Friday, February 4, 2011

DIY: Long Necklaces, Managed.

Cuter than mine is, better frame, burlap and coffee hooks - mine plain ole generic cork bulletin board and clear thumb tacks. It works but doesn't look as cute as this.


DIY: Long Necklaces, Managed.: "

2010_02_08_6418

I had a cute necklace holder a few years ago that broke, and a new one has been on my shopping list ever since. I have looked at several in different stores but never found one that I like or that would accommodate my looong necklaces. Those are the ones that have been tangled up in my drawer and really need to be managed in the first place, so that’s the priority. Last week, Chris ended up detangling a knot of necklaces while I finished getting ready to leave the house, and I decided that I would just take matters into my own hands and make one for myself.

I made it a priority to get to the thrift store on the day that the artwork was 50% off, and walked home with this cool frame for about $5.

2010_02_08_6427I removed the glass, picture and matting and pulled out some old foam board that I had never used. I cut the foam board, wrapped it in some heavy burlap (of course) and hot glued the edges around the back.

2010_02_08_6434

I picked up some padded hooks from Walmart for about $1. They started off white, which was just a little too stark for the frame, so I spray painted them beige and then rubbed on a little wood stain. This was a better color but left them tacky and messy, so I put a coat of matte Mod Podge and they sealed up nicely.

2010_02_08_6390

I wanted the hooks to be exactly 2 inches apart, so I got out the measuring tape and marked the back of the foam board in pen before I twisted the hooks through. I put 2 smaller hooks at the end of the row for shorter necklaces, and 2 at the bottom for bracelets.

2010_02_08_6432

I love it! Of all of the things that I have made, this was certainly the easiest. A perfect combination of cheap, fast, functional and pretty. A+

I’m linking up to The Girl Creative, Cottage Instincts, Making the World Cuter, Made it Monday, Sumo’s Sweet Stuff, Make Your Monday, A Soft Place to Land, Talented Tuesday, Today’s Creative Blog, Toot Your Horn Tuesday, Show and Tell,Works for Me Wednesday, Somewhat Simple, Thrifty Thursday, Transformation Thursday, Show off Your Stuff, Creative Cats, Finding Fabulous, Design-Aholic and Funky Junk Interiors.

"

50 Healthy Foods for Under $1 a Pound

50 Healthy Foods for Under $1 a Pound

Good idea here.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Educational Travel

What follows is a fabulous post about learning while traveling. It amazes me all the things that this family has been able to do in teaching her children while traveling the country. The life skills alone are great but also the experiences, the hands on, eyes on, feet on work is breathtaking. When we travel with our son, we always try to go off the beaten path, to take the time to really get into an area and not worry about cramming all there is to do in one area all at the same time. Who says you can't go back to the same travel destination more than once? While our son is not homeschooled, every child is homeschooled in one way or the other but man oh man, I'd like to be a child in Diane's family. What a great life.

Her entry is below, but make sure to hop over to her blog and read about homeschooling, visit her store and realize all that you can teach you child if you just try.






At the Lincoln Memorial


We just got home from a spur-of-the-moment week-long educational field trip to Washington DC! Since we live in the West, being able to see our American history memorials, sites and documents is a really big thrill for my kids . . . and for us parents too! Louisa is studying the American Revolution right now in her homeschool history studies, so this was a perfect learning tool. We had a chance to go for cheap, so we jumped at it, and off we went! The White House, the Capitol building, Smithsonian museums, the National Archives, the Lincoln Memorial, Mt. Vernon, Library of Congress, Smithsonian museums . . . hurray!

In my opinion, an educational trip counts for about a year of book-learning, so we travel as often as we can manage it. In the botanical gardens of Florida, snorkeling on the reefs in Mexico or sitting in on a Supreme Court session—real education happens! Most importantly, we change. Every experience cranks our minds open. We aren’t a big fish in a little pond anymore. The wider the world gets, the more we see how we fit into it and that is humbling. We come away asking, “How can I contribute to this big world?”

Being a homeschooling family, we are always looking for opportunities and nothing packs opportunity like travel. Seeing new people, new types of houses, unfamiliar lifestyles, unique cultures, trying new foods, traveling on forms of transportation we are unaccustomed to—they all are mind-expanding.

We travel light and cheap. We eat plain. My kids say we went through Europe on foot, on bread and water—and it is true! We are hungry for history, thirsty for adventure! We figure we can eat more lavishly and dress more fashionably when we get home. Going light and cheap means we can make it happen! As soon as our kids can pull a rolling suitcase, they are in charge of holding their own. We aim to go to bed early, get up early and pack each day when we travel. We have to get along in close quarters. (Yes, there are rough moments.)

Going cheap: We search for ultra cheap flights, use Priceline to bid for crazily inexpensive car rentals (our trip to Washington DC landed us a luxury van for just $15 per day). We’ve stayed in 5 star hotels for $40 a night by “name your own price” on Priceline. Although staying in a 5 star hotel is a fabulous experience that is super-fun for kids (and adults), I would recommend bidding for the 2.5 star hotels, as they usually have free breakfast, which helps a lot! We use the grocery store instead of restaurants. As soon as we arrive and pick up our rental car, we go to a grocery store, buy a cheap $3 styrofoam cooler, fill it with inexpensive, simple and wholesome food, and load it from the hotel ice dispenser each morning. We go light. Every family member is allowed one small rolling suitcase (carry-on size for clothes) and a lightweight shoulder bag which holds his reading book, card game, activities, water bottle and food pack. Less stuff = less work.

Food packs: I got tired of being the food dispenser, and all-over-my-lap-in-the-car sandwich maker, so it is fabulous having everyone take charge of themselves! The “food pack” is just a zip-lock bag with each family member’s name on it. All of the day’s food goes into this zip-lock bag, making everyone self-sufficient between breakfast and dinner. Each morning after a simple breakfast (fruit with yogurt, bread and peanut butter or cream cheese), the food packs are loaded with the goal: “only pack what you will eat”. Family members are assigned to make up the individual components (a baggie of baby carrots, or nuts and raisins, sandwiches, etc.) and they are laid out wherever convenient (you have to get creative in a hotel room). Each person takes what they will need and hauls their own food pack. Then during the day, everyone helps themselves when hungry or thirsty, giving mom a vacation too, and saving the budget from hunger-induced purchases or eating in restaurants. On each trip, we make sure to go to a local restaurant once or twice and eat what the locals eat—be it yucca root, okra and green tomatoes, crab cakes, bread pudding, poi or alligator! We look forward to that new adventure, and usually order one of each unusual traditional food and share our plates. Eating unusual food alone expands our experience greatly! And gives us some startling memories to laugh over: fried dill pickles, ugh!

Daily journal writing preserves the fun memories, the learning moments, and gives expression to the many questions and pondering that takes place as you learn something new. They are also a great evening activity in a hotel room, as well as reading travel brochures and planning the next day. We don’t watch TV in hotels, but we definitely swim! Anyway, those travel journals pack great memories!

We read all the plaques, stop at all the museums and points of interest, go wherever we want to go, and study whatever piques our curiosity. Education at its most sublime! We plan each day loosely and enjoy lots of spontaneity. My husband gets the all-time-award for being the most versatile driver! I am known to call out suddenly, “turn here!!!” as I see something of interest. And he does! From tiny crowded one-way alley streets in Italy to dirt trails up steep mountains in the Rockies, he amazingly responds to my “let’s go there!” and we’ve had some marvelous (and scary) adventures! And seen wonderful off-the-path sights too, like a bubbling mineral hot spring hill formation right out in a field in Colorado that we took off our shoes, rolled up our pants and waded around in. And concrete WWI Nazi bunkers on the cliffs of Normandy, France that we climbed down in and felt sobered by. That spontaneity has paid off and we’ve had amazing learning experiences!

Think about educational travel. It is possible. You can do it for cheap. It teaches your kids so much! Those experiences bond your family in wonderful ways! The world can be your campus.

As we were unpacking from Washington DC, my kids were already talking about where to go next . . .



"

The Hardest Mysteries

For about a year, I wrote a daily prayer out and found it to be very helpful in my faith life. I stopped doing that when I ceased being involved in the organization that I was actually doing that for which was not a Catholic organization but rather a protestant one (I left the organization when I converted). For some reason, I didn't carry over this journaling prayer habit after my conversion. I think because everything was all so new and different. I appreciate Sarah writing about this in her blog entry that follows as I believe it will help me out of the spiritual rut I have been in for a while now. Her thoughts on the Rosary and Eucharistic Adoration and the links she provided are going to be very helpful as well.


The Hardest Mysteries: "
I’m back in a prayer routine that is comfortable and well-worn: getting up really early and spending the quiet, dark time in my kitchen, refilling my mug of coffee while using Divine Office, iPieta, and a variety of rosary resources.
A couple of weeks ago, as I struggled, yet again, with mental distraction while praying the rosary, I had a moment that had to be inspired by the Holy Spirit: why not journal while praying the rosary? When I go to Eucharistic Adoration, I have been in the habit for years of writing my prayer–it feels more natural, more like a real conversation instead of me sitting there and dozing (because that is what happens when I sit still).

Why not use my writing-praying technique for my morning rosary?

It does make it take longer. It is a little unwieldy for an admitted klutzy-type person. It’s changing my prayer experience, though, and it’s also helping me pay more attention and battle those mental distractions. (For now, anyway. It seems I have to change it up and keep it fresh or lose my mind while trying to pray the rosary.)

It has also helped me as I’ve continued my rosary meditations on Catholic Moments. I’ve been struggling with the set I’m working on right now, the Glorious Mysteries. While I was battling writing a reflection for the Ascension last week, I wondered “out loud” (on Twitter and Facebook, since my three-year-old was the only one with me and her answer is likely to involve horses and pink sparkles) what the hardest mysteries are. . .

My morning rosary writing is helping me, though it was in Adoration that I found myself able, finally, to write about the mysteries I still had to prepare for my upcoming Mary Moment segments.)


Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Magnolia

http://www.stampingscrapping.com/

http://www.tildastown.com/?gclid=COT8sZrZ2KYCFddA2godSQwOKQ

OK I Thought I Had Not Been Bitten By The Magnolia Bug

I was, however, wrong . . .aren't these sooooo cute?


Week 89 – My Favourite Things: "
jacqui
jacque
denise
mindy
claudia
mina
dawny
bev
jane
dena
kathy
pops
"

This is a Great Tutorial on How to Spray Paint KnickKnacks

I need to gather up all those cute yet ugly things I have around the house and turn them into a more cohesive collection of items I love because of their unifying color.  Great little tutorial linked below.


"

Why Don't You...Use Tape To Clean Between Computer Keys!

Why Don't You...Use Tape To Clean Between Computer Keys!: "You know all the cookie crumbs dust between the keys of your computer keyboard? Kind of hard to get out of there...Use tape to pull all that stuff out of the crevices!

I read this then looked at my computer and thought ewwww - Jennifer you are brilliant and my computer keyboard thanks you.

Some Great Snack Ideas

GREAT IDEAS FOR HEALTHING SNACKING:  "The thing about unhealthy snack foods, is they generally give a big overload in calories, for a relatively small amount of food. They aren’t satisfying in the long run, so you’re still hungry afterwards. In other words, they are not calories well spent. " WELL SAID  "I don’t know about you, but I prefer to get some “bang for my buck!” So, what’s the secret to snacking smart?

Try to choose snacks which:
  • Are rich in fiber — no white flour foods, for example
  • Provide a little protein
  • Have small amounts of healthy fats — think mono and poly unsaturated over saturated fats
When you balance your carbs with some protein and healthy fat, it helps to slow down the digestive process, and therefore makes your snack more filling and satisfying.

Here are some ideas for snacks under 100 calories

Don’t forget what I said above about balancing carbs with protein and fat for better satiety. For example, some of the snacks are listed as single items, e.g. 1 cup raspberries, but you could balance this out by adding a dollop of natural yogurt, for example.
1. Fruits and Vegetables
An essential choice when you are trying to cut calories, but also want to choose nutrient packed foods…
  • 1 cup raspberries
  • 1 cup mango chunks
  • 1 cup grapes
  • 1 cup blueberries
  • 1/2 medium cantaloupe melon
  • 1 cup strawberries
  • 1 ounce of raisins
  • 1 small apple with 1 teaspoon natural nut butter
  • 1 cup broccoli with 1 tablespoon of hummus
  • 1/2 a small avocado
  • 1 cup of mixed salad leaves with 1 teaspoon of balsamic vinaigrette
  • Celery sticks with 2 teaspoons of natural nut butter
  • 1/2 cup frozen peas or corn
2. Dairy
Dairy foods are helpful when dieting for increasing your level of satiety. Studies have actually shown that people with higher intakes of dairy calcium showed greater excretion of fat in the feces, compared to diets which were lower in calcium.
So, a small amount of dairy can be helpful for weight loss…
  • 1/2 cup low fat cottage cheese with 1/3 cup pineapple cubes
  • Small pot of low fat natural yogurt
  • 1/2 cup green smoothie (e.g. baby spinach leaves, low fat yogurt, fruit)
  • 1 ounce of reduced fat cheddar
3. Savory
Instead of reaching for potato chips when you feel hungry, here are some options that will not only remove hunger pants, but also boost your nutrient profile…
  • 1/2 ounce almonds
  • 1/2 ounce mixed nuts
  • 1/4 cup seeds
  • 2 cups air popped popcorn seasoned with herbs
  • 1 hard-boiled egg
  • 2 slices extra lean ham, sliced baby tomatoes, rolled in lettuce leaves
  • 1 ounce smoked salmon with small amount of reduced fat cream cheese
  • Celery sticks eaten with 1 ounce tuna and 1 tablespoon of natural yogurt
4. Something Hot
Sometimes a hot snack can seem like a treat when it feels like you’ve been eating salad for the last 6 months. Here are some healthy options…
  • 1/2 cup cooked oats
  • 1 cup vegetable soup
  • 1/2 cup cooked millet
  • 1 cup of hot cocoa eaten with one small apple — weird, but satisfying!"
I hope to find some more recommendations that I can add to this entry.  As I try things and don't like them, I will remove them.  Many of these are offbeat enough in terms of what I normally think of as a snack that I think I will find them satisfying with the end result of feeding my body better.  Win Win.

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Crock Pot Honey Garlic Chicken

Is it a keeper?
YES! This recipe is very easy and very good!  I mixed the ingredients to the sauce together earlier in the week and stored them in the fridge.  Then when I was ready to make the dish, I just added it to the slow cooker.  I love dished that I can pre-assemble a few days in advance!
I served the chicken and the sweet Asian inspired sauce over brown rice with a side of broccoli.  I will definitely be making this again.  And again.  And again!
If you end up trying this recipe (which I highly recommend you do!) post your results here!  I would love to hear how you made out!

Mini Macaroni and Cheese You Can Freeze

Macaroni & Cheese Bites
Makes 4 ~ (12 cup) Mini-Muffin Tins
* 1/2 Pound Elbow Macaroni
* 1  1/2 Tablespoons  butter (extra for muffin tins)
* 1/4 cup Parmesan Cheese
*2 Tablespoons all-purpose flour
*3/4 cup milk or evaporated milk
*A few shakes of Tabasco sauce
*1  1/2 cups sharp cheddar cheese sheredded
*1 cup Monterey Jack Cheese
* 1 large egg yolk
* 1/8 teaspoon Nutmeg
* 1/8 teaspoon Dry Mustard
Oven: 425*
Cook and drain pasta.
Spread mini muffin tins with softened butter then sprinkle with Parmesan Cheese. (shake off extra cheese)
In a big saucepan melt the 1 1/2 tablespoons butter and whisk in flour over med. heat. Whisking for 2 minutes. Whisk in milk and cook, continuing to whisk until boiling (about 5 minutes). Add the Cheddar and Monterey Jack Cheeses and whisk until melted. Take off the heat and whisk in the egg yolk, Nutmeg and Mustard.
Fold in the macaroni.
Spoon slightly rounded tablespoons of macaroni into prepared muffin cups. Pack them gently. Sprinkle more Parmesan on top.
Bake on top and middle third of the oven until browned. (About 10 minutes)
Let them cool a few minutes then use a spoon a carefully loosen the bite-size minis!
You’ll notice this mac and cheese is a little thicker than usual but it helps when you’re putting it into the tins.
Don’t forget to press the pasta before you bake!
The Parmesan Cheese sprinkled inside the muffing tins and on top gives them the best texture…almost crunchy.
You can just pick ‘em up and pop one into your mouth…yum.

Margaret's Hope Chest

I like the way this pattern looks in the black, white and purple.


Margaret's Hope Chest: "

I was connected to Margaret's Hope Chest through Amanda Jean's retreat last summer. I am so impressed with the mission of the organization and the two women who run it. Carin and Carol are just the sweetest people ever and it is so inspiring to see how they have turned a family tragedy into an organization that helps so many people in need.


Alexia's Birthday Quilt


Here are the two quilts that I've donated. This is the second year of their Wrapped in Hope campaign, which gives personalized birthday quilts to children who have parents who are in prison. I made this quilt for Alexia who likes black, white, blue, purple and music. I used this pattern from a quilt I made a few years ago in the color scheme she requested and added some Alexander Henry music fabric for the binding.



binding detail



I finished up this quilt in November after having completed the top at the summer retreat. The pattern I used is the Fair and Square pattern that Amanda Jean designed for Margaret's Hope Chest.



Fair and Square



If you're looking for a great charity to donate to and have extra time to make a quilt, please consider making a quilt for MHC. You can find a list of children who have requested birthday quilts here.

"

Triangles in a Square Quilt

Triangles in a Square Quilt: "



I'm taking a few vacation days from work here and there to work on projects and school work. It's been nice to get out of the office for a while, and it's even nicer to finish up some loose ends around here.





On Friday I quilted and sewed the binding on my triangle quilt. I don't normally do straight line quilting because accuracy is not my forte. Even though the lines are crooked and not all that parallel, I really love how the diamonds on this are all puffy.





This quilt is going in our living room on the couch. Since everything in our house is either green, blue or brown...this quilt is perfect for our house!





Here are the details:

Original pre-cut block size:

8" x 8"

Four yards of fabric in four different colors are needed (1 yard each color). You will be able to cut 20 blocks from each color.

Then, the 8" blocks are cut in half on the diagonal (40 triangles of each color).

Sew the triangles together to opposing colors. You will have 80 blocks total. Arrange the blocks in 8 columns and ten rows and sew together.

Binding (for 2.5" strips): 1/2 yard

Backing: 4 yards

The quilt is 54" x 68"





"

Hugs & Kisses

Hugs & Kisses: "
Hey there. I have another VSN mini project to share. This challenge was to use entwined images, so my first thought was to grab these cuddly koalas from Melanie's Cuddles and Hugs stamp set.



I stamped the koalas with Memento Tuxedo Black in and colored with Copic markers, starting with N7 where I wanted the deepest shading.



Added N5.



Added N3.



Then I filled in with N1.



I used my blender pen to push in some highlights.



Used N3 and N5 to make some lines for fur. I kept adding lines, then blending them in, and adding more to give it depth. After coloring, I cut out the image.



For the background, I cut an oval from Pure Luxury Sweet Corn card stock, using my Oval Nestabilities. I used a 1 1/4 inch circle, adhered with re-positionable tape, to mask for the sun. Then I sponged Memento Tangelo.



Removed the mask and stamped the leafy branch, from Hope Grows, using Memento Bamboo Leaves.



I layered with Pure Luxury Tan Leather and used a Sweet Corn card base. The sentiment is from Hope Grows.



Thanks for stopping by. I hope you have a great day!


"