12.20.2011

Tiny Dogs #nightsewing


 L has been asking if she's going to get a tiny red dog like Clifford (when he was a puppy) for Christmas.  So of course, I had to make another dog for her, and one more for J.

So, I shrunk the pattern.  Really I just opened the image on my computer and zoomed out then I traced it until the whole pattern fit on half a sheet of paper.  It's like having a light box.  They sewed up really quickly, although the head gusset was tricky because the fleece is so thick and the corners are so tiny.  Still, I'm really growing to appreciate how forgiving fleece is.  Why didn't I see this before?


These little ones have stuffing in the heads, but the rest of the body is all poly-beads which I'm also totally into now.  Sorry for the yellow-y pictures - had to take them while the kids were sleeping, you know. (Also, the hairy arm below is not mine, just so you know.)


So, I'm totally loving these, and I think that I probably should have been making all of my patterns tiny like this.  And not just because of the storage space.  So, yes.  It's possible that I will be making tiny giraffes, turtles, and dinosaurs next year

(the year of sewing what I want).

12.14.2011

Paper Stars

  

I think this is the beginning of what will surely be a trend of books and crafts. Last week we were reading Patricia Polacco's Uncle Vova's Tree, in which the children make paper stars to decorate the tree.  L immediately said, I want to make those!  And so we did. 

 

We hadn't actually put up our tree yet, so they stayed in a vase for a few days - which I think looked quite lovely. But L carried one to our local Christmas parade to wave at the floats as they passed. 



12.11.2011

Two Patterns: Dog and Stegosaurus


You were warned about the Dog, but the Stegosaurus is here too!


My girls love dogs.  And dinosaurs.  Did you know there are 13 Land Before Time movies?

13!

And yes, we've seen them all. Although, I may have slept through a couple.


I fully expect J to open this Stegosaurus at Christmas and immediately say, "Now I need a Long Neck, a Cera, a Ducky, and a Flier!" And L will ask for several more dogs in a variety of shapes and colors. Yes, I'm prepared.


But for now, one pattern at a time.  Or, ahem, two.  

I don't expect these to replace Pink Dog, but I'm hoping they'll join the pack.  


A few notes about these patterns:
My goal was to make the cuddly, so you may notice a few differences.  They're made of fleece and furry blankets, and they're half filled with poly beads to make them more flexible - so they don't stand up perfectly for photos.  I made the dogs in two sizes, just enlarge the pattern a bit more because - of course - we need a mommy dog and a baby dog.  Also the dogs have a million variations - button/embroidery eyes, various ears, tail up or down, spots - ooh, and an easy, no sew collar.


 



Here's a qick giveaway: Today until the 16th - click the links below to grab these patterns and make some last minute Christmas gifts!  I've changed file hosts, so I'm hoping not to have bandwidth issues. (fingers crossed) (Updated: Dec. 17th - the giveaway has now ended. Thanks for all your enthusiasm!) After the 16th, you can still find the patterns in shop.


12.06.2011

Happy St. Nicholas Day!


This is the first year we've celebrated St. Nicholas Day, so we're having fun learning and making new traditions. In a little bit, the girls will wake up and find their shoes filled with a few small treats, including St. Nicholas staff (candy cane) and gold coins (chocolate) to remind them of how he gave to the three girls in the story.



Yesterday, we made cookies, which is quickly becoming one of my favorite pre-Christmas traditions.  This was the first time I made shaped cookies with the kids, and they thought it was so cool (just like play dough!).

And later, we'll spend the day making gifts for family and friends (Martha has a great list of gifts kids can make). We decided to make gift making on St. Nicholas day part of our family tradition partly because we want our children to be people who see the needs of others, like St. Nicholas did. It is all too easy to be self-involved (believe me, I know), but compassion begins with looking at the people around you, instead of yourself.  And I want to be compassionate. Our gifts won't be world changing for anyone this year, but hopefully they will help my girls and I look outward. Perhaps it will grow into something more significant.

Ultimately, I want this day to become a day of compassion for our family. Which is hard sometimes during the holidays as you recount your life, your goals, your wish lists.  I want to teach my kids compassion, but I think I'm hungering for it, too.

How do you teach your kids about giving at Christmas?

St. Nicholas and the Dowries
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And be sure to check out the St. Nicholas Center!  You could easily lose an afternoon there. Which I did. So here are a few of my favorite links to help you out:

12.04.2011

Pink Dog: revisited


Recently, L had taken Pink Dog out in public and was introducing her to some lucky passerby.

I mentioned before my slight embarrassment and jealousy of the cheesy store bought dog that my daughter prizes*, and how I was learning to love it because she does.

But then, I heard L say, "This is Pink Dog.  Mommy made it for my birthday."

This dog was given to her on a regular day by one of John's sweet co-workers - so it had nothing to do with me or her birthday. But, perhaps in the same way I love her dog because I love her, she thinks I made it because she loves me. Maybe it's silly, but man, that made me happy.

Anyway - I explained that Ms. Sherry gave that to her, and that it was from a store, which she seemed to take in stride.  But the game is on now - I'm embracing the totally excessive number of dogs we have to make a few more for Christmas.  Look for the pattern later this week...

*To be totally fair, there is some talk that Gray Dog is edging out Pink Dog these days. Only time will tell.


11.30.2011

Family Portrait

We Wilsons

I don't think we've ever had an official family portrait made - something I really meant to do this summer... But here's the one L made for John's birthday.  I had to remember to get a picture of it when I was at the library where it hangs in his office.  Its always fun to stop and look at something like this again and see all the choices she made.

So a bit about how we made it. I've been really encouraged by the way Brooke at Inchmark gives her kids a simple starting point with their art projects. It provides a structure to keep their freedom from turning into chaos.  So I drew the oval head shapes and simple diagonal lines for shoulders, then she drew the eyes nose and mouth in pencil, and painted in the rest.  I think it turned out so amazing - those noses just make me so happy. 

Dinosaurs

The only structure I provide for the two year old is rinsing out her brush occasionally. She isn't too interested in painting yet, which gives me all kinds of unnecessary anxiety. She's just got to like painting, right? But looking back at this and seeing the different colors she chose and all the different marks she made calms me.  This is it. It's happening.

11.29.2011

Advent Chain



Some day I'll get around to making some neat advent calender that we can reuse every year. But not this year. Still, preschoolers really benefit from counting time visually, so I decided to make an advent paper chain.


I've seen them around where you tear off a loop every day, so you can see how close you're getting, but I wanted L to be able to see how far we've come as well. So we made a regular paper chain to hang on the wall (we use a glue stick to secure the ends), and then attached a little star to a paper clip to move along each day.  It works as a great way to mark the time.


We're trying to do some bible readings or coloring pages every day. Plus, we've gotten out our little vintage nativity set and some Christmas books that we'll enjoy throughout the season.  Check out these great resources:
The St. Nicholas Center - an entire website about the real Santa Claus
Advent Calendar ideas - from the crafty crow, most of them easy to do last minute!


11.28.2011

Fat Quarter Tea Towels

Ursa Major Tea Towel (peacock blue)


Have you see all the exciting new stuff going on at Spoonflower? Since they opened it up as a market place, there have been lots of little adjustments, making it more user friendly and fun to browse and shop.  Plus, when people buy your fabric designs, you earn money  - which you will undoubtedly spend on Spoonflower fabrics.  It feels a bit like a big idea swap.

I haven't had much time to play with designs lately (add that to my list of things to do next year...), but I wanted to take advantage of the fat quarter sale they have right now.  A linen-cotton fat quarter measures 27x18" which makes a lovely tea towel when hemmed.  I drew this little bear illustration after our recent study of Ursa Major.

Ursa Major Tea Towel (turquoise)
Ursa Major Tea Towel (navy)
I'm trying it in three shades of blue.  I'll let you know how they turn out.  The fat quarter sale lasts through Friday, I think - so there's still plenty of time to put together a few designs of your own, or browse tea towel designs already for sale. 

December Sale

I'm a little late on the holiday shopping madness, but I'm having a little sale in my shop, too. No need to push or shove. It's a nice, calm sale - which is about all that I can handle these days. For the whole month of December:

Free Shipping on all of my Plush Toys and Zipper Mouth Pillows.  I made a whole bunch of the crocodiles, and I have more Crocodiles and Bears cut and ready to assemble - but then I realized I don't really have the space to store them!  Oops.

Check out the SALE section for discounts when you buy two or more patterns or coloring books.

And because I love you guys so much, and I'm so genuinely grateful for your support and feedback on my designs -  I've added an extra 20% off code for anything in the shop. Plug in "WETHANKYOU" during checkout to get the discount.

11.25.2011

Truffles



The girls and I made truffles this week to take to family on Thanksgiving.  I meant to share the recipe sooner, but I got distracted. I was surprised by how easy these are, but also how crazy messy little girls can get with a little melted chocolate.

Here's our recipe, based on this one. We divided the recipe into four parts to make four different flavors, which is obviously the fun part.  You could easily vary these - I tried to keep my additions between 1-2 TBSPs per quarter of the batter. The recipe calls for nut butter (and I used peanut) but you can't taste it much, so it doesn't affect the final flavor.

I tried to roll each in something different so that I could tell them apart, although, if I wasn't worried about the kids I probably would have tried more combinations.  I think we'll be doing this again for Christmas with some new flavors.  I'd like to try an orange marmalade, and maybe a mint?  They're so easy (especially without the help of toddlers), so I can definitely see this becoming a regular feature.


Sweet, Spicy, Espresso, and Panko Truffles

16 oz semi-sweet baking chocolate
1/2 cup peanut butter
1/4 cup almond milk
flavorings: vanilla, sugar, red pepper, cinammon, espresso, panko
finishing: powdered sugar, crushed walnuts, cinnammon, panko

Melt chocolate in a double boiler.  Beat in peanut butter. Add almond milk.

Divide the chocolate mixture in half then in half again, putting each quarter in a bowl.

Bowl 1: Sweet vanilla
Add 1/2 TBSP vanilla and 1/2 TBSP sugar

Bowl 2: Spicy
Add 1/2 TBSP of ground red pepper and 1/2 TBSP cinammon

Bowl 3: Espresso
Add 1 1/2 TBSP espresso (or strong coffee)

Bowl 4: Panko
Add 2 TBSP panko

Mix each bowl well, then cover and let chill in the refrigerator for 2 hours.  When firm, roll each bowl into balls (about 7 balls per 1/4 cup), then roll each ball in finishing coat:

Bowl 1: Sweet Vanilla - roll in powdered sugar or Panko
Bowl 2: Spicy - roll in crushed walnuts
Bowl 3: Espresso - roll in cocoa powder
Bowl 4: Panko - roll in Panko

Serve!