for spark catchers, again, so much more.
@@chaotic_crafter Wadding is for shotguns and muzzle loaders. For modern shotguns, wadding is generally plastic and keeps the shot separated from the gunpowder within the shell. Olden times for muzzle loaders (like muskets) they used paper wadding that was pushed down with a rod. First the powder, then the wad, then the ball or shot.
Excellent! I really enjoyed your video today. Enjoying simple pleasures like making paper decorations and possessing things we take for granted today like spices was a nice reminder of days gone by. I also want to thank you so much for mentioning the French & Indian Wars and making a slight mention of the unfortunate term "savages" ...you are staying true to history; as uncomfortable as it might be. Thank you for having the courage to go there. I wish there was more mention of our Native American history on your channel as well as some others that I watch. It doesn't go away just because we don't talk about it. The whole story is not being truthfully told when a major portion of it is left out. Love your channel. 💖
I gre up loving history and my Dad loved learning Indian lore. He used to make the most beautiful moccasins. Ste. Genevieve is full of Osage history. I wish we had some natives still in our area. It would be wonderful to have them in our story.
@@explodingkitten3331 I think this pandemic has taught us how to stop taking things for granted...everyday items are not as easy to come by like they used to be. No, I am not Native American. I live in Kentucky where we have a tragically dark and bloody history with our Native Americans {Shawnee, Cherokee, and Iroquois) during the 18th and 19th centuries. Our history cannot be told without them.
@@mattieb7348 my ancestors who came from Germany lived next door to Daniel Boone in Berks County PA. My 5 times great grandfather followed Boone everywhere he went and went with him to Kentucky. My 5 times great grandfather, George Stucker and his son. George Jr. were both killed by the Shawnee in 1781 at Grant's Station KY (near present day Paris, KY). They were both in the militia.
People made their own dye back then,out of berries and other things. all dyes came from natural sources, such as insects, roots, or minerals. Producing them was difficult and expensive. In 1856, an 18-year-old English chemist, William Henry Perkin, accidentally discovered one of the first synthetic dyes. ... He called the dye mauveine.
That star is so pretty! When I was a little girl, the girl club I belonged to taught us how to make Juleheter - Danish paper hearts. They are strips of paper woven into heart shaped baskets to hold candy on the Christmas tree.
If my memory serves me any at all, I believe that your paper could also be used to temporarily patch a broken pane of glass in your wonderful windows. I believe the paper would have been oiled first to protect from weather.
I went to University with a lovely girl who was of Swiss extraction, and she made me a star like this. I still have it, and often wondered how it was made. Please get Candy to do a tutorial!!! I'd love to make one of my own! Thank you so much for sharing this video, Justine! ~Janet in Canada
These are some of your first videos? They are precious! We still teach kids how to make these stars in the classroom. We teach them mostly to 5th Grade awesome project and yes, it keeps the boys occupied for a while.😅
What a lovely gift from your childhood friend... I wasn’t aware of Jessica’s background, living in a convent. I knew she was employed by her cousin and lived with them before she married Ron. The round box that your gifts were mailed in also looks very pretty and maybe your could use/make something handy or stylish out of it. I enjoyed Kandye’s Paper Star demonstration too! ♥️👍🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Beautiful craft ladies! Hello from New York State. If they grew beets or spinach/greens back then those strips could be put in the water beets were cooked in and the paper would take on the color and dry the strips. I don't know if they had those vegetables available back then.
I only remember making paper strips and attaching the ends to make rings. Then keep attaching till you had the desired length to put on the tree or someplace else. I really like the paper star. Will see if I can make one lol.
I also loved the Moravian Star that Kandye made. I think I will make some and hang them up even after Christmas. I might even make some pastel color ones for Easter and hang on front porch -God Willing. ( The tutorial takes about 20 + minutes) I think with Ron and Justine's current budget it would be difficult to repeat or do tutorials. *It might be great to see more on their plot regarding Kandye and the river rat vs tutorial, due to limited budget. And....Ron and the deer. What will they cook with the deer he caught, etc? ▪︎Found a great tutorial on UA-cam "Moravian Star tutorial"- UA-cam. It's a good one. Step by step and precise. Just in case anyone is interested.
"I know everything!" While smiles creepily.
It's a very small town, lol!
The saloon, general store, post office, her place is so many things!! Of course she knows everything 😏
@@cabincrafts2239 Awe, Hi Kandye! I think you're just lovely. Thank you for being a part of these videos ☺️
@@heatherofthemountains thank you Heather. You're very kind!
@@cabincrafts2239 I got nothing on you though! YOU are a sweetheart ❤️
When I was a kid in the 1960's -- a time quickly receding into ancient history, somewhere on a list with 1820 -- lots of those stars were made with strips of colored paper. Usually two colors were used for each star. Sometimes they were dipped in paraffin (wax here in the US) and sometimes glitter and such was added.
I was able to learn the first two basket weaves but never had anyone who would take the time to SLOWLY teach me the rest. People that knew how to do it, did it very fast and they got faster with the curls in the middle. I have not seen any of these stars for years. When I remember them, commercially made fluffy ribbon bows -- shiny ribbon impaled upon a plastic spike -- were just becoming common. I think these commercial products were partly responsible for edging out the paper stars.
Thank you so much for showing us how these were done.
I also dip mine in paraffin and throw mica glitter on them while they're still wet. We didn't dip them on the video due to time, plus, I keep my wax in a modern crock pot. Not too early anerican, lol!
This was such a nice video! I love Kandye’s “lessons”, and her teaching Justine much like a mother would teach a daughter, that (in the story) Justine never had. And in teaching Justine, she teaches us💕
Hello from Central Florida!
Justine, please don't sell yourself short. You are a great lady. You are kind and considerate to people. You are poised. You make and keep a warm, cozy and clean home. You are a wonderful cook. I agree with your friend Anne.
Very little waste in times past. I think it's only since the 1980s that most people became wasteful. I think we need to go back to those ways.
I'd love to see a tutorial on how to make this star! Maybe it can be a good craft for my grandchildren!
I wish I was in Florida right now. It's cold and miserable in Toronto.
@@explodingkitten3331 And, I'd switch in a heartbeat! Miss the change of seasons 😪 . I grew up in NY and actually miss the snow ❄.
So glad that Kandy gets to be in your videos.She does so well with you.I’d love to see more of her.
I went to Salem College founded in 1772 by the Moravians in Salem, NC!! Made those stars, the beeswax candles, the molasses cookies and the Love feast buns.
For Justine not being able to “read very well” she’s doing an amazing job. My great grandfather was the oldest son of sharecroppers and he stopped going to school in the 3rd grade. Up until the day he died (2019). He studied the dictionary and when he turned 90 he got his GED
Good for your great grandpa!
My grandfather (born 1901) was about the same. He had 17 brothers and sisters. They lived in tents growing up. Quit school in second grade to work. He could only write his name.
I love listening to candy, she would be a great friend to all ❤️
You are definitely a most elegant lady, Justine, and I love this story line!! I’m from a small farm in Mississippi and growing up we would walk through the woods and collect pine cones and holly and ivy to decorate our mantle at Christmas. The house smelled so wonderfully! Also, there might be some berries that are indigenous to your area that could provide some colors to your decor! Merry Christmas from Mississippi!!
Does your family still own it?
@@explodingkitten3331 As a matter of fact we do! It was my grandfather’s land which was passed to my mom (she was an only child) and now to my brother and I.
Hiya fellow Mississippian. 😊 We have a small farm on family land as well. We also decorate with pinecones and with privet limbs when they put on the berries.
I'm from Bethlehem, PA and the Moravian stars hang on most porches during Christmas time.
I know! I would love to visit your town and also Old Salem, NC
Love this. Beautiful star she made
You're welcome!
I loved this episode. I loved hearing Kandye's people were from Germany. Ah, yes, the simple days where their American heritage was young and people brought their customs to this wonderful country. I love this about America and I am happy you included it! It shows that the things that we are so familiar with now, didn't necessarily exist for everybody back then, but people found joy in sharing their traditions with each other. This was lovely, thank you Justine and Kandye!
You're welcome! My peasure!
My grandmother lived through The Depression and she saved paper & twine too.
My grandmother saved EVERYTHING!
I am Addicted to this Channel - Such A Sweet and Fun Story Line And I Adore The History! The Cooking and Baking is great too. LOVE that Star! Thanks for the work and effort to bring this to us! ❤️👍
I enjoyed doing it!
It’s such a great tradition, those with more talents teaching newbies!
This video just warms my heart. I remember my mother and grandmother taught me how to make the stars when I was a kid. It just brought me back. Thank you Kandye for showing how to make the stars.
Wow, I had no idea pepper was such a premium item. And salt too! Look at all those beautiful gifts.
I don't know why this made me tear up. Just thinking how wonderful to have such a friend and how sweet you are about compliments. This video seems to cross over between real life and story.
Justine is Adorable, and I love the Tavern, and I love what Kandye* does there.
Cool I learned something new today, that’s been around along time.I love history.
Wow Kandye that is beautiful and quite the talent 💕thank you for sharing it with us!
My pleasure!
I love Moravian stars. I’m going to try copying what Candy did here at home. Especially love the tidbit about sugar cones being wrapped in blue paper. It makes me wonder if that could be a reason friends who have Eastern European heritage have blue stars in their Christmas decorations.
Your new boss, your friend is certainly perfect for her role You and her are very good together It was very interesting I hope you and Ron have a Merry Christmas. God bless y'all
🌲⭐💩♥️😍
Love this! Such a sweet friendship. What a beautiful star!
Thanks!
Enjoyed watching Candy making the star. Great history lesson. Love the videos.
Wow! She is very talented and you are a grand lady Justine ☺️
Thank you, and yes she is!
I have heard of these beautiful paper stars, the Polish people make something much different, theirs look like sea urchins , and of course Origami comes to mind, thanks so much for sharing !
I love the creativity of old cultures 🥰
I so look forward to your videos. Keep 'em coming.
I am definitely going to try to make Moravian stars for Christmas! Loved the video. You are a great lady Justine! Hello from 🇨🇦.
My mom grew up Moravian! I love that you are making these!
I live in Germany and we have a lot of those stars, also bigger ones, hanging in the windows, most of them glowing red or yellow. I always wanted to know how to make such a star by yourself, thank you 👍🏻
A delightful glimpse of a lost world.....
How the colonials lived.....my own people were
English colonials here in Australia and I often
think about them and their tenacity to live
their lives, raise children,work with only the very basics.
However they did, they survived and thrived and
here were are to prove the point.
I have made these and they grace my tree each year. My town of Nazareth, PA was founded by the Moravians. You made a lovely star. We also have them made from stained glass.
R u Amish?
@@explodingkitten3331 No. Just happen to live in a town founded by William Penn's daughter and then sold to the Moravians. I'm actually Catholic which is a minority here.
I love anything Moravian! Love the glass ones too!
Just love how a vehicle drives by at 2:27 lol.
Oh what fun, making a beautiful star!! What a wonderful surprise for Justine!!
Thanks! It was fun!
Another fantastic video! I love this storyline. I’m going to find a video to teach me to make the stars, Kandye makes this look soooooo easy! ❤️
I’m here! (In cold west Wales, UK 🏴)
Cold here too Alex ❤⛄
We’ve been waiting for you for so long! What took you so long? 😃🤣
Hello Alex!
I'm from Indonesia. God bless you Justine 💞💞🤗
Wow! What a beautiful piece of history. Thank you
What a thoughtful gift! All the essentials and special treats too. The paper star was incredible. Thanks.
That was so beautiful.
Jasmine, you have a great friend.
That was so beautiful relationship between you both.
How pretty that little star is...I would like to learn how to make those, even for bows. Thank you for another wonderful video ☺️
Thanks! I'll see if I can get them to let me do a slower instructional video.
Love your videos! This one I really enjoyed. We live very close to "Old Salem" in Winston Salem ,NC. Lots of Moravian history there. Beautiful Moravian stars and wonderful thin spice cookies.
Wonderful gifts for Grand Lady Justine!
Hope you master the art of making the stars Justine. They are beautiful!
Look for some natural pigments to prepare for dying paper to make different colored stars.
God bless y'all!
Just beautiful! Thank you Lasses!
I love to see you open packages and gifts.
That star is wonderful. Yes, we need a detailed tutorial on how to make them!
Wow, loved the star she made!
I'm here, in NC Mountains...waiting. Cold here too.
Happy Holidays ALL!
Interesting! Would love to visit NC
Happy Holidays Marian
Loved watching the two of you! I wish I would have made it to the live stream. The star is beautiful! 😊
Thanks!
Justine would know about saving paper. Future gift wrapping. Cut it for writing paper, wadding for ammo, covering windows in winter for extra insulation, making seasonal decorations, temporary fix in winter for chinking falling out (or old rags), packing for sending gifts, toys (paper birds, whistles), signs, notices, fire starting, so much more... Twine for wrapping things, measuring, gardening, hanging things, cutting and charging for spark catchers, again, so much more.
Could you explain wadding for ammo? 🏴 here... I've never even seen a gun other than in the films lol
@@chaotic_crafter Wadding is for shotguns and muzzle loaders. For modern shotguns, wadding is generally plastic and keeps the shot separated from the gunpowder within the shell. Olden times for muzzle loaders (like muskets) they used paper wadding that was pushed down with a rod. First the powder, then the wad, then the ball or shot.
@@julien.4617 thanks Julie, that is really interesting. I would never have thought of this...
You are truely grand Justine!!!💗
She definitely made it look easy! Great job!
Excellent! I really enjoyed your video today. Enjoying simple pleasures like making paper decorations and possessing things we take for granted today like spices was a nice reminder of days gone by. I also want to thank you so much for mentioning the French & Indian Wars and making a slight mention of the unfortunate term "savages" ...you are staying true to history; as uncomfortable as it might be. Thank you for having the courage to go there. I wish there was more mention of our Native American history on your channel as well as some others that I watch. It doesn't go away just because we don't talk about it. The whole story is not being truthfully told when a major portion of it is left out. Love your channel. 💖
I grew up in Soviet union, I take no consumer goods for granted. You are Native?
I gre up loving history and my Dad loved learning Indian lore. He used to make the most beautiful moccasins. Ste. Genevieve is full of Osage history. I wish we had some natives still in our area. It would be wonderful to have them in our story.
@@explodingkitten3331
I think this pandemic has taught us how to stop taking things for granted...everyday items are not as easy to come by like they used to be. No, I am not Native American. I live in Kentucky where we have a tragically dark and bloody history with our Native Americans {Shawnee, Cherokee, and Iroquois) during the 18th and 19th centuries. Our history cannot be told without them.
@@cabincrafts2239 That would be awesome.
@@mattieb7348 my ancestors who came from Germany lived next door to Daniel Boone in Berks County PA. My 5 times great grandfather followed Boone everywhere he went and went with him to Kentucky. My 5 times great grandfather, George Stucker and his son. George Jr. were both killed by the Shawnee in 1781 at Grant's Station KY (near present day Paris, KY). They were both in the militia.
GREAT VIDEO! Love it Thank you!!
People made their own dye back then,out of berries and other things. all dyes came from natural sources, such as insects, roots, or minerals. Producing them was difficult and expensive. In 1856, an 18-year-old English chemist, William Henry Perkin, accidentally discovered one of the first synthetic dyes. ... He called the dye mauveine.
Wow, Justine sure made a good impression on that girl!
Something so simple and so beautiful...Keep those videos coming and Merry Christmas..🎄
Thank you, and a very merry Christmas to you!
That star is so pretty! When I was a little girl, the girl club I belonged to taught us how to make Juleheter - Danish paper hearts. They are strips of paper woven into heart shaped baskets to hold candy on the Christmas tree.
I've seen those. I like them too!
JulehJerter 😉💕
@@masharozalija9187 😊🧡🧡🎄
I’m so going to make some of these to decorate with this year! Thanks so much for sharing❤️🙏🏼🇺🇸
You're welcome!
try using 2 or 3 different colors of strips, we made some red white anb blue ones
You can also put dots of glue here and there and add different colors of glitter.
I bet they would look beautiful.
Kids should learn this at school.
@@SweeTeaNLemon That's an understatement, lol! Kids should be learning a lot of things in school, I totally agree! Old fashioned crafts are fun!
Those stars are absolutely gorgeous!
So beautiful! This was the first time I’ve heard you reference a convent.
That was very nice of a friend to send that ❤️
"I know everything!" Lol I go through your mail. 🤣
What a beautiful gift for you Justine. Thank you for another video from you and Ron
I'm a paper crafter. I would LOVE to see a tutorial on that Moravian star again, close up.🙂
I want to try this!
I will see if Ron and Justine will let me do a slower video.
Maybe Google a tutorial ( I will- luv'd the stars). Because I want to see more time spent on Kandye and the possum eater river rat.
@@selah7779 OH my gosh! That's too funny!
If my memory serves me any at all, I believe that your paper could also be used to temporarily patch a broken pane of glass in your wonderful windows. I believe the paper would have been oiled first to protect from weather.
Love the stars and how to make them. Thank you 🥰👍💐great series. Just found it recently.
I like your new boss, I hope you do a lot more videos with her
I went to University with a lovely girl who was of Swiss extraction, and she made me a star like this. I still have it, and often wondered how it was made. Please get Candy to do a tutorial!!! I'd love to make one of my own! Thank you so much for sharing this video, Justine! ~Janet in Canada
Moravian Star tutorial- UA-cam. It's a good one. Step by step and precise.
I love both of your channels
Pretty star and what a great gift.
A present wowza very nice of your old friend
Presents,so nice. Love that paper star,Kandye with a K. Happy Holidays!🎄
I love this instruction for the Moravian star! Want to try it! Merry Christmas
Love the Star!
very cool!....thanks for the lesson!
You're welcome!
These are some of your first videos? They are precious! We still teach kids how to make these stars in the classroom. We teach them mostly to 5th Grade awesome project and yes, it keeps the boys occupied for a while.😅
What a lovely gift from your childhood friend... I wasn’t aware of Jessica’s background, living in a convent. I knew she was employed by her cousin and lived with them before she married Ron. The round box that your gifts were mailed in also looks very pretty and maybe your could use/make something handy or stylish out of it. I enjoyed Kandye’s Paper Star demonstration too! ♥️👍🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
oh it would be fun if they made matching aprons to wear in the shoppe with that fabric - it does kind of match the curtains at the windows.
Beautiful craft ladies! Hello from New York State. If they grew beets or spinach/greens back then those strips could be put in the water beets were cooked in and the paper would take on the color and dry the strips. I don't know if they had those vegetables available back then.
Guess what they used to make the dye fast!
You're right! Definitely had beets back then. The paper would be a deep pink.
I only remember making paper strips and attaching the ends to make rings. Then keep attaching till you had the desired length to put on the tree or someplace else. I really like the paper star. Will see if I can make one lol.
There are slower UA-cam instructions out there I'm sure.
I disagree. She will not be canceled. We just love her and all of the people we have met.
Hello from The White Mountains in New Hampshire! Love the star craft!
Thank you!
Blessings 🎁💖 IM FROM GOFFSTOWN NH 💝🌟🇺🇸
Nice gift for Justine! Expensive during those days.
I use paper to roll tubes for weaving bowls, ornaments, trays, beads etc. It makes beautiful ornaments
Wow. That was such a good watch.
I also loved the Moravian Star that Kandye made. I think I will make some and hang them up even after Christmas. I might even make some pastel color ones for Easter and hang on front porch -God Willing.
( The tutorial takes about 20 + minutes)
I think with Ron and Justine's current budget it would be difficult to repeat or do tutorials.
*It might be great to see more on their plot regarding Kandye and the river rat vs tutorial, due to limited budget.
And....Ron and the deer. What will they cook with the deer he caught, etc?
▪︎Found a great tutorial on UA-cam "Moravian Star tutorial"- UA-cam. It's a good one. Step by step and precise. Just in case anyone is interested.
Love these videos 💜
Ok Ron spill the beans...what did you get Justine?
He shot her a fine buck ! Meat for her larder and a skin for making moccasins!
The leftover scraps of paper would make nice rolled beads
That is beautiful
So simple but so effective love the star
The star is beautiful!
Thanks!
It was funny hearing the sounds of the cars driving past
I know lol
Wow, that was beautiful! Gonna have to make them for the Christmas tree. Good video ladies.
Thanks!
@@cabincrafts2239 are you going too do anymore Christmas type videos? Just curious, thank you kandye!
@@patinabunker5340 I would love to, but Justine is the director and Ron Is the producer! We'll see!
I’m here too!
Qué hermosa manualidad.
Wiiiitccchhhh! That’s witchcraft what she was doing with that paper. 😂