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Valentine’s Day Cross Stitch

6 Feb

Valentine's Day Cross Stitch

I whipped up this little cross stitch as a gift tag for a bridal shower, but realized it is a perfect and quick project for Valentine’s Day. Kind of like carving your initials into a tree, but without the need to wield a knife. Stitchpoint has some nice alphabets featured in their cross stitch writing tool, and you can also find a lot of alphabet patterns by doing a search on Google Images. I’ve included a link to the heart pattern as a PDF below; just print it out and fill in the squares with your letter pattern.

Download the heart cross stitch pattern.

This project was finished in the embroidery hoop is was stitched in, using this excellent tutorial from Maximum Rabbit.

Seen in the Wild: Chalkboard Nesting Dolls

25 Jan

Rubyellen from Cakies was sweet enough to send us a link to the Chalkboard Nesting Doll tutorial she posted up on her site featuring our nesting doll blanks.

Too too cute for words, and crazy clever! You can snag your own dolls and start painting here.

Thanks, Rubyellen!

Make your own Montessori Coin Box

12 Dec

The kidlet and I took a Montessori parent-child class, which mostly succeeded in teaching her how much she likes to put stuff in stuff. Not a day has gone by where she hasn’t put her montessori skills to work dumping the cat food into the cat’s water bowl. I decided to push her interest in this towards something less messy, and made a coin box out of materials we had laying around the house. Quick & easy, and significantly cheaper than buying the legit version.

We used an empty Happy Baby Broccoli Munchies tin for this, though any tin with a lid will do. I covered the outside of the tin with Elmer’s X-treme Glue Stick (whoa! extreme! it snowboards, too!) The fabric piece was cut just larger than the tin, both in circumference and height. I lined up one edge along the top of the tin, pressing all the way around. Then, I used my hand to flatten out the entire outside. To get a clean line at the bottom, I ran my rotary cutter along the ridge to remove the excess.

Depending on the type of coins you plan on using (we have poker chips, but wood discs would also work well), slice the top of the lid with an exacto blade a little bit larger than the coin itself.

Besides just being a great tool to help with fine motor skills, the filled tin also makes an excellent noise maker.

5 Minute Mousepad Makeover

6 Dec

DIY Fabric Mousepad

Five minutes might even be too generous – this came together so quickly that I smacked my forehead for not doing this sooner. My mousepad had gotten all grimy and gross over the past year, so I called on my old friend for this refashion: Wonder-Under. If you haven’t used Wonder-Under before, prepare to have your world rocked. It’s a double-sided fusible webbing that lets you turn pretty much anything you can iron into fusible fabric. Make friends with it, and fast.

For this project, set your iron to hot. Cut a piece of Wonder-Under and a piece of fabric slightly larger than your mousepad, and iron the non-paper side to the underside of your fabric. Once slightly cooled, peel off the paper backing. I’ve found it to be the easiest to remove if you score the paper (just through the paper layer!) with just a single stroke using your scissors. You can then bend at this score and peel off the paper. Lay the fabric (print side up) on top of your mousepad and iron to affix. I went around the edges at an angle to make sure it was well sealed at the edges. Trim off the excess fabric, and you’re set!

DIY Chalkboard Paint Blocks

13 Nov

I’m a fan of anything that lets me pretend to be a scientist and mix up a caldron of goo. When I came across a recipe for chalkboard paint, I filed it under ‘Must-Do’. The options to make something into chalkboard are endless, and I couldn’t help but think how fun chalkboard blocks would be for kids (and when I say kids, I really mean me.) This tutorial was so easy and so fun. And seriously, what can’t you do with chalkboard blocks?

Materials
Latex paint
Non sanded grout
Foam Paintbrush
Sandpaper

Instructions
  1. Lightly sand blocks with 150-grit sandpaper so you have a smooth surface on each side. Wipe off any dust.
  2. Pour 3/4 cups of paint into a container. Add 2 tablespoons of unsanded tile grout. Mix with a paint stirrer, breaking up any clumps.
  3. Paint 2 coats of your chalkbaord paint on three sides of the block using a foam paintbrush. Paint may look a little clumpy but, no worries, the clumps dissolve (as long as there aren’t any big clumps). Leave three sides unpainted- two sides for you to hold while painting and one side to set the block down. Use long, even strokes in the same direction, allowing each coat to dry.
  4. Refrigerate your paint in between coats to keep paint from clupming.
  5. When your three sides are dry, paint the remaining unpainted sides.
  6. Use chalk to personalize you blocks. Wipe and reuse as much as you want!

Tip! 
If you don’t have any leftover paint to use, most home improvement stores carry paint samples for just a couple bucks. The perfect amount of paint for this project!