Monday, March 10, 2008
Bent Objects....
Prepare for hilarity! Terry over at Bent Objects is incredibly talented with a little wire and a whole lot of everyday objects. Pay close attention to any words on the products, as they are usually key to "getting" the joke.
Every few days he posts a picture of a common household object seen from a different perspective. Right now he is doing a whole series of "Tragedies at the Circus" using those little candy circus peanuts as the stars. You have to see these!
Be ye warned, some of his sculptures can be a bit off color, but the majority of them are family friendly.
Monday, March 3, 2008
New Soul by Yael Naim
Enjoy!
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Food and Family
Kraft Foods has a great website where you can type in a few ingredients you have on hand and it will give you recipe suggestions. It has been a real help for dinner a number of nights. It also has a ton of great free recipes, how to videos and even coupons for their products. Best of all, you can sign up on their mailing list and you will get a weekly email with recipes, kitchen tips, and more coupons. You can also sign up to get a quarterly magazine sent to your home that has even more wonderful, easy recipes and photos of each of them. It actually is one of my favorite cooking magazines, and I subscribe to a number of the most popular ones.
Tonight we made molten chocolate surprises. In my case the surprise was that they were not molten... but they were good nonetheless.
Go to their site and sign up- you'll thank me for it.
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
That's Just My Bag Baby...
Those of you that know me, know that I am not really a purse kind of gal. Try fitting a digital camera, an I-Pod, a book, wallet, cell phone, gum, sunglasses and keys in your standard cute, girly purse. Add various things needed by a preschool boy, and it was obvious I had to come up with a better plan.
Christmas 2007 I was looking for a new bag. My grandparents gave me money and said, "Here, go buy yourself something from us and put it under the tree." I ran across these AWESOME messenger bags from Timbuk2 somewhere online, and knew right off that I had to have one. They are waterproof, come in a bajillion different sizes, shapes and colors, and look so much cooler than a backpack. Plus, they are designed to be slung over one shoulder, which is how I prefer to carry things anyway.
I went to our local specialty sports and outdoors store just to get my hands on one and try them out for size. I decided on the Classic Small Messenger because it had lots of little pockets to store things like cell phones, MP3 players, sunglasses and suckers, while still having one large central pocket for books, a jacket or my digital SLR camera. I especially like the way the flap closes with the clips and the rubber lined ballistic nylon which makes the entire thing very durable and water-resistant. The little key fob is nice as is the adjustable shoulder strap- even though I usually leave it fully extended. You can also order optional accessories such as strap pads, cell phone holders and the like to clip to the strap.
I found a marvelous deal on a "build your own bag" of sorts online, and ordered the mocha/baby blue/mocha one with silver interior and baby blue logo. When it came it was really difficult to wrap it up and put it under the tree, but I did. I could not WAIT to open it. That was over a year ago, and I am still using this thing every day. I have washed it once (in the washing machine) and it still looks as good as new. When the time comes I will not hesitate to order another. I only wish I had thought to get one of these when Coleman was a little baby instead of lugging a diaper bag around all those years!
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Quick and Easy Ribbon Bulletin Board Craft Project...
I have had a few friends ask for directions on how to make the ribbon bulletin boards I have in the kitchen and Coleman's room. I thought I would put the instructions here in case anyone else wants to try one. Unfortunately I did not take photos as the project went along, so you will have to make do with instructions and finished product.
This project can be done pretty cheaply if you already happen to have some of the materials on hand, such as the wood, batting, staples and staple gun like I did. If you have to purchase all of it you will be looking at a more pricey little project.
What you need:
* 1/4 inch plywood or MDF in whatever size you want-I used scrap we had in the garage
*Fabric- enough to cover wood plus wrap over sides about 1-2 inches. Don't use anything really thin or stretchy. I used quilt material or drapery material. Use pinking shears (those zig-zag scissors) around the edges if you want it to not unravel.
* Quilt batting- (not fiberfill)- thick enough to smooth out the wood but we're not making a pillow here! Needs to be enough to wrap over sides as well about 1-2 inches
*Ribbon coordinating with your fabric pattern. I used about 15 yards for each of mine, but if you put your squares farther apart or your board is a different size that makes a difference too.
* Upholstery tacks- get them in the hardware section of your fabric store- they come in different designs. Get about 50-75 of them. Err on too many instead of too few because you will end up bending a ton of them.
* A light duty staple gun and tons of staples
* Scissors
* hammer
* ruler
* sawback hangers so you can hang your finished product
Instructions:
1. Cut your wood to size. Lay your fabric and quilt batting out and cut it out just about 1" too much on all sides of your board. Pay attention to be sure the pattern on you fabric is going the way you'd like.
2. Iron your fabric. Trust me, you will kick yourself if you don't.
3. Lay your fabric face down with the batting on top (closest to the wood). Lay your board on top and center it.
4. Bring your batting around the back of the plywood and staple down about 1 inch from the edge. Do all the batting, Then follow with the fabric, pulling snugly as you go. You want it to look upholstered, but not like it has had bad plastic surgery.
5. Take care at the edges to fold them so that they lay flat. Too many staples are better than too few in this project. Trim your edges so they are neat and not too bulky, but leave a little away from the staples in case the fabric pulls a little.
6. When the upholstering is done, take your ribbon and stretch it diagonally from one corner to other. Leave about 3 inches overhang on each end, snip. While you are at it go ahead and cut two of this size. Staple one end on the back and bring it over that corner and down to the opposite- then staple it on the back, You will want the ribbon to lie snug and flat to the fabric, but not pucker the edges. I always staple 3 times on each end- 2 times with the ribbon's direction and once across. This is probably overkill, but I don't want to be repairing the thing later.
7. Repeat with opposite corners.- Be sure if your ribbon has a difference in grain or sheen from front side to back you take that into consideration and use the same side or opposite if you want a pattern.
8. Now you have a giant X. Measure however many inches from your ribbon to put the next one- I do 4" but 5" or more would work too. Cut the ribbon to length, remember to cut 2 to save time. Staple the ribbon on the back at the proper distance, then pull it across and measure at the bottom before stapling the loose end. Continue with all the ribbon until it is all latticed. You may weave the ribbon as well as you go along.
9. When you have the cross hatch all done, lay your board face up on a firm surface such as a cement floor or another piece of plywood- your tacks will probably go through the back a little, so do not use a dining table, the hard wood floor or something else like that. Take a tack, put it at the intersection of each ribbon and hammer down. These little suckers tend to bend all to heck, so practice makes perfect- good luck. You may want to have needle nose pliers handy to remove wayward tacks.
10. Turn your board over and nail down any protruding spikes. Add hangers to back and hang your project on the wall.
11. Slide your memorabilia, photos, appointment cards etc. under the ribbons and enjoy!
Be sure to email me any photos if you do this yourself. I'd love to see how someone else's turn out.
This is in Coleman's Room. It's great for holding photos, all those little craft projects as well as things he picks up along the way- such as cotton, cards and more!
This hangs in our kitchen. We keep all of our appointment cards, doctor's phone numbers, neat photos, and photos of friends and people we want reminders to pray for such as our kids in Ecuador and missionary friends around the world.
Friday, January 4, 2008
IMPORTANT SERVICE MESSAGE!!!
***We interrupt this blog series on books with an important public announcement!***
Before you forward something about a missing child, deadly computer virus, Marshall Field's cookie recipe or the latest government conspiracy, please for the sake of all recipients, check out SNOPES.COM to see if it has a shred of truth.
I find myself forwarding links to this site to well intentioned, but misinformed, friends, family and casual acquaintences all of the time. Ah, the joys of the internet!
The benefit of being the one to rain on everyone's parade of misinformation with a link to the truth? Eventually you stop getting forwards!
Thursday, September 13, 2007
E-Music Download Service
Music being a top priority at our house, we love to discover and download new music. However, we HATE ITunes because of their expense, proprietary file format and general not too user-friendly program. Imagine our excitement when Kristen turned us on to E-Music.
E-Music is a downloadable music service that is reasonably priced and subscription based, but can be cancelled at any time. Subscriptions range from $9.99 a month for 30 downloads to $19.99 for 75 downloads a month. The files are regular old MP3s, so they can be burned to disc or played on any type of MP3 player. Also, they save your info on downloads, and if you should need to re-download all your music you do it for free! Best of all- you get a great FREE TRIAL of 50 downloads (email me for the link) which you can cancel immediately if you'd like. (A credit card is required for the free trial, just remember to cancel and you are fine.)
What types of artists will you find at E-Music? No Avril Lavigne or BackStreet Boys there... but you'll be thrilled if you like Independent/Singer songwriters, up and coming alternative artists, americana or alt- country, folk, gospel, kid's music and more. Here is a list of what we have downloaded in the past few months:
- Aaron Sprinkle
- Dan Zanes (for Coleman)
- Jonah Werner
- Over the Rhine
- Chuck Brodsky
- Waterdeep
- Farmer Not So John
- Jeremy Casella
- Ed Cash
- Gillian Welch
- Stavesacre
- Brace Yourself Bridget (Irish Folk-Rock)
- Edie Brickell and the New Bohemians
- John Prine
- Katy Bowser
- Peter Mulvey
- Ray Charles
- Sandra McCracken
- Sarah McGlaughlin
- Sonia Dada
- Sufjan Stephens
- The Electrics
They also have a lot of old Tom Waits, tons of the indie artists we like so well such as Jason Harrod, Mark Williams, Dog Named David, Claire Holley, Jennifer Daniels, Christopher Williams, Brooks Williams, Beki Hemingway, many of the Awakening Records and Paste Music Artists. For 50 free downloads you can't go wrong.
Leave a comment here if you want a free trial- if you go through me we BOTH get the 50 free and I would love some more great music!
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Digital Photography Challenge...
Sunday, September 9, 2007
Bloons Game
Okay, I know I posted a quiz just a few days ago, but this game is a lot of fun. Another time waster, but great for when you just need a few minutes to sit and be quiet and do nothing productive whatsoever.
Coleman likes to play it as well because he can sometimes accidentally beat the level.
Enjoy! And oh- there's also MORE BLOONS if you should get through the first 50 levels.http://www.notdoppler.com/bloons.php
Saturday, September 8, 2007
Letter of the Week Preschool Curriculum
Friday, September 7, 2007
Paperback Book Swap/ Swap a CD
The way it works is simple... just type in the ISBNs of books you want to get rid of. Make a wish list of books you'd like, or order them off the site if they are already available. When a book is requested from you, you simply click a couple of places, a page prints out for you to wrap up the book, you take it to the post office and pay the shipping. When the book is received, you get a credit good toward another book for yourself. It's that easy.
There is a sister site called Swap a CD.com that is a similar format but with CDs. The credits can move back and forth between the two sites, so if you are getting rid of a lot of books you can get CDs and vice versa.
So far I have had only good experiences with both sites. You get automated email reminders and it is a great way to get your hands on some things you want for CHEAP.
And that is my middle name.
http://www.paperbackswap.com/
http://www.swapacd.com/
Thursday, September 6, 2007
The Impossible Quiz
That being said, it is also a lot of fun! I just discovered they have come out with a second one as well, which I have not attempted yet. I think I got as far as 80 something on the first one.
http://www.notdoppler.com/theimpossiblequiz.php
(I can't remember if there is anything off-color in this thing since it has been a long while since I played it. Play at your own risk if that may be a problem.)
Enjoy! And don't blame me for the block of time that just disappears.
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
Team Hoyt
A friend sent me the link to this video on YouTube a number of months ago. What a wonderful story of sacrifice and love. If Dick loves his son this much, how much deeper is OUR Father's love for us?
For the full story on this incredible pair, go to their website at http://www.teamhoyt.com/
The video below is from the Today show. The second half features the video shown above.
With Love, just about anything is possible.
Tuesday, September 4, 2007
Dan Heller's Photography
Way back in the 90's when we were shopping for a new lens for our Pentax SLR film camera (remember those... film cameras?), I did an internet search for the particular lens we were looking at purchasing, and this guy's website came up. I took a look around and decided that he was the best stinkin' photographer I had seen outside of my art appreciation classes.
I discovered that he used the lens that we were considering, and I sent him an email asking how he felt about it. Turns out, he really liked it and responded with a good email about its pros and cons. Not only talented, but also seems like a very nice guy. Taking photos is his job, so I trusted his judgement and we bought the lens. And what a job, travelling the world (often on someone else's dime) taking photos and enjoying cultures totally different from your own.
Check out his site: http://www.danheller.com
If I ever come across a boatload of money, I intend to buy a number of his prints to hang in our house, that is, until mine look as good as his.