Archive for the ‘meaningful labor’ Category

Cupcake Blanket


2011
12.16

So.  My three-year-old nephew, Oscar, is obsessed with cupcakes right now.  When I saw him in Florida in September for my cousin’s wedding, it was all about cupcakes.  He had stories about how his mommy was going to make him tiger cupcakes for his birthday (which Luke said was an entirely imagined plan), he watched Kate playing a terraforming videogame and it was all about making cupcake planets, and he said he dreamed about cupcakes and wanted to live in a cupcake world.

I thought this was adorable, and that I had picked up on the perfect birthday idea – making him a cupcake blanket.  But his birthday was only a little more than a week after the wedding, and I went to the fabric store directly upon my return from Florida, but all of the cupcake-printed fabrics were pink and excessively girly.  I called Luke to double-check, but he didn’t answer so I just used my better judgement and passed on the fabric.

But then we were discussing what to get Oscar for Christmas and  Kate said, “Everything I know about Oscar’s likes can be summed up by ‘the Car movie’ and I’ve exploited that as much as I can.  Unless I can find a good cupcake blanket…”

And I thought that she was messing with me.   But she came to that idea on her own.  So – Challenge Accepted.   In my quest to become remain Oscar’s favorite auntie, I decided to make a cupcake blanket that was reasonably gender-neutral for Oscar for Christmas.  But the fabrics didn’t magically change from shades of pink, so I decided to approach it a different way.  I bought two pieces of fleece, one brown with polka dots for the top, and another complimentary-colored one with basketballs for the bottom.  (Basketball with Grandpa may be the only thing in the world he likes better than cupcakes.)

So I appliqued cupcakes onto the top of the blanket.  First, I cut cartoony cupcakes out of paper grocery bags.  Charles thought they looked too much like muffins, so he lobbied for sprinkles.  I have never done this kind of thing before, but it seemed like it made the most sense to sew all the pieces together and then stitch to the blanket, so that is what I did.

But it seemed like it was going to be too flat, so I stuffed just the top of the cupcake with some cotton batting to make it a little puffier.

Then, because I was making a fleece tie blanket, I tied my two pieces of fleece together.  It is super-simple, I made one of these with my mother-in-law like eight years ago and basically faked it from memory.  I used my rotary wheel and cutting mat to make one inch strips, about five or six inches long, mostly eyeballing it on the length but using the grid on the mat to be fairly precise about the width.  Then you just tie square knots, making sure you are tying the pieces you cut together and not missing any.  It is a little tricky if you are working on a table shorter than the length of the blanket, because you really should cut a whole side before you start tying, and the place you might make a mistake is if things get all jumbled together from moving the blanket.

The whole project took the better part of a day, but it was really fun, and I think Oscar is going to like the result.  (I turned up the corner so you can see the basketballs underneath.)

Of course, after I finished this, I told my mom about it.  She had just returned from Louisiana, where she had hung out with Oscar while Jackie took her law school finals.  And my mom said, “That will be great, the other blanket you made him is his favorite but it is getting too small for him.”

And I said, “What blanket was that again?”

“The baby leopard blanket.”

Finally, the lightbulb went on and I remembered that I had made a baby blanket for this little guy already.  Out of a piece of fabric his dad had bought at the Ben Franklin dime store and then, because most eight-year-old boys don’t have much use for a piece of fabric (even if it has cute baby leopards on it), had just sat in my mom’s house for twenty years.  I had completely spaced that out.  So, we can start taking bets on what the next blanket I make for him might have on it, when he is too old for cupcakes and basketballs.

Party Favor Purses


2011
12.06

So, I was trying to think of something I could make as party favors for Rose’s birthday.  Money is tight (though it always seems to be at this time of the year) – so I was trying to do her birthday on the cheap.  And since her heart’s desire was to have a couple of girlfriends sleep over and watch Mary Poppins, the party wasn’t going to be spendy.

I looked at a great book, One Yard Wonders, for ideas, because I knew I wanted to make little purses for them.  And I have two bins of fabric remainders (even after donating five plastic grocery bags full of scraps to the kids’ school for art projects they were doing).  So I figured I could scrap some purses together for the six girls at the party.  I found the perfect thing in the book, and then just scaled it down a little to be more of a kids’ size.  I cut a pattern out of a paper grocery bag by drawing a circle that was an inch bigger than what I wanted for the purse, and then extending the line off the side and flattening the edges.  I got Charles to pull apart some links off a chain for the metal connector, then made the purse straps to fit through the chain link, which wound up being a little wider than one inch.

I picked out some fabrics for the outside of the purse, and a contrasting color for the lining.  (After doing tons of fancy gowns over the years I have so many satins to pick from, which make a lovely lining.)  If you want more detailed instructions, comment or message me, and I can break it down a bit further, but it wound up being really easy to put together, so you could probably just fake it.  I gathered the bottom of the purses a little to scrunch them up a bit more, and the tops don’t really close, they are just held sort of closed by elastic.  But I like the scrunchiness of the bags, and I think they turned out super-cute.

I also attached a little flowery flair to some of them (a la my crafty fundraiser post, just minus the hair elastics) to spice things up a bit, and they were pretty and simple to put together in a couple of evenings.

Best of all, I had a party favor that the girls loved, and I didn’t spend a dime on!  We threw in some Mardi Gras beads that Aunt Jackie sent Rose a huge box of, and a fruit roll up, and a couple of leftover hair gadgets from a prior project, and called it a day.  And Rose’s party was awesome.  The cake that her Nana Joyce made her was really amazing as well.  I can’t give you tips on how to do it, but there is a picture here.

Rose’s Birthday Cake


2011
11.28

Rose’s Nana Joyce made her this amazing birthday cake.  Please note the sugar and cake ice cream cones, as well as the kit kat drawbridge (they are Rose’s favorite candy…)

Halloween Countdown…


2011
10.28

Panicking, trying to get the last bits of the costumes together before the big Variety party tomorrow night. I initially thought Charles and I were going as Alexia and Lord Macon from Soulless (a fabulous series we read this year), but realized no one would ‘get’ it. So I joked to my sister that we were going to be Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace, and she said “You HAVE to do it.” So I am working out how to make a cravat for Charles. He found this awesome tutorial, and I’m trying to work my way through.

Then I told my mom, and she asked if people would really get that any more than the other.  But I am going to do QR Code nametags that link to their wikipedia articles, so at least I won’t have to describe it.

This has been probably the most challenging bunch of costumes since we did Darcy and Elizabeth (or possibly since I helped Kate do a Kaylee costume, that was pretty tricky).

But I just want to show off the best buttonhole I ever made (though I’ve done about thirty now on the various costumes this year so it turns out that practice does improve ones’ ability – quick, someone tell parents and music teachers everywhere!):

buttonhole

It turns out I didn’t need to be afraid of doing the buttonholes after all…