Archive for the ‘meaningful labor’ Category

Crafty Fundraiser


2011
10.17

I was racking my brain for something I could do for the $10 fundraiser table at the upcoming silent auction benefiting my kids’ public school, which has been hit pretty severely by budget cuts this year.  The idea behind the table is to replace the ‘buy it now’ table we had last year with a bunch of items that could all be sold for the same price: $10.  Since a lot of the items on that table were handcrafts like knit hats, scarfs, etc., I thought maybe I could do something (though I don’t yet know how to knit).

But as I was doing Rose’s hair the other day, inspiration struck.  Grandma Vickie had bought Rose some cute little hair gadgets at a fundraiser, and I realized I could make them myself.  And since they used small amounts of fabric, I could basically just use scraps from past projects to assemble them, so they were really low cost, just the elastic hair bands!  I think we are going to sell them three pairs for $10, so the goal was to do at least 60 of the individual gadgets.

Super easy, and illustrated in the photo here: first, cut out circles of fabric.  I used a cottage cheese lid as my pattern.  Then, do a simple in and out stitch around the outside of the circle.  Pull to gather, and voila!

You can just knot the gathered thread, stitch an elastic hair band to the other side, and be done with it, but on some of mine I thought it would be cute to add a button for some contrast and/or bling (depending on the button and the fabric).  So you can stitch that on during the band-attaching process.  I can think of a lot of other cute ideas to play off this – my mom just suggested jingle bells with Christmas patterns – that could be adorable!

But the key to the whole process was inviting some friends over (thanks, Kate, mom, and Glory!) and spreading the labor out a little bit.  I had almost all the circles cut before they got there, but the four of us worked for three or four hours and made almost 100 individual gadgets, fifty pairs!  I finished up the last of the circles today and as my mom is still coming up with ideas, this might not be over… but this is a great start for the fundraiser, since I only invested $5 for 100 hair elastics.  It would have cost me more to make a couple of pans of brownies, and this is going to make way more money for the school!

  Now just to figure out how to display them all on the table – I don’t want to leave them in the mixing bowl!

 

 

 

Saver of the Day


2011
10.08

My husband is the greatest.  I think most guys these days, if you said, “my sewing machine is jacked up,” might not be able to look at it, identify the problem immediately, send me out for a part, and fix it, thus saving my weekend.  It is the only soccer-free, gymnastics-free weekend we have until Thanksgiving and I really wanted to work on the Halloween costumes.

  So he’s awesome: smart, handy, and he can reach the stuff on the top shelves.  A man among men.  That is all.

 

Rockford Peach Costume


2011
10.05

So, just in time for Halloween, I finished the Rockford Peach costume I was working on for my friend Nicole.  I started it a long time ago, but the cancellation of the costume party we were going to led to a long process of procrastination and fear.  But to refresh your memory, this is what I was going for:

Madonna in a League of Their Own

Obviously, the movie “A League of Their Own” and the overall idea is sort of out of vogue, so there was no pattern that I could find readily available to make the costume.  So I used Butterick pattern 5598 and sort of modded it to make this:

The modifications I made to the pattern were to drop the double-breasted style of buttons, elongate one of the lapels and make that fold-over thing (I am highly technical with my self-taught sewing knowledge), and add sleeves.  I just worked it out as I went, and I think it turned out pretty decently.  It looks okay on me, I really hope it fits Nicole well, since she’s a little taller than I am…  I’ll post an update picture in the future if I can get one of her wearing it.

Game Design


2011
09.21

Pretty much since he was able to hold a crayon, Dillon has drawn complicated mazes, maps, racetracks, and what-have-you.  These pictures were always more about the process than the result, and always part of a complex narrative that was happening in D’s head (and often out loud with lots of sound effects).

Lately, his artwork has become “video game designs.” (His phraseology.  Also his teacher’s when we were discussing what he had to do less of in school, in service of actually getting some work done.)

This afternoon after we took Rose to gymnastics, D asked me to play through a game he’d been working on.   And I was surprised at how well-developed his ideas were, and how well he followed the typical game structure and format.  Also how he was able to replicate the ideas with a pencil and paper.

If you’ve ever played Dungeons & Dragons (I know, my geek is showing), this was sort of along those lines, a one-on-one with your ten-year-old DM.  He had drawn a series of elaborate maps/mazes over several pages, as well as status bars for tallying hit points, inventory tallies, money tallies, and a ‘store’ of things that you can purchase with your dimes and quarters won for defeating evil creatures.

He was just so smart about everything that it sort of threw me.  I mean, he’s a really smart kid – he and

One of my favorite villains from D's game

his buddy stayed up late at a sleepover pretending to be amoebas in their sleeping bags – I wouldn’t say he’s totally typical.  But he was organized around this game to a level I haven’t really appreciated before.

Also, there is the delivery, which is lovely.  He isn’t a cynical tweener yet.  He’s got his moments of snottiness, but he can be so earnest and unreserved about things he enjoys, and he was completely involved with this idea.  He would say stuff like, “Now we have to battle this ghost, and I really don’t generally like to fight things my punches won’t connect with, but our enchanted bows and arrows should do the trick!”

He would draw villains in rooms as we walked into them, and each had a little hit counter bar underneath that he would shade in, and then after the bad guy was defeated his bar would be erased back to zero or the character would be erased entirely.  You got loot for defeating bad guys (I earned a bow, single-bladed axe, double-bladed axe, sword, and was almost to the magic lightning weapon when I had to leave to go to a meeting).  In general, it was pretty fun.  I might just have a little Gary Gygax on my hands.  I could certainly do worse.