The One Chocolate Pudding Recipe Every Parent Should Have

January 18th, 2010

Recipe Mondays

Every parent needs a recipe for chocolate pudding – to satisfy the cravings of mom & dad, and of course, to satisfy the chocolate cravings of the children.

I am obsessed with “finding” the perfect recipe. To eliminate the need to keep trying to find a good recipe. To have “the” recipe I will make again and again for the family. To have the children, when they are grown, come back home, and eat and enjoy those things with will flood their senses with memories and moments from a happy childhood. And, I believe that in raising children, repetition, is key. Repetition is the foundation for happy memories.

Our eldest daugther asked me for chocolate pudding, and I didn’t yet that perfect recipe in my recipe box. I rathered a recipe that did not call for only egg yolks. I like recipes that call for 1 cup of this 2 cups of that, rather than recipes that call for 1 3/4 cups this, 2/3 cup that. Silly, I’m sure, but they just make me more comfortable. It’s much easier to multi task, when you don’t need to think too much. And, for my own curiosity, I test recipes with the more rounded-off ingredients, to see if it makes a difference. I also test to see if it makes a difference using easiest mixing methods (i.e. combine all ingredients, vs. first combine this, then that, then this, then that, etc.). This chocolate pudding rocks. And, it’s soo easy.

Ingredients

2 cups milk
1/2 cup white sugar
1/2 cup semisweet chocolate chips (the better the chip, the better the pudding)
2 tablespoons cornstarch
dash of salt
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

Combine all ingredients except the vanilla in a medium saucepan. Whisk somewhat constantly over medium-high heat until the mixture comes to a boil. Boil, while whisking, for 1 minute. Remove from heat, add vanilla, and divide among 6 cups, ramekins, or 1 bowl! Cool and enjoy.

Printable Flash Cards for Reading Music

January 15th, 2010

HomeSchooling Fridays

To open and print the G-Clef music flashcards, open this file: g_clef_flashcards.pdf

I’m actually not a homeschooler, but I do supplement my children’s education at home. And, I find this moves along the progress and intellectual challenge, well. I hope all our children will play a musical instrument, and sing. I started our eldest two children on the piano at four years of age. Our older two play, and number three will be up for starting this year. And, learning how to read music is so key! It can frustrate new learners, and slow down children in their third year of lessons, – it even slows me down! And, I have played for a decade!

To print the Bass Clef Flashcards, open this pdf file: bass_clef_flashcards.pdf

So, here are some printable flash cards, for all those children that are learning music. I keep a set in the car (we practice while waiting for the bus). And, I keep a set in the kitchen, so that I can quiz the children when one of them is around, and I am making dinner. I think with how busy we are these days, it makes all the difference to make things a little easier, – and for me this means not having to remember things. The more copies I keep around the house, the better!

With love, from Dina

I love my girls wearing ballet slippers for house slippers

January 14th, 2010

Shopping Thursdays

I don’t know what made me think of it, but in December, I found these great, beautiful, nightgown cullottes, for the girls. A lady in Utah sews them, and sells them online. I found them after hours of searching online – literally. I bought a few for the girls (I hope to feature them next week, and will invite the lady that sews them to share with us how she does). They are made out of a tricot fabric – a silky smooth material, that you can throw in the wash, into the dryer, and don’t need to iron. Unfortunately, it is a nylon material, which are not my favorite. But, my girls love, love, love them!

Anyways, I wanted some slippers to go with them. And, I wanted to find those little mock-ballet slippers, in pink satin.

Walmart has great ones, 2 pack for $4. Danskin satin sippers in pink or white. They have a little cute bow on the front. Unbeatable price. And, super comfy. I think they are sold-out online. But, I found them at our local store and bought some for the girls.

Here are a pair I bought from a Payless Shoe Store in Chinatown (Manhattan). Not all stores carry them. They were more expensive because they are leather. Made by American Ballet Theatre.

And, here is a picture of a pair of ballet slippers that I purchased on e-bay. You can buy then in all different colors. Only $7. Our toddler wore a pair of these with her red Christmas dress for pictures. (eDanceZone is the store name). Yes! This is how this all started, now I remember. I needed a pair of red dress shoes. And, I couldn’t find anything under $40. But, I knew they would only be worn once. So, that’s when I thought of red ballet slippers instead. They are a perfect innocent style of shoe for little girls. And, just $7. And, they have a leather sole! Imagine that.

Organizing and Backing Up Family Photographs

January 13th, 2010

It was not until my honey took off with the older two children for a ski trip that I found the time to tackle the task of organizing and backing up all the photos on my computer. I had to do it because I had so many photos on my computer, my computer was running out of memory and slowing down. I needed to back them up in case my computer crashed, and I had to get them off my computer hard-drive, to free up space.

I started with the idea that I would subscribe to a general back-up service to back-up all my folders, including my pictures. I looked into and signed-up for both iDrive and Mozy. The problem with these services, however, is that they do not allow you to view your photos online. So, once you upload or back-up your Pictures folder, they sit online, invisible, until you re-download and restore the pictures folder to your hard-drive.

general back-up services, like MOZY or iDRIVE, will not let you view your pictures online.
you back them up to a folder, where they remain invisible, until you re-download them.

I then started looking into the special photo backup services. I had used Snapfish in the past, but Snapfish’s interest is in getting you to buy prints, not store your photos. So, Snapfish will delete your photos after a certain amount of time, if you do not continuously order more prints. Snapfish also charges you a per image fee to re-download images to your computer hard-drive.

SNAPFISH will delete your photos if you don’t keep ordering prints & will charge you a fee for each photo you want to re-download.

In my quest, I learned that a lot of the companies that were around three years ago, are gone – a disheartening discovery. A few years back, CNET recommended a company called ProtectMyPhotos.com, which is now out of business. HP offered a back-up service, and then discontinued this service, giving people 30 days notice to re-download their files, before HP would delete them. And, this was a paid HP service. A classic move.

There are really four other options at our disposal: Picasa, Flikr, PhotoBucket, or SmugMug. These are the four major services that allow you to back-up your photos online. Picassa is owned by Google, Flikr by Yahoo, PhotoBucket by Fox, and SmugMug is an independent family-owned business.

Since SmugMug is a relatively new, and small company, I would only use them as a secondary back-up. The back-up service costs $40 per year, allows for high-res uploads and downloads, and is easy-to-use. But, they do make money when you order prints. Their printing service was the most expensive at $0.19 per 4×6 print.

Flikr and PhotoBucket were the next options I tried. Right off the bat, the one thing that I did not like was the fact that both services are primarily focused on photo-sharing not photo-backup. I get the worried feeling that somehow my family photos are going to end up in the public’s general sharing pool. With both services, it was difficult to figure out how to opt-out of the sharing. I couldn’t figure out how to do it with PhotoBucket.

My next stop was Google’ Picasa. Picasa is both a desktop client as well as a web-based backup service. Once you download Picasa, it serves as your photo-viewing tool. So, when you click on a photo, the photo will open up in Picasa.  I am not a big fan of all the frills, but Picasa does have face-recognition technology, which I understand they purchased the patent to. You can label the family members in your photos, and then search for photos of that person. I can think of a handful of times when this might be useful (searching for photos of children for the yearbook, etc.).  You can then checkmark the folders you want to sync to the web. And, Picasa will quietly work in the back-ground syncing your photos to the Picasa online back-up service. Picasa will give you 1 Gig of free storage, which is 10x what Flikr will give you, and 2x what PhotoBucket will give you. The upgrade is also by far the cheapest. Only $5 for 20 Gigs worth of storage, compared to Flikr and PhotoBucket’s $24.95 per year for unlimited storage. I backed up five years of photos (original high-res size), about four thousand pictures, and am only using about 5 Gigs. I also trust Google not to pull a fast one on consumers. To understand the trust that consumers are giving them with their photos. To be a little nicer. (You can also order prints from one of many print services: Walgreens, Snapfish, RITZPIX, Shutterfly, Lifepics, fotoflot, or American Greetings).

A snapshot of what my backed-up files look like on the web (secure to me only):

Easy Ways to Finish Seams

January 12th, 2010

Sewing Tuesdays

I’ve always wanted to sew nightgowns, pajamas, and robes for my children. Because I remember always getting a nightgown for Christmas from my grandmother, and because I can never find classic styles in stores. This past Christmas, I sewed a great robe for our eldest daughter. It was my first time using a pattern. I was so excited about the finished product, I didn’t even think about seams (I hardly knew what they were). I wished someone had taught me. It makes the whole process so much easier. The objective with finished seams is to hide the raw edges of your fabric, in the interior of a garment or piece, so that when you wash it, the fabric does not fray. It also makes the finished product look clean and neat. Here are my favorite ways to finish seams.

1. French Seam

A couture finish, yet the easiest and cleanest of them all. Only requires sewing 2 straight lines. I couldn’t believe sewing french seams was so easy.

Step 1

Place wrong/back sides together (insides of garment facing each other), sew very close to edge, using a plain old straight stitch. Then trim any extra fabric (if you weren’t able to sew close enough to the edge on your sewing machine).

Step 2

Now, fold right sides (exterior sides of garment) over the seam you just made, so that right sides are now facing each other. And, sew a straight line, as close as possible to the end. Now, turn your garment outside-in. That’s it!

2. Sewing two straight lines then trim fabric with pinking shears

Pinking shears are scissors with saw-toothed blades, that cut in a zig-zag pattern. The zig-zag cut helps keep fabric from fraying. It is not the neatest finish, but it usually does the trick, and it’s fast.

A great pair of pinking shears on Amazon:

3. The no-sew seam: iron-on hem tape

Iron-on hem tape, in my experience, is a little wimpy. It will only work well on thin, light-weight fabrics. After you sew your pieces together (wrong sides facing each other), simply turn your piece inside-out, and iron on the hem tape to hide your unfinished seams.

4. Fold seams over, inward, then sew together

Does not work well on very thick (quilted) fabrics. You also need to have enough fabric to work with. It looks very clean however.

Turn your piece inside out to finish seams. Wrong sides (interior sides) of fabric should be facing each other. Sew your seams using a straight line 3/4 inch from the edge of fabric (or, on your pattern’s seam lines).

Now, turn the extra fabric on your seams inward (folding each piece of fabric once, to the inside). Iron these two pieces flat together. And, sew another straight line to join them together and finish your seams.

5. Using a serger or overlock sewing stitch

A serger (two to three hundred dollars) or overlock sewing machine can serge your unfinished hems. This is great! But, if you don’t have one, like me, you can find a dry cleaner’s that does. And, they will finish your unfinished seams for a few dollars (this is what I did on my first few pieces).

With love, from Dina

Basic White Cake Recipe for Birthdays & Parties

January 10th, 2010

Recipe Mondays

Our youngest little girl is going to be turning two this February, so I’ve started thinking about her birthday. Another reader recently asked me for the white cake recipe I use too. So, here it is. I’ve tried tens of white cake recipes over the years. And, this is the one I will pass down to my children. Though, it is not mine. Sometime, when I have time, I would like to make a few changes, and I will share that one too.

When I am not inclined to bake a cake from scratch, at times I am not, then I buy a box, and make my own buttercream frosting. But! I often find that going to the grocery store to buy a cake box takes more time than just making it in the morning while the kids are eating their breakfast. A final note, there is no perfect white cake recipe, that doesn’t use only egg whites, and cake flour. You just can’t get around these two buggers with white cake. I’ve tried everything.

With love, from Dina

White Cake Recipe from Cook’s Illustrated Magazine

12 tablespoons (1 1/2 sticks) butter, softened
1 3/4 cup white sugar
6 large egg whites, room temperature
1 cup whole milk
2 teaspoons vanilla
2 1/4 cups cake flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt

Preheat oven to 350.

Using a stand-alone, or hand-mixer, beat sugar and butter, on medium speed for about 3 minutes. Combine rest of wet ingredients together, and set aside. And, combine rest of dry ingredients, and set aside. Butter and flour your cake pans, I used 2 9-inch rounds. Add a little bit of the wet ingredients to the butter/sugar mixture while continuing to beat on medium. Now, a little of the flour/dry mixture. Continue alternating, until done. Divide among your cake pans. And, bake until a toothpick comes out clean. 2 9-inch rounds take 23-25 minutes.

My Buttercream Frosting Recipe

This is actually an Italian Merigue buttercream. But, it is the only recipe I use to frost and decorate birthday cakes. It is the PERFECT eating (tasting) recipe & the PERFECT decorating recipe. Two birds with one stone. I actually have this recipe on All Recipes, for those of you that would like to read the good reviews first. It will give you plenty extra to color and decorate. If I have extra, I squeeze it into a ziplock bag, and stick it into the freezer, where it will keep for months. And, when I get a “Mommy, can you make me some icing for my cupcake?” I just pull it out of the freezer, and I’m done!

6 egg whites
2 cups white sugar
2 cups (4 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature (if a little cold in center, that’s fine)
1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract, optional

Place the egg whites and sugar into a metal bowl (use the bowl you will beat them in). Set bowl in a pan of simmering water (about 2 inches of water fine). Heat, stirring frequently, until the temperature of the egg whites reaches 160 degrees, or until they are very hot to the touch, 5 minutes. Mixture should look marshmallow-y.
Transfer the bowl of egg whites/sugar to mixer. Beat on high speed until they arethick, shiny, hold their peak, and are cool to touch, about 5 minutes (more for some). Now, beat on medium speed, while pinching off small pieces of butter, and adding to egg whites/sugar. Add vanilla. Beat until thick, and fluffy, 5-10 minutes.

If buttercream looks like it is breaking down, continue beating and it will come back together. If it will not thicken after you are done beating, this means the mixture was still too warm when you started adding the butter. Stick it in the fridge for 1/2 hour to an hour. And, do it again. It will come together.

Above, after beating egg whites and sugar – make sure it’s cool before adding butter!

Above, what it looks like when it is done!

What to do with all those egg yolks? Lemon curd (for the cake filling), creme caramel (flan) & chocolate pudding, are my favorites. Sometimes, I mix some lemon curd with the buttercream for a lemon-curd buttercream, which is also great.

The Christmas Card Photo

December 15th, 2009

1

Well, at least I am set to finish the Christmas cards this year, before … 3 days before Christmas. I had decided that I did not want another picture of all the children, sitting next to each other, smiling at the camera. Every Monday morning, I accompany one of our son’s to a teacher’s lesson prior to the start of school. And, the teacher has all the Christmas cards she receives tacked to a wall. There are quite a lot of them. And, in every one, the children are looking straight at the camera smiling. And, this is what we have always done too. But, I find something quite unnatural in them. So, this year, I decided to take a different approach. And, in doing so, learned learned a lot about pictures, lighting, and cameras.

I started by looking for inspiration. Something, or some idea, to spark a creative ah-ha moment. I always start with Google, then Google image search, then Flikr. And, really, nothing caught my fancy. Everything looked so posed. Looking through magazines from the 1930s, 40s, or 50s, would have been nice. But, where to access these? However, I did stumble upon this photo, which I thought was super.

christmas picture kids

I loved this photo of the two children, whispering in Santa’s ear. Just loved it. I initially wanted to re-create something like this. With all four children, whispering in Santa’s ears, and whiskers. But, I didn’t have anyone that could pose (and pose convincingly) in a Santa costume. Maybe, with a little more prep, I will try this one next year. It’s such a fun and sincere picture.

I ended up deciding to take an un-posed picture of the kids, dressed up, in our home, in front of the fireplace. I’m sure many of you can attest to the stress and logistics involved in taking family pictures. It was several hours of intense stress for me … making sure the little ones got their naps at the right time (so they’d be happy!), prodding the older ones to get dressed, dressing the younger ones when they woke up from their nap, making sure nobody ate anything or got into any food (I have pull locks on the cupboards), getting everyone into the room at the same time, and so on. Very stressful. And, prior to that I had to set up some lights in the room (it was nighttime so there was no natural light, and the room itself does not have sufficient light), setting up the camera, practicing with the different camera settings, and on and on. But, anyways, we have one picture that is not perfect, but it will do. It seems to me photographing children should be a job for 3 people. One to photograph, and one assistant per two children.

The red Christmas frocks I found for a steal at a little shop in Greenwich, CT, that is going out of business, unfortunately. So many of these brands going out of business, Best & Co., gone, Oilily, gone, Old World, gone. I was able to get these for less than $20 a piece. The red ballet slippers on our eldest girl, are real ballet slippers, around $5 on e-bay, brand new. We buy a bunch of them in different colors, and the girls use them as house slippers. And, the boy’s bowties I made from a brown velvet, to match the brown corduroys. But, you can find (and alter) adult velvet bow-ties also on e-bay for under $5.

On a side-note, I just finished a large wool quilt, that I am planning to gift to a couple as a wedding present. I will try to post it in the next few days, with a tutorial for anyone that has not made a quilt before (it was my first!). It has one square that is a collage of the couple, a collage made of fabrics. And, all the wools, are super quality, which I was able to find at Mood Fabrics in New York City (Carolina Herrera and Ralph Lauren wools at great prices). (A lot of the big time designers unload their remnant fabric inventory at Mood – it’s a wonderful place to shop – aside from e-bay!).

Dina

Gingerbread Men Stationery

December 4th, 2009

ginger_bread_men_christmas_paper

To print, open this high res .pdf file: gingerbread_men_paper.pdf

Gingerbread men stationery, that a wonderful artist created for us, I believe that this one is done in watercolors. The high-res .pdf here is the original high-res .pdf, that can be used for professional printing. It looks amazing printed on a good home color printer.

craft paperGingerbread

To print, open this high-res .pdf file: gingerbread_men_craft_paper.pdf

Thanksgiving Hat

November 8th, 2009

Thanksgiving Hat

Open this .pdf file to print the above pictured Thanksgiving Turkey Hat: thanksgiving_turkey_hat.pdf

Here are some printable Thanksgiving Turkey Hats for the children to have fun with. We make Thanksgiving Hats on Thanksgiving Day, and leave them on the children’s table. They put them on, and color on them, and have fun with them. But, they are fun for any make-believe day in November. I find that our 8 year old girl, is playing school more and more often with her younger siblings, and she loves to have these types of crafts to entertain them.

I have matching Thanksgiving Paper here: www.familye.com/thanksgiving-paper/

Thanksgiving Paper

November 7th, 2009

Thanksgiving paper
To print this free, printable, Thanksgiving Turkey Stationery, print this .pdf file: thanksgiving_stationery.pdf

A few years ago, I had a wonderful designer, create this theme, for a pattern of Thanksgiving/Fall inspired stationery. We also used the theme, to make printable Thanksgiving Hats (for children), craft paper, and place cards, all of which I will upload later this week. I love it because it is sweet, charming, and perfect for family life.

The children print it come November, and draw on it, play school with it, write letters to friends on it, write letters to family on it. It is one little thing that helps propel the theme of Thanksgiving and November in our house. We have a few dozen turkeys that like to wander through our backyard at this time of year – and, this helps too. It’s simple, but it’s fun, and it’s free. So, print as much you like. And, if you would like me to offer print/mail services, please email me at dina@familye.com, and I would be happy to print let’s say 50 sheets, and mail them for a small fee.

Floral Arrangements in Pumpkins

November 4th, 2009

floral arrangment pumpkin

This is one of my favorite table centerpieces during the fall, and for the Thanksgiving Table. It is terribly easy to make, as long as you have pumpkins, flowers, and a little of that green floral foam. Where we live in Connecticut, everyone stops selling pumpkins right after Halloween. I think the stores literally ship off their pumpkin supplies. So, knowing this in advance, I stock up on pumpkins, for these floral arrangements. If you keep the pumpkins outside, they will last at least a month, in my experience.

I like to use the smaller sugar pumpkins for arrangements that will go on the table (the finished arrangement will be low, so they do not obstruct your guests from seeing and talking to each other). You will want to cut out a fairly wide round opening at the top of the pumpkin, like you can see I did in the picture below. I scooped out everything, and then with a regular metal (eating) spoon, I scrapped the sides of the interior. When done, the interior of the pumpkin should be quite hard (you will remove most of the soft flesh layer).

carving pumpkin

I found that my sugar pumpkins did not leak water, so I simply put a piece of the green floral foam directly into the pumpkin. If you would like to play it safe, you could first put a plastic container into the pumpkin (plastic food container, or yogurt container cut in half). Before putting the green foam into pumpkin, soak it in cold water, so that it becomes completely saturated with water. Cut a piece that will fit snug into the pumpkin, push it into the pumpkin, and add water before you begin to arrange the flowers. I then cut the flowers to height, and arranged the flowers (by sticking them into the green foam).

floral arrangement pumpkin

In the arrangment here, I used red roses, sunflowers, green leaves, and berries.

First Birthday Party

October 29th, 2009

image for article for first birthday

I am a big fan of very innocent, simple birthdays for children. I remember when my husband and I had our first child, our first child’s birthday was coming near, and I had the most frustrating time planning that birthday. When I searched the Internet or even the party stores for ideas, I found mostly very commercial theme inspirations (Elmo, Disney themes, Pixar themes, etc.). I combed the aisles of the Barnes and Nobles, and found no books to inspire me. Nothing seemed right, I did not want any silly commercial theme. I was inviting family members. And, I did not want to inundate an innocent soul with “stuff” too soon. And so,  I came up with this theme for our third baby’s first birthday.

Printable First Birthday Party Stationary (Invitations)

Original watercolor design, in high-quality .pdfs, that you may print on a home color printer.

first birthday invitations

Printable first birthday party invitations template: First_Birthday_Party_Stationary.pdf

Printable First Birthday Party Hats

first birthday party hats

Printable First Birthday Party Hats template: First_Birthday_Party_Hats.pdf

First Birthday Party Thank You Cards

first birthday party thank you cards

First birthday party thank you cards template: First_Birthday_Party_Thank_You.pdf

First Birthday Party Craft Paper

You can use the craft paper to decorate brown paper school lunch bags to create cute take home goodie bags. Or, you may use the paper as stationary. Or, even to write thank you notes.

first birthday party free printable craft paper

First birthday party craft paper template: First_Birthday_Party_Craft_Paper.pdf

First Birthday Party Cake

I wanted to make a birthday cake to match the general theme of the birthday. I always use the same recipe for making a white birthday cake, and always a meringue buttercream icing to frost and decorate. With four young children, we are planning birthdays and cakes every few months now.

first birthday party cake

Lamb Costume

October 26th, 2009

homemade_lamb_costume

We made this lamb, or sheep costume, this year, with about 1,000 large cotton balls, some Elmer’s glue, and an old bunny costume that had belonged to the older children. I liked the fact that we used something with a hood, because I think the hood of cotton balls gives the costume a nice effect. The old bunny costume was a size 8, so I cut off the arms and legs first. And, the older children took turns gluing on the cotton balls, while watching cartoons, or playing board games. I think it took them about 2 to 3 hours over the course of the week to glue on all those cotton balls.

You could use a glue gun, but we simply used craft glue and Elmer’s glue. It is easier to squirt glue over a section of the undergarment, and then press the cotton balls onto the glue. Progress is slow at first, but the end result is well worth it. We then tied a few loose bells we found in our Christmas bin to a piece of pink ribbon, and tied this onto the zipper.

sheep costume for kids

If you would like to purchase cotton balls, Amazon is currently selling a case of 2,000 cotton balls for under $10 (which beats the price of about $1.50 for 100 at the local drugstore).

Homemade Bat Costume

October 25th, 2009

homemade bat costume for kids

bat_mask_template

Well, I finally finished the childrens’ Halloween costumes. Our eight year old girl is Mary (from Mary had a Little Lamb) or Little Bo Peep. The 19 month old is the little lamb. Our seven year old boy is Darth Vader. And, our little three year old, here, wanted to be a bat, ever since a real bat found a way into into his bedroom a few months ago.

This was the easiest of the costumes to make. We used hand-me-down black long underwear shirt, and pants. We have tried all kinds of long underwear over the years, and we like Duofold, the best. You can find these at Sports Authority. And, sometimes, on Amazon.com.  And, then we used less than 1 yard of black fabric, and 1 piece of black felt. I purchased the least expensive type of black fabric I found (I think it is a plastic derivative, and was about $2 a yard). But, if you don’t frequent the fabric stores, I think you could cut out wings from a black garbage bag. I made a template for the mask, and will upload it here.

The great thing about this costume is that it is easy to make, and comfortable to wear. Our little guy wore it practically all day, for the Halloween parade, and then while playing in the backyard. I did not attach the wings to the pants (only the shirt), and I think this made it more wearable.

What you’ll need:

1 black pants, and black long sleeved shirt
1 yard black fabric
Baby pins, or needle and thread to attach the wings to the shirt
1 template for the bat mask: bat_mask_template.pdf
1 piece of black felt, or ability to print mask template on cardstock

What to do:

To make the 2 bat wings, you will first need to take a few measurements. The top width of the wing will be the length of the shirt’s arm. Measure the shirt’s arm, from armpit to cuff. This will be the width of the wing. (For example, I cut mine only 12 inches for our 3 year old).

The top-down length of the wing will be the length from the armpit to your child’s knee. Now, you can cut out the wings from the fabric using these measurements. Draw 1 wing on the fabric using a white chalk, crayon, or other light pencil. You know your width, your length, and draw the curves/points by hand. (To give myself a little extra fabric to work with for sewing wings to the shirt, I added 1 inch seams to the top and side of the wings before cutting them.)

You can sew the wings onto the shirt with rough large stitches. It does not need to be perfect because you will remove the wings after you are done with the costume. (This took me about 10 minutes total). You could also use baby pins to pin the wings onto the shirt. 

For the bat mask, you can can print the bat mask template, provided here, on a heavy cardstock (it needs to withstand the pressure of string running through it to tie around the head). Or, what I did here, is I printed the template on regular paper, traced it onto a piece of black felt, and cut out the mask from the felt. I then made two small slits (do not make holes/just tiny slits) on each end. I tied two long scrap pieces of black fabric through each slit to tie around the head.

Mailbox Costume – Homemade With These Printables

October 23rd, 2009

mailbox_costume
To make the mailbox costume, print this file for printables: mailbox_costume_printables.pdf

I know, everytime I pass by a real mailbox, I can’t help but laugh, thinking about this costume. Seeing a mailbox now reminds me of the costume, instead of the other way around. I have a boy, that is obsessed with mailmen, UPS men, FedEx men, DHL men, and all their respective trucks. I don’t know how this idea came to me, but I thought it would be easy enough to make  a mailbox, with an old cardboard moving box, some blue paint (or blue poster board), and some great graphics. I had these graphics made  for the costume. And, they are super nice, high-quality, and you can print them right here. We ended up using this costume for play for months and months after Halloween. Our five year old was very obsessed with this thing. (The costume is essentially, a box. I would not recommend it for children under 7, because it can get heavy lugging a box on one’s shoulders. )


What you’ll need:

1 or 2 old moving boxes, depending on size
Packing tape
4 pieces of blue poster board, or blue paint
1 printable file for postal box graphics: mailbox_costume_printables.pdf

What to do:

First, you need to create the shell from the cardboard boxes. I wish I had taken pictures during the process, but I did not. Start with one box, open up the ends. I taped one of the ends (4 flaps) open, to give the mailbox more height. Do the same for the opposite end, leaving one flap alone. This flap will be the front of the mailbox, that will open and close. Now, cut an extra length of cardboard to add to your box, to create the curvature at the top of the mailbox. It will all look very messy, with the random cardboard and tape, but it will all come together after the blue shell comes on. Reinforce the mailbox with tape.

Next, paint the box blue, or, tape on blue sheets of poster board (this was a shortcut I favored). And, attach the templates here to complete the mailbox.

Halloween Wreath

October 20th, 2009

halloween wreath

If you wanted to make your own Halloween Wreath, this is an easy one to make. You can make your own twig wreath with sticks you find in the backyard, or, you can purchase a pre-made twig wreath.

What you’ll need:

1 Pre-made twig wreath, or thin sticks to make your own (about $18 from Michael’s)
1 Orange paint spray in a can (available at a hardware store, Michael’s or Walmart)
1 Can primer spray (unless your paint does not specify to use a primer)
1 piece of black ribbon, or black material, to make a bow

What to do:

First, you will want to apply the primer to your wreath. We did this in the backyard, to avoid fumes near the house. Lay down 2 large black garbage bags on the grass, to prevent paint from getting on the grass. Place the wreath over your covered area. Spray with primer. Wait until time specified on primer can. With some, you only need to wait 30 minutes. When primer is dry, spray with your orange paint. Wait until dry. Some paints dry in under 1 hour. Tie on a black bow. (Be careful, under most circumstances, you will need to first apply a primer. If you skip this step, the paint will not stick to the raw wood, and  the little parts that do stick, will simply scratch off).

Halloween Garland

October 19th, 2009

halloween garland

Print this file to make the Halloween Garland: halloween_garland.pdf

We like to decorate the house  a little bit for Halloween; the children, especially, like to decorate their rooms. We enjoy doing it together. And, you can make this garland at home with some string and the printable file, provided here. No need to run to the store, and purchase yet another thing. I find, that with four young children, shopping is a chore; and I don’t mind consuming less in the world. I don’t want to be continuously throwing or giving things away. And, I would rather ground the kids in simplicity.

I had a designer create the file above, Halloween Garland, especially for this purpose in mind. I have seen printables online for awhile now, but why not take it the next level, and have printables that are really very nice quality. We used some kitchen string, printed the Halloween Garland file three times on cardboard stock paper, cut out the shapes, then glued them onto the string with some Elmer’s Glue. Have fun! And, if you send in your pictures, I would be happy to post them.

This year, we are making our Halloween costumes again. Our eight year old girl, is going to be Mary (from Mary Had a Little Lamb). I learned how to sew (better) for the occasion. Our one year old baby girl is going to the Little Lamb. Our three year old boy is going to be a Bat. And, our seven year old boy is going to be Darth Vader. We are still working on them, but I will post tutorials on all, hopefully by next weekend. And, I am making printables for the Bat and Darth Vader costumes that I will also upload. Tomorrow, Tuesday, I think I will post a how-to on the orange pumpkin wreath we made this month.

Pumpkin Carving Patterns

October 16th, 2009

A variety of pumpkin carving ideas and printable templates or stencils for your fun. Please remember to print the .pdf files, as opposed to clicking on the .jpg images. Print the pumpkin carving template (.pdf), attach to a pumpkin with tape, and cut or saw through the shaded areas only.

pumpkin_carving_happy_face

Print this file: pumpkin_carving_happy_face.pdf

pumpkin_carving_happy_face

Print this file: pumpkin_carving_happy_face2.pdf

pumpkin_carving_spider

Print this file: pumpkin_carving_spider.pdf

pumpkin_carving_spider_web

Print this file: pumpkin_carving_spider_web.pdf

pumpkin_carving_haunted_house

Print this file: pumpkin_carving_haunted_house.pdf

pumpkin_template_witch_face

Print this file for Witch Face Pattern: pumpking_carving_witch_face.pdf

pumpking_carving_owl
Print this file for Owl Pattern: pumpkin_carving_owl.pdf

pumpkin_carving_frankenstein
Print this file for Frankenstein pattern: pumpkin_carving_frankenstein.pdf

pumpkin_carving_funny_face


Print this file for funny face pattern: pumpkin_carving_funny_face3.pdf

pumpkin_carving_bat


Print this file for Pumpkin Carving Pattern for Bat: pumpkin_carving_bat.pdf

pumpkin_carving_cat


Print this file for pumpkin carving pattern for Cat: pumpkin carving cat.pdf

pumpkin_carving_pattern_face

Print this file for this face: pumpkin_carving_face.pdf

pumpkin_carving_pattern_silly_face


Print this file for Silly Face pumpkin carving template:
pumpkin_carving_silly_face.pdf

Homemade Bird Mask

October 15th, 2009

bird_mask_template_for_kids

Print this file: bird_mask_printable_template.pdf

Sometimes we just need something for the children to do on a rainy day. Here is a bird mask template. The children can print, cut out, and decorate. A fun craft for Halloween, or anytime of year.

Homemade Bunny Costume for Kids

October 14th, 2009

homemade bunny costume for kids

We made this bunny costume out of a few old undershirts, blanket batting, and a few pieces of pink felt. I always think that there is something sweet and innocent with making a costume. This is a fairly easy one to make. We used a white ballet leotard shirt and pants. And, found the white cap, made by Zutano (they make basics in different colors).

What you’ll need:

2 old boy’s sleeveless undershirts, or t-shirts with arms cut off
Fabric glue, or Elmer’s glue
1 bag of blanket batting, or quilt batting, the rolled kind, not the loose stuffing (Walmart or Michael’s, around $10)
2 pieces of pink felt (around $1 for felt pieces)
1 piece of white felt
Long sleeved white shirt, white pants, and a white hat/cap
Needle and white thread, or 2 baby pins

What to do:

If you can’t tell from this image, the bunny body is very puffed. Make this part first. You are going to attach the two undershirts together, around the neck, and around the armholes, and then you will stuff it with blanket batting. You can sew the two neck holes together with needle and thread (does not need to be perfect; you can teach a 7 year old to do this). Or, you can attach the neck holes together with glue. And, you want to do the same with the armholes. If you are gluing, instead of sewing, you will want to do one side, and then the other, allowing time for each side to dry first. Now you have a piece that is open at the bottom. Stuff the shirt with batting, and then sew shut at the bottom.

Cut a piece of batting to glue onto the exterior of the puffed body. Glue onto the body. Once this is dry, cut out a circle from one piece of felt, and glue onto the piece’s front, or tummy. Now, you are ready to make the ears for the hat. Cut out two ears from the white felt, and two pieces of smaller pink ears from the pink felt. Glue the pink onto the white, like shown in the picture. Sew these bunny ears onto your white hat. Or, attach them with 2 baby pins.