Showing posts with label instructions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label instructions. Show all posts
Sunday, May 26, 2013
My origami display solution
I have loved folding origami ever since my second grade teacher Mrs. Maetani at Waterford School (Provo, back when it existed) taught my class how. And then my big sister went on a mission there and brought me back a huge oragami book in Japanese (which didn't matter, because it is based on pictures anyway). I was an origami fool as a kid. Bored at church; origami, bored in school; origami, bored ANYWHERE; origami. I still love to do it. My perfectionist tendencies get a huge kick with all the crisp exact folding... The only problem I ever had with folding origami is that I never had a very good place to put it/store it/display it. And therefore was reluctant to do it as much as I might have otherwise. I didn't want them to go to waste (especially if it was with real origami paper, which I rarely had). Because I'm crazy like that too. But having recently succumbed to the temptation to buy a fat stack of darling little origami papers and so I now have loads AND THEN I saw these tiny clothespins and voila! A brilliant solution was procured. I don't know if others have done this before me and I have just been clueless. It is certainly simple enough I wouldn't be surprised. But either way, I figured I'd share it with you.
None of my doorways are safe now.
Labels:
creativity,
darling,
decorations,
fun,
instructions,
origami,
projects
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
#365 drawings: 2 (flower bead jewelry tutorial)
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2/365 |
Hah, I did it a second day!
(even though it is sort of a cop out drawing.. it is still technically a drawing!)
I was going to draw one of my favorite photos of Max from when he was 3 or so.. and/or an animal suggestion of the long list my kids gave me. But... well, it didn't happen. What did happen was this very sloppy instruction sheet for Activity Days (I help out with the 8-11 year old girls at church) tomorrow. It is not a pretty, cleaned up fancy tutorial like I would like show on my blog. It is a rather ugly (though hopefully informative) info sheet. But I am going to post it anyway, because day 2 is not one to chicken out on showing my work. And if I wait until it is perfect, well it probably won't happen. And if it does it will take up lots of time and stress. So I am letting it go!
lots of different beading variations.. |
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Homemade Christmas Present Roundup Vol. 1
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DVD travelling art kit |
No tutorial for the capes. Just a hemmed rectangle of fabric, with an elastic casing at the top, and a craft foam applique. Really easy. |
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Lunch Money Cuff tutorial: Lemon Squeezy Home |
bowtie: Lemon Squeezy Home. Hat: Sew Liberated |
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Wall-E instructable, EVE instructable. Both modified |
(You can also check out my other tutorials..)
Labels:
creativity,
darling,
easy,
instructions,
kids,
linklove,
pastprojects,
sewing,
tutorial
Friday, November 23, 2012
Tutorial: Upcycling cereal boxes into carboard mailers
This is so easy I can't believe I haven't thought of this before. It is brilliant if I do say so myself. I wish I had thought of this when I was bothering with all of the promotions and whatnot to get a tiny bit of sales with my etsy shop. Though they will be useful for the new printing run I'm doing of my Ted book. Just in time for the season of gifting and shipping everything. Either way I am super happy that I found such a great use for the waste from the grotesque amounts of cereal my children consume. I will certainly never need to buy another small mailer again!
See, totally easy! I know I'm going to be using them from now on. Are you?
Labels:
cereal,
creativity,
easy,
instructions,
recycle,
tutorial
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Kid Project: Upcycling old broken crayons into swirly coloring sculptures
I did this last year with my kids for their friends, and since it was for gifts, I didn't blog about it then. That and I'm pretty awful about blogging. But in honor of the upcoming gifting/making/shopping madness, I wanted to get more homemade gift ideas out there and in my tutorials. So, this random post which was half written (and of course not finished) was dug gingerly out of the pile of my squandered molding ideas, and with a little spit polish here and there, I present it to you for your crafting pleasure.
Step 1: Peel old crayons. (kid step) Perfect job for kid helpers. You (the adult) can make it easier by taking an exacto knife and cutting through the length of the crayon paper wrapper.
Step 2: Sort out the colors into like piles. (kid step) I used a ton of leftover crayons, all different brands. Some of which had different wax and sparkles and whatnot other components, so it wasn't all totally homogeneous. Not the best thing, so I would suggest maybe sticking to the same brand. It still worked though, but next time I think I'll go with all the same sort of crayons.
Step 3: Melt them double boiler style. (adult job) You can use a variety of things for this purpose. But just know it will probably ruin whatever container you use. So think recycled. You can start collecting rinsed out tin cans, or I used glass baby food jars.. anything that isn't going to melt with the crayons. (don't use anything plastic) And put them in a shallow pot of boiling water. Make sure the water doesn't go into the crayon containers.
Step 4: Pour the molten wax into molds. (adult job) Use tongs or oven mitts or something, because I guarantee whatever you used to house the molten wax will be super hot. Be careful when you pour! You can use all sorts of different molds to shape the wax. I used candy molds this time. But you can use old ice cube trays, or muffin tins, old prescription bottles or even hollowed out egg shells. The possibilities are really endless. (you could get real fancy and make plaster casts of objects and fill it in with wax..) I also like to swirl and mix two or more colors together. I try to stick with colors next to or close to each other on the color spectrum (or mix with neutrals, white, brown, greys and black) to avoid really ugly combinations, like what happens when you mix complimentary colors that cancel each other out. Because they will mix up a bit. The mixing colors is my favorite part. Go crazy and have fun with it though!
Step 5: Cool them off completely. Cool off in freezer (where the wax will contract, making it easy to pop right out of the mold!)
Step 5: Remove from the mold and color. (kid step) Make sure it is totally cooled off and cold, and not even slightly warm at all. If so it should come right out and be ready to color with!
There you go! Enjoy! It is really fun, and they make fantastic gifts. If you want more gift making tutorials let me know!
These were from candy pretzel molds, so I had to tape up the end so the wax wouldn't run out, but overall it made a great shape for coloring with. |
Upcycled Fancy Crayons
Step 1: Peel old crayons. (kid step) Perfect job for kid helpers. You (the adult) can make it easier by taking an exacto knife and cutting through the length of the crayon paper wrapper.
Step 2: Sort out the colors into like piles. (kid step) I used a ton of leftover crayons, all different brands. Some of which had different wax and sparkles and whatnot other components, so it wasn't all totally homogeneous. Not the best thing, so I would suggest maybe sticking to the same brand. It still worked though, but next time I think I'll go with all the same sort of crayons.
Step 3: Melt them double boiler style. (adult job) You can use a variety of things for this purpose. But just know it will probably ruin whatever container you use. So think recycled. You can start collecting rinsed out tin cans, or I used glass baby food jars.. anything that isn't going to melt with the crayons. (don't use anything plastic) And put them in a shallow pot of boiling water. Make sure the water doesn't go into the crayon containers.
Step 4: Pour the molten wax into molds. (adult job) Use tongs or oven mitts or something, because I guarantee whatever you used to house the molten wax will be super hot. Be careful when you pour! You can use all sorts of different molds to shape the wax. I used candy molds this time. But you can use old ice cube trays, or muffin tins, old prescription bottles or even hollowed out egg shells. The possibilities are really endless. (you could get real fancy and make plaster casts of objects and fill it in with wax..) I also like to swirl and mix two or more colors together. I try to stick with colors next to or close to each other on the color spectrum (or mix with neutrals, white, brown, greys and black) to avoid really ugly combinations, like what happens when you mix complimentary colors that cancel each other out. Because they will mix up a bit. The mixing colors is my favorite part. Go crazy and have fun with it though!
Step 5: Cool them off completely. Cool off in freezer (where the wax will contract, making it easy to pop right out of the mold!)
Step 5: Remove from the mold and color. (kid step) Make sure it is totally cooled off and cold, and not even slightly warm at all. If so it should come right out and be ready to color with!
re-purposed glass baby food jars work great for gifting and/or storage (as well as for melting) can you tell I did this when Liam was still eating baby food? |
There you go! Enjoy! It is really fun, and they make fantastic gifts. If you want more gift making tutorials let me know!
Labels:
creativity,
easy,
gifts,
instructions,
kids,
pastprojects,
recycle,
tutorial
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
my briliant anti-cold-cereal solution
You may have noticed previously my stark and vehement dislike of cold cereal. But I seem to have come up with a quasi solution to my problem of too expensive, too soggy, too processed, too boring and not lasting until lunch; cereal complex. One that I will even consent to consume, nay even enjoy. (pause for actual cereal eating break... seriously, I just realized that this is JUST exactly what I want. right now). Now to continue with out spilling milk on the keyboard.. ahem.
Make your own.
No, not another sort of breakfast (though you know, that is good too, but tends to always dirty more dishes... so, you know, kind of evil... but we're not talking about dishes now, are we?) But make your own cold cereal. I've made granola before, and its fun for a bit, but really quite sweet and pretty heavy on the stomach. By itself. BUT of the few cereals that I eat voluntarily at all... they seem to have the 'bunches of oats' or 'oat clusters' in them, which duh, is granola. Then they just add flakes and dried fruit or nuts. Pretty simple. I've been meaning to do it for a while to see how my homemade version worked out. Then I finally did. And it does. So I'm breaking my blog silence by deciding not to be selfish with my self proclaimed profound discovery.
The instructions are actually pretty simple.
-make granola. (easier than it sounds) You do not need to be Crunchy to do so. From my brief stint of habitation in Portland, I learned thus: apparently I'm only a wannabe hippie. I had only deluded myself that I knew anything about true earth love. And footprints of carbon. They are professionals. However, for this you do not need to be.
combine in saucepan and bring to a boil:
1/2 c. water,
1 1/2 c. brown sugar,
4 tsp. vanilla,
1 tsp. almond extract (optional) and
1 tsp. salt.
pour the hot syrupy stuff you just made over this in a big bowl:
8 c. oats,
1-2 c. coconut,
1-2 c. slivered almonds, or other nuts of your choice (cashews are heavenly).
Mix it all thoroughly and spread out onto a large cookie sheet. Bake at 250 for a couple of hours, or 200 or lower all night.
Break up into small chunks and add dried fruit. I prefer cranberries, though raisins are good as well. I haven't tried dried bananas, but they might be tasty (especially the non freeze dried ones) or cherries.. anyway, that is what truly makes it taste good, so don't skimp on the dried fruit. Then mix in a whole box of corn flakes. (you could go all authentic and mix in different kinds of flakes, like bran flakes and some frosted flakes... but I just used corn flakes... I'm lazy like that.
It actually makes quite a bit of cereal. So it lasts a while, and my cereal reserves (that I don't even eat!) don't get depleted quite so fast. We've been going through cereal like its going out of style!
Liam does his part with the rampant cereal consumption. |
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
kid project: growing sugar crystals
My kids are on a crystal kick such as the world hasn't seen since the early 90's. Theirs runs more towards the cheaper plastic sort, but nonetheless just as crazed. I thought I'd show them some real crystals. They aren't too impressed by small ones we found in rocks, so I thought perhaps we could make some bigger ones.
Fortunately a while ago I scored a sweet Goodwill find of "How Science Works" and bequeathed it to my oldest filled with fantasies of doing science projects together and being that cool sort of Mom. Then I got all nerdy and explained it all before we did it.
this is how:
1- we heated up water and slowly dissolved sugar into it until it wouldn't dissolve any more, and then we should have added a tiny bit more water so that all of the sugar would have dissolved and not acted as seed crystals all over the bottom of the jar. ..and added blue food coloring
2- we poured the super saturated hot sugar water/syrup into a jar and hung a rough string (we used hemp because it was laying around, you could use yarn) into the jar (not touching the sides or bottom)
3- waited. Patience isn't a strong point in children, but they held off for two whole days while we were growing a seed crystal.
3- we took the largest seed crystal (that Lucy didn't eat) from off of the rough string and tied it to a nylon string (fishing line works) and hung it from newly resaturated sugar solution.
And then whilst on vacation, we grew bigger ones.
Saved the biggest ones in cool origami-sticker boxes, and happily ate the rest.
They taste like little naked nerds.
Fortunately a while ago I scored a sweet Goodwill find of "How Science Works" and bequeathed it to my oldest filled with fantasies of doing science projects together and being that cool sort of Mom. Then I got all nerdy and explained it all before we did it.
this is how:
1- we heated up water and slowly dissolved sugar into it until it wouldn't dissolve any more, and then we should have added a tiny bit more water so that all of the sugar would have dissolved and not acted as seed crystals all over the bottom of the jar. ..and added blue food coloring
...BTW, this is AFTER the solution has sat and been poured out. |
2- we poured the super saturated hot sugar water/syrup into a jar and hung a rough string (we used hemp because it was laying around, you could use yarn) into the jar (not touching the sides or bottom)
3- waited. Patience isn't a strong point in children, but they held off for two whole days while we were growing a seed crystal.
3- we took the largest seed crystal (that Lucy didn't eat) from off of the rough string and tied it to a nylon string (fishing line works) and hung it from newly resaturated sugar solution.
And then whilst on vacation, we grew bigger ones.
Saved the biggest ones in cool origami-sticker boxes, and happily ate the rest.
They taste like little naked nerds.
Monday, April 26, 2010
Tutorial: Diaper Holder Changing Packet

DISCLAIMER! I used pictures of two different diaper holders in the directions, so sorry if that is confusing. It is also really hard to explain how to do things with only pictures and words... instead of just doing it, or showing someone how in person. I didn't think this was complicated at all until I wrote directions for it. If you ARE confused, please ask me questions, and I'll try to make the directions better and clear it up.
Supplies:
-rotary cutter, self healing mat and clear ruler (or scissors and measuring tape)
-sewing machine.-two coordinating/contrasting fabrics, 1/3 of a yard each
-matching thread
-clear vinyl, 1/4 yard.
-iron on/fusible interfacing
-10" of 1/4" wide elastic
-sew on Velcro
-8 1/2" x 4 1/2" x 1" diaper wipes traveling case (Huggies.. is the one I used)
optional:
-coordinating 1" wide grosgrain ribbon
-more coordinating fabric scraps for pockets.
-tissue paper for sewing vinyl easier
-clothespins for holding vinyl in place
Cut:
-one 10 1/2" x 20 1/2" rectangle of the main/outer fabric
-one 10 1/2" x 20 1/2" rectangle of the liner/contrast fabric-one 10 1/2" x 20 1/2" rectangle of the fusible interfacing.
-one 8 1/2" x 11 3/4" rectangle of main/outer fabric or other coordinating fabric for the middle pocket
-two 5 1/2" x 10 1/2" rectangles of clear vinyl for outer pockets
-two 2" x 10 1/2" binding strips out of outside fabric or second coordinating fabrics for vinyl pocket edging
Use 1/4" seam allowance unless otherwise specified on this pattern.
We'll start with the inside.


Fold pocket over adding more small pleats close the the corners of each side. Pin and stitch along the sides. (if you want more guidelines as to how big to make the pleats, use the travel size diaper wipes you'll be putting in it as a guide)

- [1st illustration] sew (no pinning on vinyl) right sides together the binding strip to the vinyl. (tip: sew with the vinyl on the bottom, it will feed through your machine easier.)
-[2nd illustration] turn and fold fabric binding strip along the seam edge.
-[3rd and 4th illustration] Fold twice to make a binding. stitch close to the edge. (edges won't match, wider side with outer stitching is the outside). Repeat for other vinyl pocket.
Inside is complete... now to construct the outside.
Velcro Tab: (two ways shown)
-Cut about 7/8" hook side of velcro, and about 1 1/4" of the soft side of the velcro.
cut 3 1/2" of ribbon. Sew hook side of velcro just past the middle of the ribbon. Fold ribbon in half and stitch along the edges of the ribbon.

cut two pieces of 2" x 1 1/2" contrasting fabric scrap. Sew hook side of velcro onto the right side of one fabric piece about a 1/2" away from the end. With right sides together sew around three sides of both fabric scraps leaving the opposite end (of the velcro) side open. Clip corners, and turn inside out. (you can stitch 1/8" around the edges for a more finished look if you'd like)
pin velcro tab as shown to the middle of the lengthwise end (velcro side up). Pin soft side of velcro in between 5 1/2" and 6 3/4" along the ribbon (or in the middle) as shown. (To double check correct velcro position, fill liner side with diapers and wipes, pin corners together and fold up, checking velcro closure. Adjust accordingly.) sew velcro and velcro tab on.
Labels:
baby,
changing kit,
creativity,
darling,
instructions,
kids,
projects,
sewing,
tutorial
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