Tuesday, February 28, 2012

ALERT: Jackspeak

I love music lessons with my boys. Tonight, while folding laundry, we're going old school with a little Frampton Comes Alive! (Do You Feel Like We Do?, of course.)


Jack: "Is Peter Frampton dead?"


Me: "No."


"So, is he really old?"


"Well... he's older. He's kind of a rock legend."


"If he was dead, he'd be a real legend."


"They have a name for legends who are still living. They call 'em 'living legends.'"


"And if he was dead, he'd be a dead legend."


"Right."




Wednesday, February 15, 2012

ALERT: Charlietalk

Charlie: "Mom, watch me count to twenty."


Me: "Okay."


"1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20."


"Wow Charlie, that was really good! You're a smarty pants."


"I don't have any pants on. Call me smarty undies."



Friday, February 10, 2012

a wearable handmade valentine: minkee heart wristlet

One of my favorite times of year is here—making handmade valentines with the boys! This year we’re going with this supremely cool idea from I am Momma Hear Me Roar. Photos, construction paper, staples, and Pop Rocks:


Jack valentine copyJack rocks with all the energy of a late '80s hair band (without the hair).



Charlie valentine Charlie rocks, too. Straight-up three-year-old grunge. See the angst?

I also took on a handmade challenge at work and made a special valentine gift for… myself!


Minkee heart1


This simple wristlet is made from a scrap of denim and a scrap of fuzzy Minkee. If you have button-sewing, hand-appliqueing, and scissor-wielding skills, you can whip this up in less than an hour.

Seven other staff members joined me in the handmade valentines challenge at work. Talk about getting creative on the job!



Valentinecollage

You can get the how-to for all of these Valentine’s Day projects on Martingale’s Facebook page (scroll down to the February 6th posts). The projects are all of the quick-and-easy variety, which means there's still plenty of time to create something special for your sweetheart. Even if your sweetheart is you.


If you'd like to stitch up a wristlet, read on!


a wildcards tutorial: minkee heart wristlet


Denim heart bracelet
Materials


  • Large scrap of denim from jeans

  • Small scrap of pink Minkee fabric

  • 3 small pink buttons

  • Dressmaker’s measuring tape

  • Washable or air-soluble marking pen

  • Hand-sewing needle and thread to match Minkee and buttons

  • Seam ripper

  • Freezer paper

  • Glue stick

  • Tweezers


Directions

1. Measure around your arm, 4" up from the bottom of your wrist (my measurement was 8"). Cut a rectangle that is 3" wide and as long as the measurement around your arm (my rectangle was 3" x 8").

2. Lay the rectangle flat, right side up. Space the buttons evenly along one short side of the rectangle, 1/2" away from the edge. Mark button placement with a pen; hand sew the buttons to the rectangle.

3. Using the button placement as a guide, mark placement of the buttonholes on the opposite short edge of the rectangle. Make small slits in the fabric for the buttonholes using a seam ripper. (Make the slits small—you should have to work to get the buttons through the holes.)

4. Machine wash and dry the bracelet so the edges fray; clip and pull the frayed edges until you like the look. Clip any stray threads away from the buttonholes.

5. Print out this heart pattern (it should be 2" high):


Heart

Cut it out, trace it onto the freezer paper, and cut it out again. Iron the heart template onto the back of the Minkee scrap, shiny side down. Cut the heart shape from the Minkee, adding a 1/4" seam allowance.

6. Center the Minkee heart widthwise and lengthwise on the bracelet; glue to baste in place. Hand appliqué the heart to the denim, turning the 1/4" seam under as you go.

7. Fuzz up the heart edges by rubbing the tip of your seam ripper quickly and lightly along the appliquéd edges. This releases the fuzzy fibers from the sewn edges and softens the look. Cut a 1/2" vertical slit in the center of the denim on the back of the wristlet where the heart has been appliquéd; pull the freezer paper out using tweezers. Whipstitch the 1/2" slit closed.

If you don't like the frayed-edge look, you can turn the long edges of the wristlet under 1/4" and press; then topstitch the folded edges down.


For more more repurposed projects, check out my book ReSew.


Thanks for stopping by. Cheers to an extra lovey-dovey Valentine's Day!