flowers

flowers

Monday, December 12, 2011

favorite senior shots from 2011-2012

 a recap from the past year of my favorite senior and 8th grade pics...

















thank you seniors and 8th grade graduates of 2011 and 2012!!








Thursday, December 1, 2011

wreaths...


i hope this is the first of many wreaths as i love them & enjoy making them... this is our Christmas wreath this year.  I used a straw wreath (bought on 75% clearance at Joann's after Halloween-yes!!), and wrapped 2 different colors of yarn around in securing in the back.  Then I simply crocheted 3 flowers, sewed buttons on & sewed all 3 to the wreath.  Easy & took little time to make.  I forgot how allergic to straw/hay I am though & sneezed my way through the whole thing! achooo!!

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

rrrrrruffflllllesssss

thanks to Pinterest, I have been sewing ruffles on lots of things... tops that needed a little "updo", old overcoats that were just "blah", and a recent project- flower girl dresses for a friend's wedding.  I decided to actually document this, just in case I wanted to every figure out how it did it years from now when all our children decide to get married.  I was given some plain white flower girl dresses & had to add some ruffles to match the wedding colors & lengthen them a tad as well.  I also made sashes but did not include this in the tutorial as it seems pretty basic to me.  If you have questions about that part, I can add it on later.
I start with my trusty Gingher scissors, measuring tape & tomato needle cushion- I also usually keep a seam ripper on hand & a smaller pair of gingher scissors & of course, my sewing machine.  The material I used was a shiny, polyester kind that is sort of shimmery & made for perfect ruffles.
My first step was to cut into strips about 6 inches in width & 2 yards in length.  I used 2 of these strips for each dress because you need to so it will be super "ruffly".  Use less, if you don't want something so ruffly.  Also, these were pretty wide b/c I wanted them to add length to the dresses, not just embellishment.  
Then, I folded them in half lengthwise and ironed them....
Ironing them makes the ruffles stay in place & it just looks better, guaranteed. I then sewed each end together to make one long loop. Now it's ready to pin to the dress.
Dress:
Kinda plain, ya?
let's jazz it up a tad...
Using the bottom of the dress as my measuring stick, I laid it out on my bed (sorry- no worktable here, it's my bed or the kitchen table folks!) and stretched it out to full length.  Taking the long loop of pre-ruffled material, I also stretched it to full length just underneath the dress.  This was hard to get a picture of b/c I would have had to be on my ceiling, so I'll just try to explain.  I laid the strip of fabric down horizontally so the dress bottom was centered just above it & then pinned the middle of the strip to the middle bottom of the dress.
this is my attempt at eyeballing the middle of the strip.  It doesn't have to be exact but it does help to do some measuring ahead of time so you don't end up with way too much fabric on one side & not enough on the other.  I have done this before & it's a pain to rip out especially with certain types of material.
After pinning the middle, I pinned the edges, leaving the other side for after this side is all pinned.  Then I just basically divided everything into halves.  I pinned halfway between the middle pin & edge pin on both sides & divided those in half, pinning the middle of those 2 halves until I got down to basically a ruffle-size pin.


You can see the other side of the ruffle here that is for the other side of the dress, it just sat there until I flipped the dress over & did the same thing to the other side.
Then I pinned all the ruffles.  Like I said, it's not an exact science, but just try to keep the ruffles "roughly" (har,har) the same distance apart.
Do same thing to other side and it's ready for the sewing machine.  So I ended up with about 3 inches of ruffle hanging down from each dress.  Whatever length you want your ruffle to be, just make sure it is twice the width you need. 
I didn't document the actual sewing part, but I just put the pinned edge under the needle & took pins out as I sewed along.  I think they turned out pretty cute!

Ruffle...


simple sash...


finished dress!

P.S. note on the sashes- I believe i used the same width of material for the sashes but only one yard in length instead of two.  Simply fold in half (inside-out) and sew along cut edge, turn right side out, finish edged with a French seam & iron flat!

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Thursday, November 3, 2011

making flubber....

let me just say... this was a FUN project to do with our kids!
We did it as part of our "Science Class" for our 1st grader & Kindergartener and they absolutely LOVED watching a liquid become a solid-ish substance before their very eyes. I found this original recipe on Pinterest and decided to to make our own with lots of pics as well.
So... to start out with, you need:
3 tsps. Borax
2 cups of Elmer's Glue
Warm water
Food coloring (we used Wilton's b/c I am apparently out of regular food coloring)


I had never bought Borax before (crazy, I know) and I found it in the laundry detergent section at Walmart.  It only came in a big box and the recipe only calls for 3 tsp., I thought that was kinda silly but who knows what else we will end up using it for??  The recipe calls for 2 cups of glue and since that sort of measurement isn't on the bottles, we sort of had to guesstimate it, but 2- 7.625 fl. 0z. bottles of Elmer's was just about right.
So we started out with 2 bowls and got ready to mix:
First we mixed the borax and 1 cup of warm water in a bowl, then in the other bowl we mixed the glue and 1 and half cups of warm water.  Our almost 7 year-old declared that the glue mixture looked like milk except chunkier (I thought that was a very appropriate description):
Stir, stir, stir...
I let both the girls stir while I tried to squeeze out every drop of glue I could.
Then we realized that we wanted to make several colors, so I got out 3 more bowls and divided the glue gunk between the 4 (that's including the original mixing bowl).
Then we added food coloring to each, mixing well.
Last step, (and this was the really cool part) I divided the borax/water mixture between each of the four bowls and let the girls mix away.  It INSTANTLY becomes flubber (no kidding).
becoming flubber-ish....
keep working it over bowls with hands....
it gets stretchy...
and VOILA!! we have FLUBBER!! (no Calley is not eating hers even though it looks like it)
look at the purple mommy!!
Our four colors :)
What to do with flubber besides squish it??
We got our cookie cutters out and the girls enjoyed "cutting" shapes out and them watching them "melt" into each other making new shapes.  Even our older kids (12 &14) enjoyed the flubber and want to make some of their own... well, we certainly have enough Borax for that!!