Showing posts with label Arts and Crafts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arts and Crafts. Show all posts

Monday, October 12, 2015

Silly Notions & a Bunting for Birthday Girl


I am not big on going "over the top" on birthdays... but I wanted so badly to make something fun for our lil' Whitty's 1st birthday.

So... I made a Bunting ~ Banner ~ Tassel ~ Thingy! 



The crazy thing is that it cost me NOTHING!

Not one dime!

Basically, a few years ago my great aunt went through all of her sewing notions and her sister-in-laws. 
She gave them all to me. Hundreds of spools of thread... every color.
Buttons galore! Oh, the buttons!

And Notions! 
Bias tape.
Lace.
RIC RAC!



I've considered selling them on etsy... but who has time for that?


For years I've kept this ridiculous amount of bias tape, lace hem, ric rac and scrap fabric that I never really intended on using or had a plan for .... until it occurred to me just how lovely the gold, pink and teal that comprised the majority of the notions would look together!


I wonder what they were making with that gold ric rac? 
Wise man Christmas pageants come to mind! 
Tacky tacky tacky!

And I wonder over and over when that $25 ric race was made! 
Wright's brand.

I looked to see if it said... nope.


Then there is this beauty... Baby pink raw silk used to make the skirts for my brides maids.
Don't ask why I picked pink... I don't know. 
I don't even like pink that much! 

But it all worked together to make this lovely ... dare I say... Beautiful!
 Bunting!


That lace on the end with the daisies KILLS me!


And it was the perfect back drop for a birthday girl!

Don't you think the gold ric rac is the BEST? 
Just so perfectly girly!



The moral of the story...

If you are given some "silly notions" save them... 
One day you will find the inspiration and figure out exactly what they were made for!

~ The End ~

Friday, April 10, 2015

Renaissance Study

This week has been engaging!
Renaissance ~ Rebirth
Old ideas becoming new.
Realism. Invention. New Ideas.

We've read...

and...
(This was a left-over from last week, but still a favorite!)



We've listened to...
The Story of Mankind ~ By Hendrick Van Loon (Now that's a name!)
Scroll down to chapter #39 - Renaissance


(I know this is earlier, but it put us in the mood 
to paint the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel!



We've watched...






We've done...

Some amazingly fun art projects!

Putting ourselves on to our backs just like Michelangelo to paint or draw "The Creation of Adam".

Cora is in the midst of dramatic disgust! 
Throwing pencil and giving up all hope!


Addie found when you erase the bits fall in your eyes!



Eli puts a "boppy" to good use.


Cora is all discouragement. Just too hard!


Allan is having a grand time!


The end results... The Creation of Adam. 
Top left: Addie
Top right: Cora
Middle left: Allan
Bottom left: Thea
Right: Elias



And a little Mona Lisa smile...


I encouraged the children to make Mona Lisa their own!

Addie's ~ The Fingernail Painted Mona Lisa
Allan ~ The Yellow and Green Mona Lisa
Thea ~ The Faceless Dark Skinned Mona Lisa
Elias ~ The Green Skinned Mona Lisa
Cora ~ The Lipsticked and Blue-eyed Mona Lisa



Whew! Thank goodness it's Friday!



Friday, January 9, 2015

Things I Forgot to Post Over the Holidays


This boy had his birthday on Christmas Eve... 
and his baby sister was 3 months old on the same day.
They have a special connection.



A rare sighting... Unhappy Whitley.



 Preciousness!




Whitley's Christmas Boots
Complete with vintage silver buttons!




I managed to make CRAFTS with the kids!


We actually got around to making cookies too!!!!



Thea's 1st dental appointment... she rocked it!



Our most beautiful tree!



Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Nesting

I finished up these two very important things in preparation of a little someone's arrival!

A tiny pair of gray and yellow Mary Jane felt booties...
And a pair of pink flowered pixie booties!


Each sister squealed in delight!
Tiny felten shoes for tiny toes... There isn't much cuter than that, I think! 


I think we might be "ready" now. But then again, I might make one more pair, a size bigger... 

Thursday, January 2, 2014

My New Door Daybed

A few months ago Tim and I realized need a bed for our spare room ... it use to be the baby's room (she is about to turn 3 and I am ignoring that I ought not call her a "baby").

Tim's parents were coming for a visit and then a few weeks later my parents... we had NO bed for them. We deliberated if we wanted a queen or two twins until we realized a twin would be most functional, particularly a daybed/trundle combo. 

I was looking around and everything was p-p-p-ricy and that was when I got the notion that I wanted a "door daybed". 

If you know my husband at all you know that if  I say "Could you make me such-and-such?" He will undoubtedly say "When do you want it?" 

After looking at my inspiration photos he went to our local re-claimed materials store and bought 3 solid hardwood doors (one of which we didn't have to use), he found some old stair spindles and he got some lumber, plywood and some polyurethane from the hardware store. 

Tim trimmed/rounded the edges of the doors on top, put on the legs and constructed the base... all the boring stuff. I sanded and scrapped off  the chipped paint (which surely has lead in it)... I wore a mask and glasses, like Norm Abram would tell you to do. I left some of the paint on it to give it the effect I desired, but it could also have been taken all off and we could have refinished the old hardwood anyway we liked. Then I washed the doors off and poly-ed the whole thing about 3 times to seal it all in and make it safe.

This is what we ended up with...



The room looks even better with the trundle pushed under. 
The spreads were made by my grandma and were on her spare room beds.
They actually aren't solid black they have tiny tan pot-a-dots and are really quite charming.


I estimate we spent less than $75 to make our door daybed!

Ladies, don't look for a rich man or a man who has big muscles,
find a man who will make you things!

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Making a Life Book for Baby

Life books are similar to a traditional baby book or scrapbook, the difference is that the purpose is to explain and timeline past events to give clarity and truth to a child who has come home through adoption.

Imagine if you were adopted... you knew your new mom and dad loved you dearly... but before that you have absolutely no clue what took place in your life!

What happened to your birth parents?
What happened to you that brought about the need for adoption?
How did you end up being adopted by your family?

The Life Book intends to answer these questions in a way a child can understand and to provide them increasing facts as they grow up. For this reason I began to think that especially our youngest child needed a few different life books to help her understand who she is... the first being very simple and very age appropriate for a toddler or preschooler.

For Christmas I made Thea a life book that is for her first few years.
It is a board book. 
It covers the concept of adoption, but not a whole lot more.
It covers how she was born into our family and her most basic personal life history.





How to Make a Personalized Baby Board Life Book...

Step 1 - I ordered a blank board book online from Barebooks.com
I ordered both the 5x5 and the 8x6, but ended up using the 8x6 because it offered more room.

Step 2 - I wrote out the content I wanted to have explained to Thea for the rest of her pre-school life about how she came to be adopted and a part of our family. Make sure to be factual, realistic and also simple and age appropriate. You can put feelings you are sure your child felt, like fear or sadness... or also that he/she felt loved by important people you know expressed and showed love.
I made sure to include as much age-appropriate facts as possible:
- where he/she was born
- when (or approximate)
- how he/she was found or where they were abandoned
- why bio family chose adoption
- where he/she lived after abandonment
- how he/she likely felt
- special people who cared for him/her
- when adoption took place and how
- how the adoptive family wanted and needed him/her



Step 3 - Figure out how to put all these facts on the pages you have... I had 9 pages to use so I divided the main thoughts between them. I did two double spreads on pages 4 and 5 and 8 and 9... where the illustrations and words take up both pages. My ideas and pages worked out like this...
Page 1 - Intro to her life, where she was born, when.
Page 2 - How she was grown and birthed by her birth mom and her decision to not parent.
Page 3 - Her life in the baby home.
Page 4 and 5 - Our family's desire to grow and that we felt we were missing someone.
Page 6 - Mommy comes to get her.
Page 7 - Thea and mommy bond.
Page 8 and 9 - Our family together forever.


Step 4 - I cut out pages of printer paper the same size as my book and made a sample book.  I drew my illustrations and made sure to leave room for the text at the bottom or top of the pages and made it look how I wanted on the sample pages. (Sorry, I threw them away, but basically I made a sample book and drew it all out prior to actually drawing it on the board book).

Step 5 - Board books are great because you can place the sample drawings over the top of the board book and trace them with a dull pencil... it leaves an indention in the board book that you can see just well enough to go back and outline and color in, sort of like coloring a coloring book, but you have faint indentions instead of lines!

Step 6 - Trace the indentions with black fine point sharpie markers. Then color in the white with fat/regular sharpies of any color. Remember that leaving a little white is a nice added depth, you don't have to color it all in. I found one set of sharpie markers that had a wide range in skin tones! I would plan on getting 1 fine point black marker and about a dozen other colors that are the fat kind, with at least a peach skin tone and a brown or light brown skin tone. I used the light brown for skin and the dark brown for hair.

Step 7 - Trace lines to write your text on if you need the guidelines to keep it straight and level. Put a piece of paper down and use a ruler to mark the line on top of the board book, so that you aren't actually drawing a line on your board book, it will leave an indention you can see close enough to write on.

Step 8 - Read it to your baby! This isn't a book we keep sitting in the toy bin... it stays up on a dresser and every night when I put Thea to bed she points to it and says, "Rock rock?" and I rock her and read her the story about how God placed her in our family! She is learning more and I know one day it will give us the chance to talk about things in a personal way!




Monday, October 15, 2012

The (Educational) Benefits to Teaching Children Knitting

Knitting teaches more than a just a skill or pastime.
Scoff... if that weren't enough!
But, if it isn't for you... 
here are just some of the things that knitting teaches a child...



- Math. Math! It teaches basic and complicated math. (Patterning, counting, skip counting, multiplication, division, subtraction, adding, and probably things I don't know about ... :-)
- How to read and understand a pattern/instructions and to use reasoning and visualization skills to make the finished product.
- Fine and gross motor skills. The mobility and dexterity required for knitting helps improve brain function according to one study.
- Problem solving skills... All the knitters say "Amen!"
- Studies on knitting have concluded that it helps children to learn to read better because it requires a left to right and/or circular process.
- The history of knitting and textiles is a whole unit of study one could explore.
- Helps children to maintain focus and attentiveness. It is also calming and repetitive.
- Helps improve a child's personal image and attitude toward achieving a new skill.
- Children can learn about the different materials and how they originate: wool, cotton, acrylic, bamboo, silk, fleece, etc...
- It is a purposeful and tactile way to improve all of the above skills and abilities!!! That in itself is priceless!

Further Proof...

Ambleside: Hand Crafts
Hand Work in Waldorf Educations: Benefits of Knitting
The "More" Child
Parenting Passageway: Knitting in your 1st Grade Class



Teaching Knitting to Children


Every summer (for the last at least 5 summers) at our camp I lead a Knitting Skills Class during our girls camps. It is the highlight of the summer for me because each girl starts off thinking that she is incapable of learning this complicated skill, only to leave a few minutes to hours later feeling like she is very capable and has achieved something most other girls her age can't do! Plus, getting to sit beside them, teach, help and talk about their lives is really the biggest advantage to knitting and teaching children to knit.

Knitting is a craft that initially seems very complex and difficult only to become easy quickly when the basics are learned, then it has the amazing ability to match you in complexity as your skill level grows!

Knitting Rocks!

Below is the method I use in teaching knitting to the 8-18 crowd. I hesitate to teach a child younger than 8 to knit for a few reason... (and trust me I have tried with my 7 year old 3 times now... and she isn't ready yet... but is a very advanced girl in most ways.)

1. I would hate to frustrate them, because it is to difficult and to cause them to decided they don't like knitting, when really they aren't yet ready.
2. Little hands have poor motor skills, and both fine and gross motor skills are needed for knitting... I think needle point or even crochet are better for younger children and help them develop the skills needed for knitting later on.
3. Knitting, as any other thing, is best done when a child shows both interest and ability to comprehend and complete it.

Additionally it is best to chose bigger needles and yarn... it makes it easier to see what you are doing and also easier to manipulate with your fingers... sort of like giving fat crayons to toddlers. Also, as pretty as they are, help your student/child to NOT choose a yarn that has nubbys, fluff, loose strings and such. It will just frustrate their attempts... Make the yarn as simple and as fat as possible.

Sorry... love this yarn... inspiration!


~ How to Teach Children to Knit ~

1. Show them the things you need to knit: two needles and yarn. Let them choose needles and yarn that appeal to their personal taste and style. We all like to look at needles and yarn and find something that sort of speaks to us and inspires us! Let them do the same... and enjoy the entire process!

2. Explain how knitting works. The basics I usually go over are...
- When you knit you are basically creating loops... that must stay on the needles.
- If the loops come off it destroys what you are creating and makes it unravel.
- When you knit you are basically transferring the loops from one needle to the other using a stitch.
- You create loops in a pattern that goes back and forth over and over again creating the length you desire.

3. Choose a fun but simple first project. I think the best is a scarf, dishrag, head band or cuff bracelet. Help them think of how big this needs to be and help them design an easy pattern for it.

4. Explain how to make a slip knot and put it on the needle.

5. Teach them how to "Cast On" using the basic knit stitch...
I know there are other methods to casting on, but I think the best is to teach them to knit straight away and since you can cast on using the entire knit process (just minus the dropping of the previous stitch) it is a perfect way to help them learn to knit and cast on. Simply follow the rhyme and stop prior to "Off jumps Jack" or where you'd take the old loop off of the left needle. ((I loath the "finger" method to cast on... really silly, if you ask me... when you can just teach one thing... knitting.))

6. Teach them the Knitting Nursery Rhyme!
I have always used this little rhyme... it has yet to fail me (can't remember where I learned it)! It is ever so helpful in teaching children to knit as it helps them connect an idea to some words that they can memorize easily.


~The Knitting Nursery Rhyme~

In through the front door. 
(Put the needle through the first loop/slip knot).

Run around the back. 
(Place the thread of yarn between the two needles by running it around the back).

Down through the window.
(Gently pull the loop and right hand needle down through the loop on the left hand side).

(Stop here for "cast on" and continue until you have as many loops as desired)

And off jumps Jack. 
(Gently drop the loop as you transfer the "new stitch" on the right needle).



7. Remind them of these knitting basics...
- Keep your hands and fingers up on the stitch you are currently working on (not down low on the needles like some beginners tend to do).
- Teach them how to hold the stitch they are working on and to control the loose yarn with their right hands (even if they are left handed).
- Don't let your loops/stitches become too tight, as this will break the yarn and make it hard to put your needle in the stitches.
- Don't let your loops/stitches become too loose as this creates uneven work and dropped stitches.
- Count your stitches at the end of each row to make sure you didn't drop any or create extras.
- If you are getting extra stitches it is usually because at the end of the row you are pulling the loose yarn upward and that makes it appear like their are two stitches instead of just one.
- When they are ready teach them to cast off... by knitting two, passing the first one over the second until the end.
- Show them how to correctly finish their piece of work by tying it off and weaving the loose end into the work with a needle or crochet hook.

8. Show them. Watch them. Show them again. Let them.
This is where relationships grow. Be patient. Just keep showing them over and over. If they are frustrated and want to stop, let them... or say, "Why don't you give your hands a break and just watch me for awhile..." You can even hold their hands and do it with/for them.

9. Give feed back and encouragement!
Undoubtedly if your student/child is over the age of 11 or 12 the first thing that will come out of their mouth about their work will be negative. When I hear this I always say, "Oh, wow! Are you serious!?! When I first started my work/piece looked exactly like that... everyone has to start somewhere. It will get better them more you try. I think you are doing an amazing job for only just learning!"


Knit On!

And if you were wondering who took that amazing photograph 
of my daughter (still pre-knitter) please check out Amy Brothers
She is an artist with her camera lens and knitting needles too!


Tuesday, February 14, 2012

My hearts



- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Monday, February 13, 2012

The Man of My Dreams Makes Me Things

My husband IS the man of my dreams. Every day he some way or another makes a dream of mine come true. In fact, nearly every morning he makes me THE best coffee complete with steamed milk, chocolate sauce and caramel swirled on top... that in its self is a gift to me. Am I right... he is a dreamy man?

When I came home from Ug@nda this last trip the kids said on the ride home, "Mom, we have a surprise for you..." and something about a rug. Tim quickly shushed them. I got home to a platter of cheese, crackers and wine... OH my... such a dream man! I love cheese and quite honestly, I am easily pleased by dairy products.

Then he said, "We have one more surprise." He took me in our bedroom and showed me he had nearly completely re-decorated it (we had the bedding and curtains already). Now who out there has a husband that you could trust to re-decorate your garage, much less a master bedroom and have it turn out like this???


Yes, that lamp (and it's mate) were my grand-grandma Gail's... they are white porcelain and have a fruit motif on top of the round thing... I LOVE LOVE LOVE them!!! I loved looking at the very realistic fruit when I was a little girl. Tim thinks they are ugly, but let them be the show piece of the room... cuz he loves me!





He made the bench at the bottom of the bed, 2 night stands... complete with the fruit lamps and he made a little reading/talking nook for us. His note said some thing to the effect that "we are now parents of 5 kids and he thought we needed a place to retreat to..."

Love him and the way he thinks!
I hardly leave my bedroom at all now.



THEN... it gets better!

For Christmas he made me/us a new dining table, with enough room for us all, plus a guest or 2. It took this long to finish it and get 4 strapping dudes to carry in our house... the thing could sub as a bomb shelter, it is so well made... 100% hard wood, not a laminate in sight!




Isn't is perfection!
The benches could easily fit 5-6 kids and 4 adults. Summer staff are on their way... so I think we could fit at least 12 around it.

I LOVE MY MAN!
HE SPOILS ME TOOOOOOOO MUCH.
I am bragging and boasting... even though that isn't right.