The Color-Chip Flowerstix tutorial

Searching for something to do with the little ones on yet another of our summer days of indoor ennui, I saw one of our paint decks sitting on the counter. Perfect. “Let’s cut this up!” I said. It was the big boy who thought we should glue things to sticks (to make flyswatters) and he also suggested that we use chopsticks. That was the birth of these Color-Chip Flowerstix. I must say that his originals were covered with bling. Kids can’t get enough of the bling, can they? Pink and green rhinestone flowers…googly eyes…anything that sparkles and moves. We adults are so sedate by comparison. But I opted out of the bling for this tutorial, favoring the pure color and shapes of these expressive little things. So here’s how you do it: 1. Choose your color chip for the flower center. Cut it into an oblong shape. 2. Choose another color for the petals. Cut little fingernail shapes- varying the widths of each one. 3. Use a glue stick or paste to glue the petals to the back of the flower center. 4. Then choose another color to use to make decorative seeds or shapes on the center.

(I tried to use as much of the little printing and words on the color swatches as possible because that way it is obvious that they are paint swatches. And, well, I just love little words.)

5. Glue the flower head to the big, flat end of take-out bamboo chopsticks. You can reinforce with tape. 6. Cut out some leaf shapes for the stalks.

Et, voila! You can arrange them in a vase or decorate a birthday cake or give them as gifts. You could make boats or birds or letters or faces or anything. read more

sunday sewing…


I asked my son if he wanted to sew something with me. First, he drew the plan. And then he said it could be a t-shirt. I have a fresh stack of new fabrics ready to go for my first quilt project (and it happens to be for him)- he chose the placement of the fabrics in his design and we made it happen. He had an old plain t-shirt that worked. He got to push the gas pedal 🙂 Glee. Delight. SPEED! (Note to moms: hard to maintain even tone and cool temper when your child’s foot is controlling the speed of the needle and your fingers are so close…gentle, loving voice becomes rather sharp in this situation…a la drill sergeant…feels like the fuzzy feel-goodness thwarted temporarily by said momentary tone.) I thought he would want to sew the cotton patchwork down to the shirt but he told me that he is the designer and I am the sewer.

On deck…


My first crafting super-hero was without a doubt, Lotta Jansdotter. I think that my crush is almost a decade old now. I just love her simple, clear aesthetic…her earthy palette…the gentle and quirky nature-inspired drawings she prints on her textiles. I once, long ago, even had one of her aprons but it is gone- (you can read about my love of the apron from my Ode to the Apron post here.) I have her stationary, cards, etc. In fact, she is really no longer my crafting super-hero…simply because I have loved her for so long that I now have many new craft crushes. But I would say she is part of my foundation. I am going to make her Simple Dress for my baby girl. And I am using her lovely fabric. The pattern is in her book Simple Sewing for Baby. read more

LEGO sewing machine

The reality is, we spend most of our hours at the LEGO table..at least two hours a day: Lately, I have been making gardens—carrot trucks, flower vendors—anything natural—because LEGOs are so completely unnatural. I like the contrast. Big boy has been making vehicles. He tends to be more into movable creations than static ones—everything is on wheels…or pontoons…or is a spaceship…or floats…or is made of ice. These days it is all about the little LEGO people. Today, he asked me if I would be the husband. I agreed. I am sad that he now says “wife,” because for the longest time he said it “life.” “I’ll be the husband, you be the life.”

So, while I was there today safeguarding baby girl from ingesting the ten thousand eatable things, I made this sewing machine. Notice the throat plate and feed dogs? And then I used the inside of the smallest wheel for the flywheel- it really turns. There is a spool of red thread on top (I like that it is sitting loosely on a tiny black car antenna…as if the tensioner would adjust the tension just like on a real machine). And one tiny grey light makes the bobbin winder. But the best part is the needle/presser foot—it actually looks real—it is a tiny upside down hammer. The LEGO people have tiny tools. I think it is a Bernina activa 220- what with all the buttons and the computer screen… read more

Summer is here…what to do?

S-U-M-M-E-R. Suuummmmer. I love summer, always have…but what to do with kids in the desert heat?

We have a plan: A Face A Day. Found stuff, drawn, glued, painted…whatever. We will make a face every day. This is one from our first batch: OK- now that covers about 12 minutes of each day (including clean-up)…now what? If you have any other good ideas please share!

Zakka-style Ikea High Chair Hack



Whew…that is a mouthful! Zakka-style Ikea high chair hack (or mod.) But that is just what I did for our high chair. Basically, it is a padded slipcover…but really it it is a glorified pot-holder custom-tailored to the seat back. The plastic is so hard for a little baby’s head…just learning to sit up and eat all at the same time…so I thought I would make it softer. My friend, J, liked it so much she wanted one, too. Hers is in lovely soft greens. You can see more Ikea hacks here and another slipcover for a high chair here. read more

one thing done well

Ok- as parents (or as people…or as friends…) how many things can we say that we do right? RIGHT. Really right. Absolutely, empirically, incontrovertibly right? And what is right anyway? How about done well, very well? I am here today to place my first check in the box of well done with these pencils, these sharpened, but not too sharp (lest he put an eye out) pencils sitting in a baby food jar on our dining table- where we eat our meals. The big boy has had a box of markers on the table for about a year. The paper is on a nearby shelf. And the pencils are a recent addition- started maybe two or three months ago. You know what they are? They are a bouquet. They are possibility. They are an invitation to creativity- and kids already do that so well without any help. Whenever he wants to draw they are there. And he either draws alone or we draw together. And it is good. And I feel happy and relieved that as his mother I have done, without a doubt, one thing right. Hear that? That is the sound of me smiling. read more