An Egg a Day, #4: Isia recently insisted on wearing her Woodstock-worthy blue tie-dye shirt with the bright pink heart in the middle, seen here, several days in a row. I was thrilled not only because it seemed to be dirt-repellent- it stayed clean for over two days- but also because she's possibly inherited my soft spot for tie-dye. I love tie-dye and, between us, I have a plan to incorporate more of it into our lives shortly... well, mainly our bathroom. But in the meantime, what better place to display some tie-dye magic than on some eggs?
An Egg a Day, #3: As promised... glitter!
Ah, glitter. It sparkles, shines... and ends up being found for weeks after-wards on the floor, chairs, and even the cat. At least- that was before I found a better way to contain it. The joys of glitter without all the mess? Oh yes!
Things move a little bit slower around the house these days with a
toddler and a baby. You learn to plan ahead, allot yourself more time
than needed... and then a little bit more for good measure. So our egg
decorating started last week even though Easter is still about three
weeks away. And for good reason: I wanted to do hollow eggs this year,
and of the few we began decorating last week only one survived little
hands. They were all fine at first, but I mistakenly left them within reach. (When
will I learn?) So to encourage us to try again- this time putting all
decorated eggs out of reach- I'm doing a week's worth of egg-xcellent
posts (smile).
It all began with these flowers. I enjoyed making them so much that I made a few more- and then a few more as well. Well, then they needed a home, so I made a wreath entirely out of old shirts, and one pair of very loved corduroy pants, to put them on...
"A Friday ritual. A
single photo - no words - capturing a moment from the week. A simple,
special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and
remember."
(words & inspiration via Soulemama.com)
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In this technology age, I am probably not the only one who's created a wreath form out of t-shirts. But I've developed this method without referencing anyone else, which, I think, is as close as we can get to original these days (smile). Our wreath journey continues!
Next we'll match our bound end to the end of the other shirt, right before the sleeve section. (We'll need the rest of the sleeve later to secure the two pieces together.) Tape the ends together.
Reclaimed Wreath, Part II
Yesterday we ended up here:
Next we'll match our bound end to the end of the other shirt, right before the sleeve section. (We'll need the rest of the sleeve later to secure the two pieces together.) Tape the ends together.
Our windows have been open this week, allowing spring's breezes into our house. They've been busy breezes: removing the last remnants of the cold we've been recycling the past month and emptying our closets for the annual spring cleaning. As I start to ready our clothes for warmer months, my pile of clothing-to-be-recycled grows faster than the lettuce seeds I just planted. I've been looking at the shirts especially, starting to see dresses, like here, and also wreaths. Wreaths, you say? Yes, wreaths, and here's how you can start to see wreaths too!
A Reclaimed Wreath, Part I
Take two long sleeve shirts, fold them in half, and lay them on a flat surface opposite of each other.
Starting at the outer corner (which is the middle of the neckline), begin to roll the first shirt in towards the middle. Continue until your roll contains the body of the shirt and just a little of the sleeve. The rest of the sleeve will be needed later on.
Is there any better way to welcome Spring than by gardening? Our voluntary starts from last year- including Swiss chard, kale, random lettuce, and cilantro- have already brought life to our garden boxes.
Isia's my constant helper these days. She's an enthusiastic one, who solves the problem of not recognizing weeds yet by just pulling everything (eek!). I thought putting her to "work" digging with a spoon might be a tad more helpful. I also cut a milk carton in half and offered her the bottom part to fill with dirt for her own flower seeds. She thought about it, then decided that it would be better to just fill and dump...
Isia has decided (without asking Mama's opinion) that naps are no longer necessary. Ahem. So while Billy took his nap yesterday, we used this bag of clover making supplies from the corner of my kitchen, here & these directions to make:
Here are our finished clovers, pre-sprinkles. It was, of course, no longer St. Patrick's Day. But is there ever a bad day to make sparkly edible four-leaf clovers to share with your neighbors? (Hint: I learned the more melted chocolate I used, the better they held together.)
I bought the ingredients to make these beautiful creations on Monday:
And now it's Saturday and I still have the bag of supplies sitting in the corner of my kitchen. How was I supposed to know that Spring was going to arrive this week? All of a sudden running around the backyard and having picnics became more important than being in our kitchen. But I haven't put the supplies away yet, because there's always time for something delicious- especially when little hands can help! In the meantime, find the directions to make your own here.
Picture courtesy of http://familyfun.go.com/recipes/clever-clovers-988547/ |
Happy St. Patrick's Day!
"A Friday ritual. A
single photo - no words - capturing a moment from the week. A simple,
special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and
remember."
(words & inspiration via Soulemama.com)
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And lastly, more things I would like to try:
::Make a picture Lichtenstein-worthy here.
::An introduction to digital scrap-booking through videos here.
::And I'm also loving the "stitching on a path" tutorial here.
I've been so inspired this week, thank you for joining me!
ps. This is my attempt at the "Polaroid Collage" (from Monday). The tutorial was written for Photoshop, so I had to improvise a lot using Elements. Improvise, of course, meant spending way too much time on it. I'm now really considering proper Photoshop (smile).
I fell in love with black and white photography in high school. At the time, the only way to create your own pictures was to hide in the dark room until you had mastered your light exposure and your hands smelled like fixer. It was magical. And I was apprehensive of digital photography at first, because the computer would be handling the process instead of me. But this technique made me a convert, because I could never do this in a dark room...
and it's such a nice effect. So nice in fact, that many do it and many have different techniques of doing it. Here's what works for me:
1) Open your picture
2) Create another new adjustment layer, Layer>New Adjustment Layer>Gradient Map. Select the black to white gradient. If the image looks infrared, click the "Reverse" button and it will go back to normal. Click "OK" to apply the gradient map.3) Now zoom in on the area to be colored so that it fills your screen. Select your brush tool, pick a size, set mode to "normal" and opacity to "100%." Set the foreground color to black. Make sure the gradient map layer is selected and begin to paint over the area to be colored. I like to investigate the brush's "more options" and soften the brush as I reach the outside edges.
4) Once I've finished painting the colored area, I usually see some color beyond the outside edges. Tidy it back up by setting the foreground color to white, then paint the color away once more.
5) Flatten your image, save as a .jpg, and...
6) Sigh a deep sigh of relief that the little boys noticing your daughter's eyes are still more interested in their trucks than her.
I love wallet sized pictures. I think they're the sweetest size to keep, to tuck in a note, and to give away. Although I can print 4x6 prints for around 10 cents a picture- even less on sale- wallets can be as much as 30 to 50 cents a piece. Yikes! Then I discovered how to take one 4x6 picture...
and turn it into two wallets!
Since my traditional white border would have gotten lost on the white blog, I used gray instead for contrast. I think I like it... and I think I might need to think of other fun border colors (smile).
The directions are for two "landscape" wallets. If you would prefer "portrait" wallets instead:
and turn it into two wallets!
How to make 2 wallets from a 4x6 picture:
(modified from: http://www.elementsvillage.com/forums/showthread.php?p=547212)
- Open a new, blank file (File>new>blank file) and set width to 4 inches & height to 6 inches, resolution 300px/in, background white or any color of your choice
- Access the rectangular marquee tool, and in the the tool's option bar select "Fixed size." Set the width to 3.25 inches and the height to 2.25 inches. Turn on the grid, View>grid, and snap to grid, View>snap to grid.
- Duplicate the background layer, Layer>Duplicate layer, and create the first box by clicking with the rectangular marquee tool. Position the box, then fill it with 50% gray (Edit>fill selection, and under contents select 50% gray.) Select>deselect gets rid of the marching ants.
- Repeat for the next box. You should now have a document containing two rectangular boxes filled with 50% gray.
- Select the first box that you wish to fill (with the picture) with the magic wand tool. On the tool's option bar be sure that contiguous is checked. You should see "marching ants" around the selection, indicating that it is active.
- Open picture 1, go to Select>all, Edit>copy, then go to your layout as completed in step #5, and Edit>paste into selection
- Your image will be larger that the rectangular box, but you can drag it around to position it as you like. Holding shift as you resize the image with the corner handles will keep it from distorting.
- Repeat for picture 2 with the 2nd box. Or, if you'd like to use the same picture for both boxes: select box 1 with the rectangular marquee tool (set back to "normal"), Edit>copy, select box #2 with the magic wand tool (still "contiguous"), then Edit>paste into selection.
Billy is now 6 months, and wearing an outfit from when Papa was a baby. Handsome! |
- Open a new, blank file (File>new>blank file) and set width to 6 inches & height to 4 inches, resolution 300px/in, background white or any color of your choice
- Access the rectangular marquee tool, and in the the tool's option bar select "Fixed size." Set the width to 2.25 inches and the height to 3.25 inches. Turn on the grid, View>grid, and snap to grid, View>snap to grid.
- (Continue as above)
Our little Billy is now 6 months old, which has prompted a flurry of picture taking. I've been busy designing photo packages for family to celebrate this milestone. (We're halfway through his 1st year... eek!) While searching my computer for different saved ideas and tips, I realized that it would be handy, and quicker, for me to post some links and notes here instead for future reference. Then I thought it might be helpful for you too- so that is what we shall do this week. An idea or editing trick a day, starting with...
the collage! I like the simple banner across the middle of the page, but I'm thinking about branching out into:
::making a polaroid collage from one picture, here.
::adding some amazing distressing to my clean edges, here.
::incorporating some beautiful (free!) digital scrapbook paper, here.
::making a polaroid collage from one picture, here.
::adding some amazing distressing to my clean edges, here.
::incorporating some beautiful (free!) digital scrapbook paper, here.
Like most art teachers, I have a hard time throwing away anything. I see magazine holders in cereal boxes, buildings in oatmeal canisters- and a canvas in a ripped paper grocery bag. The last of which is especially fun to hang on the refrigerator for little hands to draw on.
And see that fantastic marker holder? It was a gift from a friend right before Billy was born. If you'd like to make one of your own, directions here. It's been so much fun for drawing, as well as entertaining (putting markers in and out... in and out...). Happy drawing!
And see that fantastic marker holder? It was a gift from a friend right before Billy was born. If you'd like to make one of your own, directions here. It's been so much fun for drawing, as well as entertaining (putting markers in and out... in and out...). Happy drawing!
"A Friday ritual. A
single photo - no words - capturing a moment from the week. A simple,
special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and
remember."
(words & inspiration via Soulemama.com)
. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . .
This is how you mend board books, round two. I thought the wallpaper would be great- sturdy, flexible- and it was, at first. Then it started to come up off of the binding, and nothing would stick on top of it to protect it. So I removed the wallpaper, and used paper instead to mend them once more. Success!
Here are the steps:
1) Make sure the spine of the book is as smooth as possible, removing any excess paper.
2) Cut out the spine paper: as tall as the book and wide enough to allow overhang onto the front and back covers. I wanted to keep the front and back so I just left a little overhang. You could cut a larger piece to cover the front and/or back covers at the same time, then design your own cover designs on top!
3) Lots of glue onto the binding and a smooth coat where the overhang will be.
4) Attach the spine paper: I smooth it out from the center of the spine, attaching the overhangs last.
5) Rubber band the newly bound books so they can't fall apart as they dry.
6) Let them dry overnight, then remove the rubber bands. Trim spine paper as needed around edges.
7) For extra protection, cut out a single piece of clear contact paper to cover the front, spine, and back of the book. For attaching, I match it up to the front cover's edges first, then smooth it towards the spine, over the spine, then over the back. Trim any edges as needed.
8) Read and Enjoy!
A few more things... I still found some pages- like the "Monkey" page above- needed more love, so I attached small pieces of contact paper to cover the page seam with overhang on both pages to help hold them together. I didn't create titles on the spines, but you could if you wanted to. Lastly, to protect well-read board books from falling apart in the first place, you can cover them with clear contact paper or packing tape.
We've been in our home for less than a year: not long enough to tackle big projects but definitely long enough to notice blank walls. And notice them again. And notice them yet again. Am I the only who fixates? (smile) This blank wall in our dining room has been especially noticeable recently.
But not anymore! I found this idea several places on the internet, and we already had the rod so I just had to buy the hanging clips. I love that Isia's artworks are more a part of our home- not just the refrigerator- and that we can change them out so easily. Yea for more places to hang art! Now onto the next blank wall... (smile)
But not anymore! I found this idea several places on the internet, and we already had the rod so I just had to buy the hanging clips. I love that Isia's artworks are more a part of our home- not just the refrigerator- and that we can change them out so easily. Yea for more places to hang art! Now onto the next blank wall... (smile)
These are the better of my first attempts. I have an idea for them... but, as in words of Lewis Carroll, "Begin at the beginning and go on till you come to the end: then stop." So this is only the beginning...
Posting on Amazon, here. It might be worth keeping an eye on the price: it was less than $10 when I bought it a month ago and now it's up to almost $17 (!). I've seen prices do this before, and they usally go back down again.
We'll take a break in our book-making adventure to eat muffins together, because every creative journey needs fuel. These muffins are delicious: sweet, fluffy... and bran. I never thought I would put fluffy and bran in the same sentence. Usually bran and baking, at least in my experience, equates something dense that I can either eat or use as a door-stop. These are the absolute opposite, and they freeze wonderfully too. That is, if your family doesn't eat them all first.
This recipe comes from the 2011 Marsh Holiday Cookbook:
Rise 'N Shine Blueberry Bran Muffins
2 cups shredded bran cereal
1 1/4 cups skim milk (we use whole)
1/4 cup applesauce
1 large egg
1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 cup firmly packed brown sugar
4 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup fresh or frozen blueberries (we usually use 1/2 to 3/4 of a cup)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1. Preheat oven to 400F
2. In a large bowl, combine cereal, milk, applesauce & egg. Let stand for 10 minutes.
3. Combine flour, sugar, baking powder and salt. (I whisk bran mixture lightly at this point.) Add dry mixture to bran mixture, stirring gently to combine (do not over mix). Stir in blueberries and vanilla.
4. Spoon batter into a lightly greased 12-cup muffin pan.
5. Bake for 20 minutes, let stand in pans 1 minute; then remove.
6. Try to convince your daughter to let them cool down before her first big bite.