Showing posts with label kids craft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kids craft. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 March 2013

Easter crafting

The kids have been begging me to do some Easter craft activities. Truthfully, I've been putting it off. My patience levels for kids crafts are not that high at the moment.

But yesterday I bite the bullet and opened up a craft box I ordered them in the mail last month.



 I gave them their supplies, set the boundaries and let them go.



They were quiet for over an hour, no arguing, nothing! It was bliss. (Ethan was asleep...)

Tomorrow we are going to try some more Easter craft and also try our hands at Easter Biscuit Decorating.

What are your plans for the weekend? Are you doing anything crafty?






Thursday, 21 June 2012

Our Winter Holiday To Do List



School holidays start at 3pm this afternoon here in Queensland, so I thought I would write a list of things I would love to do with the kids over the holidays.

Some of these are my ideas and some the kids have asked that we do.

  • Cubby house building
  • Exploring in the park
  • Painting
  • Making dress ups
  • Toast marshmallows in our outside fire
  • Collage
  • Make party decorations for Ethan's birthday
  • Make a cake
  • Make some gingerbread men
  • Go on a scavenger hunt in our neighbourhood
  • Sew a simple tote bag with Caden
  • Fix the sandpit in the backyard and dig for fossils (buried dinosaurs etc)
  • Donate one bag of no longer used toys to charity
  • Bike riding
What are your plans for these Winter holidays?


{image source}

Sunday, 17 June 2012

Another weekend bites the dust

The weekend just gone was a pretty damn good one even though I woke up on Saturday morning and puked my guts up and then still made it to the 8am footy game to watch Caden. I am so glad I made it because he scored his first try AND got player of the match. I didn't managed to get a photo of any of it though because of the previously mention puking. I was trying mighty hard to keep the contents of my stomach down.

Then we had to do some shopping for Ethan's birthday which is next week! He will be TWO. TWO! How did that happen? Caden and Mahli are beyond excited about his birthday and were mighty miffed when I told them that we wouldn't be having a party, just cake and dinner with family. Caden told me that every onedeserves a party, I told him he is still having a party, just a small one. That seemed to settle him down.

Sunday was spent on the couch, I was (and still am) feeling sorry for myself and decided a movie day it would be. B had other plans and spent it on the roof fixing(finishing) our back patio. Caden and Mahli begged me to help them make some necklaces with beads. Who am I to say no to some crafting, so we made a few necklaces with their names on them.


It was a quiet weekend spent just with our little family and it was just what we all needed.

What did you do over the weekend?


Monday, 4 June 2012

{Guest Post} Quilting with Kids



For as long as I can remember, I’ve been surrounded by craft and creating. My mum is a sewer. Her mum is a sewer. My other nan is a knitter. My great aunt spins wool, and makes booties and coat hangers, traditional fair of the country weekend markets. My linen press is full of items from my glory box, lovingly crocheted or embroidered by my great grandmother. Really, it’s no wonder that creating runs thick in my blood. Mum always had craft supplies available, and very rarely a school holiday went past without at least one craft workshop. My own children, in turn, adore crafting. From colouring in, to cutting and gluing any scrap of paper they can find, to their latest wish. Learning to sew. I’ve posted on my blog previously about my eldest son’s quilting adventures, but of course, what big brother does, so must little brother (and tiny sister, it seems). Boy2 is 3.5, and I thought we had no hope of it going anywhere nearly smoothly, but I was surprised! So if you’ve been thinking of maybe sewing with your little ones, I thought I might share our process. It’s lots of fun, not totally accurate, and what I think is a wonderful way to introduce some basic sewing principles!

We started with an A5 piece of paper, as it was pretty well the right proportions (our finished piece would be somewhere around the size if an A3 piece of paper, give or take). Sitting down at the table, I passed Boy2 a pencil. “What would you like your quilt to look like?” “not MY quilt, mummy, Cookie Monster’s quilt!” “ok. How do you want COOKIE MONSTERS quilt to be? Can you draw it for me please, just with straight lines, k, baby?”. And completely unaided, this is what her came up with:


From there I fudged, er, translated a rough pattern, and using fabrics that he selected, started cutting. I would claim he chose the fabrics himself, except he was somewhat biased and used the exact same fabrics as his brother’s quilt. He did, however, choose the placement of which fabric was where.

With the pieces cut out, I laid them out on the desk for approval. Approval was forthcoming, around the same time his enthusiasm waned, so there they stayed for another week or so. Then he was keen to get stuck in, so we trundled off to the studio, and started sewing. Being three and a half, I didn’t expect great things, but I had him beside me and explained about lining up and pinning, and then he sat on my lap, and hands under mine, we started sewing. The last couple of long seams I let him guide the fabric himself, with my hands hovering nearby, and my foot only *just* on the pedal so we were nice and slow. It was tricky trying to convince him to keep him the fabric butted against the piecing foot, but wonky as it was, the seam was done, and the pride on his little face was just adorable. This step, obviously, varies by child. Our five-and-a-half year old can now under close supervision, use the machine completely independently, even if I do have to keep reminding him to slow down on the pedal!!

The finished quilt top, pinned and ready for quilting: 




We went to Lincraft on a recent holiday, and he happened to spot some Sesame Street fabric, a fat quarter of which made for a perfect backing: 




Of course, now the 19 month old has decided she should have a go to!! I do love sewing with my little people, even if a certain someone has a half-quilted dolls quilt on the needle and I can’t finish my own current projects! What’s the favourite family creating projects at your house?”


Rachel blogs as Little White Dove about creating on her own and with her three small children over at http://thedovenest.wordpress.com. A photographer and obsessive crafter, and unable to limit her creating to just one artform, she paints, knits, sews, crochets, scraps, draws, and has a go at almost anything, including launching her very own fabric line (http://etsy.com/littlewhitedove). She also has a personal photo blog at http://rachelmeszaros.com.au/explore, and can be found on Facebook at http://facebook.com/thedovenestand http://facebook.com/rachelmeszarosphotography