31 January 2011

Ready for another craft night?

Wednesday February 9th @ 7:30PM I'll be sewing my little heart out and I'd be happy to have you along.

I might be making some pillows. They'll be more masculine than these because I'm out numbered around here, but aren't these sweet?

Of course, if I were you I'd make this:

... if you had someone in your house around teeth-losing age. I don't yet.

Yum...

Our best girl Martha has got lots of these ideas if you need inspiration...

or you can just come as you are and admire other people's projects.

I forgot to take pictures of the awesome projects people worked on last month and it's a crying shame because Meg had these awesome monkey heads she glued on gloves... see I just need a picture. You would be like, WOW! Monkey heads on gloves! I get it!

I'll have Thomas venture out of our room for as long as he can manage to take some pictures this time. Ok Thomas? Ok thanks.

See you next week! If you come! Ok society sisters?! Ok thanks.

I love this face

And that face is taking me on a date this week. A real live date! We aren't the date night types.

Actually, we are the every night's a date night when you put your kids to bed at 6:30pm and have an endless stream of Netflix, Hulu, creative projects, and inside jokes types.

So that's neat.

One more thing about that face I love so much.

He organized, and I mean super-organized, our entire kitchen this Saturday and it's brilliant! I like things clean, but he's tidy. You know what I mean?

Right now our kids are playing with a "new" batch of toys like it's Christmas morning because that face organized their toys into categories and divided them amongst three large bins when we first moved in. Every 3-4 months the bins get rotated and so every 3-4 months ta-da! Christmas.

Good job face.

29 January 2011

art smock

We bought some finger paints last week so the boys needed art smocks.


I got inspiration from Make it and Love it. I made the boy version of course (no ruffle), but since I like to make life hard I decided to cover a vintage sheet with vinyl instead of just using cotton.

It was slippery business and guess what? Vinyl doesn't slide through a presser foot and I have a wonky edge or two to prove it. So, I nixed the bias tape around the edges and zigzagged stitched raw edges. It was the easy way out and I love it. So mission accomplished Make it and Love it.

The closure on the back makes it easy to hang and store.


I learned a lot making these should-be-simple smocks. For example, I was so frustrated about not being able to sew on the vinyl that I couldn't think clearly enough to remember that you can sew with tissue paper over the vinyl, which comes off when you are done. I also learned that making two little smocks is a lot like making two little dresses and I really need to have a baby girl to sew for someday, because despite the vinyl drama this was a very very fun project.

Oh and the vinyl drama was totally worth it since Ambrose managed to get paint all over his smock (duh) and it wiped right off!

Way to go vinyl smock. Way to keep it clean.

28 January 2011

use your words

Living "down the street" from the ocean and being literally surrounded by it for so long has inevitably led me to draw parallels and analogies from it's constant presence. There's a wave for every emotion.

Yes, I really make these sorts of personal comparisons. And I love it. Eat your heart out transcendentalists!

But really, most days are a calm, flat summer in Oahu for me. The occasional rolling tide of excitement or random upset. All is crystal clear and promising.

I think we all have our choppy days-- murky water and ugly breaks. No one wants to get in and frolic around with you because you're hard to be with and too much work.

I'm never a gigantic, angry tsunami. My in-laws might disagree after living with me as we waited for our place to be built and I figured out how to manage two very young children in cramped quarters all together all the time. My bouts of anger are brooding and simmering, but quickly crash, devastating all in my wake until a gentle tide brushes everyone away, only to gather those who wish to remain safely in for a smaller set until peace remains.

But today I felt out of sync all day. There was no gentle pull and exhilarating crash. No give and take. No patterned tide to ride out until calmer waters returned once more. My children floated along, helpless to my crash, eager to return to rhythmic tides.

I was too.

So I paddled along remembered courses. Cuddle everyone up with a favorite movie, draw with chalk outside, clear the main room of clutter... but still uncertain waters billowed all around as the swirling, insistent current surged and tugged around me. Treading water at this point, I commanded my ship and drove the little ones far away for a day out. Stroke by stroke we paddled through familiar places and sailed on carefully. Safety on the horizon.

Until the drive home got too long and Ambrose's persistent requests to go to the beach became too many. Even though it was almost dinnertime I pulled off at Kekela where we drew a long, winding track in the sand with the heel of our slippers. It was getting cooler and the salt air was crispy on our faces as we finished creating the course. With the waves roaring on our right, as if cheering us on, I loaded Asher on my back like cargo, Ambrose held tightly to my left hand and we ran and we ran and we ran. Soles padding, faces laughing, heart pumping in and out-- gentle pull and exhilarating crash.

Asher's tiny arms still clung tightly around my neck as I sunk down into the sand, my legs alive from the race, and breathed heavily with relief. Ambrose grabbed my face in both his hands and exclaimed, "I win! I want to go camping with you! Let's invite dad! I want to race again!" He was happy and babbling every free associated thought that occurred to him in an excited sequence that matched my relief. Asher, cuddled up on my back like a little sea lion with his mama, giggled in my ear and kissed my cheek and the rhythm of the waves echoed in our ears as we brushed off the sand and headed for home.
The archetypal burst, in force.

27 January 2011

re-try the dancing kids post

I hope these work because they would and wouldn't before. The kids danced happily at Happy School today and Adelaide wins the award for best hula shake. Enjoy... it takes a while before the video will let you press play. I hope this works. And if not, I am, truly, sorry... (anyone watch the Manuel Ortiz show on SNL???)

Ambrose and his girls! (We missed you Shae Man!)
video

See the first 30secs of this to see what I mean about our champion Hula girl:

video

So cute right?

Happy School Song- shortened version: video

26 January 2011

did you know that we were all born to run?

This book will tell you all the reasons why too - even if you don't believe it. I'm convinced anyway.

I was never good at book reports.

Which may surprise my students. Shhh, don't tell them.

Anyway, I just wanted to tell you that I finished this book and it was ridiculously good.

And if you run you should read it because you'll want to memorize every word. Interestingly enough, I think non-runners would appreciate it too since McDougall approaches it initially as a non-runner and explores why many people HATE running.

It's just so great. Even when the author rambles a little off on tangents that you find yourself being entirely interested in. But maybe that's just me. I also love Into the Wild, which is another book criticized for it's tangents. I think a well placed tangent adds perspective and delicious side dishes to the giant thanksgiving turkey plot.

Also this book makes me want to eat and run like the Tarahumara. And write with an easy style like Christopher McDougall. He writes like a journalistic storyteller. I like it. I need to use my words more.

Ok, book report done and I didn't even tell you about any of the characters or rising action and leave you with a reading rainbow cliff hanger! Dang.

25 January 2011

smells like home!

Mama,

I was excited when I thought you were sending me T-shirts so I was surprised to open the envelope and find teaching shirts! Wow, even better!

And then I cried because they smelled like you and our laundry room in Bakersfield, CA.

Anyway thanks!

Love you,

Stephanie

ps- I realize that my bed is unmade in the background dear mother. Yes you taught me better. If Asher weren't sitting on my lap and vying for some attention as I type this I would go back, make the bed, and retake the picture in your honor... but, alas... well I'm sure you understand. :)

23 January 2011

the beasts

They both bring me books to read all day long and love to curl up on my lap as I do all the voices and chant all the rhymes.

They bump into each other frequently and cramp the other's style, but love each other more than any old best friend ever could.

They both prefer me over anyone in the world but never hesitate to cry for Daddy the minute I scold or when it's bed time already and they know who will most likely come back in for one more cuddle, story or song.

The big beast is a charming chunk of sunshine and hair pulling frustration. But I seriously dare you to stay mad for too long.

He is so smart it's scary and a little too honest. Like when he pointed to the 300lb woman minding her own business in front of us at church today and innocently noted that, "She, she, she... is bigger...(realization forming slowly apparently) big, BIG, TOO BIG FOR HER CHAIR!!" His honesty embarrasses me (actually mortifies really) at times and brings me to choked up tears at other times. He is the most forgiving person I have ever met and he'd have to be as the first guinea pig, I mean child, in the family with a mother like me. Every morning, no matter if I threatened him back into bed within an inch of his little life at 3AM when he was scared, he greets me with pure surprise and elation that we get another day together as very best friends--like he can't wait to get started!

He is a silly potty-mouthed, emotional, creative scientist, who is bursting out of the seams with one-liners to write home about so watch out!

The little beast is going through a stage. He needs a breakthrough. It's a good thing he is so affectionate and a beautiful, beautiful boy because what he makes up for in endearing affection and adorability he lacks in communication right now.

He wants to tell me something. He needs me to figure it out as if it's killing him and I'm just not getting it. Sometimes I finally swoop him up and beg him to show me... just to have him point to a blank space in the fridge as if he recalled something that was once there and was stolen from him outright. So, instead he settles for watching Toy Story 2 over and over until I can't take it anymore and force everyone into the great outdoors- slippers or not. "We're outta here beasts!" I should never be surprised that mother nature makes everything better as she always does, but I always am.

I know the boy will talk around age 2 as his brother did. I am not worried. But I sure wish I could make him feel understood until then. I look for other ways to connect in the meantime. A snuggly reading session, a wild goose chase down the beach, pointing to each bird or dog we can find on a stroll around the tall palm trees, or just catching him in a sleepy mood and stroking his still-baby-soft-legs and cheeks with my index finger as he giggles lazily.

Just some Mama thoughts on a Sunday night. Aloha.

21 January 2011

got a free afternoon?

I did since Adelaide invited Ambrose to play at their house while Asher had his nap. Thanks Echo! I used the quiet time to clean my house... just kidding! I made a picnic blanket!




And it rolls up all pretty when you're done:

I saw one like it in this book a year or so ago:
and have wanted to make one ever since.
I just used a vintage sheet and blanket I bought long ago as well:

I'm a little bit in love with it. What a breezy project. Let's go picnic!

19 January 2011

Crafty things that are making me terrifically happy

Here's that sail I said I was going to make:

A sail boat! I mean, sail bed!

A good excuse to finally use my trusty steering wheel buttons... purely for embellishment. No buttoning required of these fancy fancies.


Ambrose didn't act as excited as I imagined he would when I was done and I felt lame staying up the night before stitching my little heart out just to have him shrug at it. The next morning though, he ran into where I was sleeping and told me he sailed in his dreams! haha He's currently playing Captain Hook on his bed with Smee (Asher) as I type this. Oh good. Sometimes crafts seem to be more for parents than the kids they are supposedly created for and I really didn't want this to be one of those cases!

Thanks to my pal Kristi for donating the perfect white fabric to the cause. She saw 7 yards of white fabric for $2. She bought it. I understand the impulse. What a steal!

Ok, and now to give credit to another pal- my Mel P. She "slaughtered a sweater" way back when and I wanted to do it too. My sweater was too short to wear by itself and too hot to wear with a shirt under it.

Sooooo.....

I chopped it and hand-stitched some trim on. It's easy and now it's not too hot or too short. I love! Try it sometime.

Hmmmm.... what else? Oh yeah, I inherited a monstrous flannel board collection and so I spent hours cutting these out:

Remember these? I am so excited to have my own set! We'll use them to teach our primary class and for FHE. Thank you Beth! So awesome! It even had a quiet book to go with it that Ambrose and I just put together yesterday.


I have wool felt coming in the mail soon to make another crazy, cool quiet book I dreamed up in the shower one day! TMI? Sorry. It's gonna be cool though. But it will take me a while to finally finish. I'll show you when I am done Mom. And anyone else who cares. :)

Oh and last but not least (Can you handle more craftiness? Try not to vomit. I am almost done.)

My friend Katie tipped me off about this handy contraption (found at good old Walmart):

and now my thread has a happy home instead of being all balled up and tangled in a grocery sack in some container. AWESOME! It was making me pathetically happy to put this together before bed last night. Thomas was laughing at my glee.

Ok, I'm done for now. Have a crafty week and a nice life!

18 January 2011

Want to hear one of my all-time favorite musicians?

He's playing on this blog right now. I've got a bunch of his stuff to the right there ------>

He performs under the name Quail and can record and write music for any genre you want because he's cool like that.

You may even hear Thomas drumming a little on "Churches and Libraries"- in fact- no maybe about it. That's him alright!

Anyway, he's got this stylish new site and if you are a musician, music lover, or can tap your fingers to a good beat (read: that includes just about everyone right?) you should check it out!


We love Birds, Beaks, and Bones Martin. Best album of 2010 if you ask me!

Check it out y'all.

17 January 2011

photo practice

Thanks Mom and Dad for the new photo gear for Thomas' birthday and Christmas!

We are learning how to use it all. We'll try every couple Sundays to get it just right and someday we'll have a current family picture for you! Until then.... practice!









15 January 2011

We frequently dance in my somewhat disheveled room

Gif Created on Make A Gif
and Ambrose requests "Sleepyhead" by Passion Pit... aka- the "alien song"... I think he likes the male falsetto. Who can blame him. I've always been a fan myself. So we get down to it daily.

It's the only exercise I can muster these days.

How do you all have the energy? Way to go.

14 January 2011

Books I've been meaning to read...

I keep track of all good book recommendations like the ones
My honestly on to pals,

Star,

Carrie,

Many nerdy English friends and fellow teachers,

and Melissa,

tell me about. So I put all these on my "book list" on the Hawaii public library homepage!

Do you see a theme in my blog posts lately... besides frequency... get it done!

Why talk about it when you could do it. Which one should I read first? Any other recommendations?

13 January 2011

And now a post for my sister Ashley Smashley:

Dear Sister,

I thought of you all day today.

Why you ask?

Jeggings!

JEGGINGSSSSSSSS!

Jean Leggings!

...jeggings...

(jeggings.)

You know you love them.

Admit it.

Thanks for helping me put off my "homework."

Hope that helps you start off your day right dear sister.

Now run out and get yourself a pair or fifty.

Love always,

Stephanie

p.s.-
Jeggings.