As mentioned a few weeks ago, I'm the proud mama to a new blog. It's up and running now, so I wanted to link y'all to it.
« October 2008 | Main | December 2008 »
As mentioned a few weeks ago, I'm the proud mama to a new blog. It's up and running now, so I wanted to link y'all to it.
Posted at 01:51 PM in around town, green, other blogs | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
Thanksgiving is such a nice holiday. J and I had a great time cooking together, starting last night with the side dishes. Bo contributed, too, peeling the yams, pouring the sugar into the whipping cream, licking the beaters, feeding her sister crayons. It was magical.
Really. Slowing down to cook together and listing the many things we were thankful for as they came to mind throughout the day. Bo said she was thankful for Magpie. My heart melted faster than the butter in the mashed potatoes.
But the leftovers are in the fridge now. The kids are sleeping. The dishes are clean. Can we officially move on to Christmas?
Posted at 11:42 PM in Christmas, family, general musings, gifts, other blogs, sewing, tutorials | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
I know it's technically not even winter yet, but it sure feels like it.
The first
of delivery of this brilliant collection, East Meets West, will be available in
January. The assortment inspired by the lively
Japanese community in Brazil. The bold, vibrant graphics found in restaurants
and the streets are embodied in pieces like the Namazu (Japanese for catfish)
Graphic tee and the Ginko Leaf top and dress.
Posted at 12:07 AM | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
I've blogged about the amazing Nate and Mary Eberle, of aNeMoNe Handmade Paper Flowers before, but if you're like me, you just can't get enough of their beautiful work.
Posted at 11:41 PM in around town, Christmas, paper crafts | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)
I've said before that we're going for a "folk modern" look in our house. But we're such a long way from having all the projects finished and personality infused here, it's hard to say it looks like much of anything yet.
Posted at 11:52 PM in Christmas, other blogs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
OK, I should have written this post three months ago (maybe I did?), but I'm ready now to start knocking off my Christmas to-do list. More than ready. I have that poundy-in-my-heart desire to spend the next five weeks banging out the crafts. My friend Nissa suggested coffee, candy and illegal substances to power me through, and I told her as long as hot glue guns count as illegal substances I'm all set.
I'm not confident that it's going to be a 100 percent handmade Christmas this year, though, as originally planned. The clock is ticking and my freelance gigs are piling up. Plus, there's at least one cookbook on my wish list and I know J isn't about to write out all 1,080 recipes by hand.
So, drum roll please, here's Christmas Craft No. 1 ...
Felt dot garland!
This was inspired by a Martha Stewart project several years ago where she (or I should say, "her people") made garland out of string and those round stickers you use for garage sales.
Posted at 02:31 PM in artsy fartsy, Christmas, sewing, The HomeMaker | Permalink | Comments (13) | TrackBack (0)
Forgive me. I'm about to step on my soapbox. And it's all over a homemade play kitchen.
Posted at 02:01 AM in crafting with kids, general musings, gifts, green, other blogs, toys | Permalink | Comments (6) | TrackBack (0)
Take a tip from restaurants: distract the children with a set of Crayons and a paper placemat for coloring.
The paper placemat can simply be an 11-inch by 17-inch sheet of white computer paper. Or, drape long sheets of butcher paper over the “kids table” to serve as a doodle-able tablecloth.
To hold the Crayons, you’re going to turn an empty aluminum can, such as one that once held tomato paste or string beans, into a turkey.
Rinse and dry the can. If there are sharp edges around the rim, cover them with masking or electrical tape.
Cover the can with a scrap of fabric by applying glue to the can and rolling the fabric over it. Trim away any excess fabric.
Cut feathers from different colors of felt. Tip: wool felt is much easier to work with than craft felt. Yes, it’s more expensive, but you’ll only need a small amount for this project.
You can reinforce the feathers either by doubling up the felt and gluing the two pieces together or gluing a popsicle stick inside two layers. You also could make fan-like layers of feathers or use real feathers instead.
Now fold a small piece of brown felt in half and cut out two identical turkey heads. Cut one small wattle out of red felt and sandwich it in between the two brown turkey heads. Either glue or sew the heads together, leaving the neck area somewhat open so it can spread onto the can.
(Looks like I should have stitched up my jeans while I was at it.)
Posted at 03:27 AM in crafting with kids, The HomeMaker, tutorials | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)