A Catch-Up

Just wanted to put in here a catch-up post from homeschooling. We’ve been taking a break due to Christmas for nearly a month now –That’s a nice advantage of homeschooling. But I wanted to share a little discovery fun that Rachael, Abi and I had on one of our homeschooling nature walks.

We had been discussing light and the affects of light on items. We discussed shadows and took the opportunity to check out some shadows at various times in the day. Along with our shadow viewing, we decided to take our magnifying glasses and observe plants up close. We also collects items that would fit in a sandwich bag in which to make nature pictures.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

 

– It was a fun time.

Wordless Wednesday: Dress-Up

It was all Abi’s idea played out on one observing baby…

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

The stylist and her model, Hannah White. 😉

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Carefully situated bling.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Rachael got in on the play.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Ms. Drooly’s happy to be involved. =)

– love the sisterly fun.

Vibrant

Another simple gift I made for the girls this Christmas was watercolor paints. Since it was a gift, I got a set of 19 assorted paint cups with lids (since I figured we’d be making more paint before it’s all said and done). For our back-up stash and the stash I made for a friend, I just used old babyfood containers.

First I used these ingredients:

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Once the chemical reaction part of the baking soda/white vinegar was done (I’ll have to do this another time with the girls so they can squeal), I added in the food coloring.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

I used 8-10 drops of food coloring instead of food coloring gel since I had the food coloring. I found that if you let the paints dry for 4 days instead of the 24 hours the recipe said, then the colors that separate a little (8 drops didn’t separate) settle back in and dry out completely.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

And the finished product was also quite fun and has provided hours of vibrant painting.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

* this is a pic of the colors before they dried. Now image those colors, but dried and that’s the end product. 😉

 

Hung with Care

It came to my attention to years ago when picking out Abi’s stocking that stockings just aren’t made like they used to be. They seem to be made of more flimsy material that sure doesn’t look like it’ll last more than a Christmas or two of jubilant dumping.

So this year I saw a pinterest idea that I ran with to create a little more Christmas cuteness hanging from our mantel.

I spent a whoppin $6 at the thrift store to purchase all five of our stockings in cute sweaters. (Rachael’s sweater cost nine cents… yes, people: $0.09!)

Then I laid an old stocking on the sweaters, chalked the outline, cut them out and sewed them up.

And thus I give you our stockings:

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Abi’s stocking

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Rachael’s stocking (sorry, it’s a little blurry)

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Matt’s stocking.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Hannah’s stocking

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

And my stocking.

Next year I think I’ll add embroidery to them to personalize them, but for this year, our stockings worked out great. I also really like that we can easily add a stocking to the mix for a buck or less for whatever foster kids come through our house while still hanging onto the homemade love.

Time cost: 10-15 min per stocking.

Financial cost: $0.09 to $1.00 per sweater (stocking) unless you want to make more than 1 stocking per sweater.

Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Baskerville 2 by Anders Noren.

Up ↑