Thursday, July 24, 2008

Riley fairy




My kids are all great artists. Recently while my husband was out of town for work, the kids each drew him large pictures. I loved the picture of Riley and her dad as fairies, and so I decided to try and re-create her drawing as a doll. She loves it, and I am fairly pleased with the results. Next one the agenda is Ethan's sea creature.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Block-a-month


I finally finished my center blocks for the block-a-month quilt I started last year. As you can tell, I am a pretty big fan of fall colors.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

a note from Ethan


Ethan, my lego-obsessed son, left me this note last night.

Just about finished



I am finally almost finished with redecorating Riley's room. I finished these ribboned curtains Saturday night. I think they turned out quite nicely and were very easy. I started out sewing on the ribbons, but have a few issues with thread tension, so I switched to using fabric glue. This was very quick and very easy. I let Riley choose the ribbons (which I had been gathering for several months) and their order. Simple and cute!

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Truffula Tree



With the ending of school fast approaching (tomorrow), Riley decided she wanted to make a special gift for her kindergarten teacher, a Truffula tree (from Dr. Seuss's The Lorax). After brainstorming awhile, I think we came up with something pretty good.
Materials: Styrofoam ball, fuzzy feather boa in your choice of colors, 3/8" dowel, sculpey (yellow, green, black), wooden platform, craft glue, sewing pins.
To start with, we poked a pen into one end of the styrofoam ball to make it easier to handle. Then we covered the ball with craft glue. Next we poked a pin through one end of the boa and stuck it in the top of the ball. next we slowly wrapped the boa around the ball, keeping the rows as close together as possible. when we came to the end, we put in another pin. (anywhere that I worried about how well the boa stuck, I used another pin to reinforce). Then I cut 2 4-5 inch pieces of the dowel. I rolled a piece of sculpey (color didn't matter here) to match the width and attached it to the end of the dowel. I then rolled the dowel/sculpey combo with some smooth and flat yellow sculpey, smoothed it out, then added some small thin slices of black sculpey to try and get that scribble quality that is found in the book. I bent the "trunk" to match the trees in the book, baked it, and put the dry boa ball on top. I covered the wooden base with green sculpey and baked it. After it had cooled, I drilled in two holes for our two trees and used screws to attach the trees (screwing into the dowel) to the base. We did snap one tree while trying to get it attached, but that is what super glue is for. I will make a Lorax this summer when I find the right materials. Riley's teacher loved it.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Kitchen Towel Apron



I came up with this pattern as a gift for my daughter's friend's birthday. Very easy. I found some cute kitchen towels on clearance after valentine's day. I cut off the top corners of the towel to give it an apron shape (you could use another apron as a pattern), leaving the rest of the sides, top and bottom alone. I then took a package of extra wide double fold bias tape, left enough tail on one end for tying, sewed it to the cut edge, left a large enough loop to fit over a child's head (measure this), sewed tape to the other cut edge, and left an equal tail on the other side. DONE! I added a contrasting pocket on the first one I made, just for some extra fun.

Friday, May 23, 2008

Twilight

OK, so I am a closet Stephenie Meyer fan. I just saw the trailer for the "Twilight" movie, and am pleasantly surprised. Now, if only the 4th book would come out...
Here is a link to the movie trailer: http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.fullscreen&videoid=33429578