Saturday, December 1, 2012

What the felt was I thinking.

I had twine and I had felt, oh and don't forget hot glue. So I decided to make garland out of said felt.  I have been "making" this garland for 2 weeks now. I decided the felt need to be in circles, the exact same size. I wonder what I'm thinking when I think of these oh-it's-going-to-be-quick'n'easy plans. Those quick 'n' easy plans are never quick and easy. 

Now I have my E asking to help. You can't use hot glue, you can't cut with scissors, but sure you can help. She tells me to wait until she wakes up. Yeah, ok. The felt garland in my head is hopefully going to actually turn out. I also have what it will most likely turn out in my head also.

Really how hard can felt garland be????
So I googled felt garland. Oddly I haven't even found ONE pin about making garland out of felt. I did not take this as a good sign. But who am I to worry? I mean seriously this should be QUICK 'n' EASY says the woman 2 weeks later....

Monday, November 26, 2012

Christmas Ball Wreath, now $17!

So we, meaning Rebecca and I, decided that using italics was going to be "my thing." 

Anyway, I decided after a year of whining I was going to do it, I was going to make a Christmas ball  ornament wreath. I went to Dollar Tree and bought all the red, green, and silver ornaments they had. I also found a few stocking stuffers for the twins. $20 and an unknown amount of Christmas balls later, I started hot gluing the top onto the ball. I want to note I am a cheesy Christmas movie junkie. I love watching the Hallmark channel during this time of year and occasionally I will actually switch to the Lifetime channel. Don't shoot me, it's my guilty pleasure :).  So to keep the mood going, I had my cheesy Christmas movies playing.
Finally about halfway through the hot gluing process I stopped burning myself with the glue. So I thought, "Hey, success! I'm getting better at this thing!"
By this time my husband thought I was nuts. He kept asking me, "why are you doing this?" Who knows, because we can't afford the wreath I want? Because I want to have something I've made? Because I want to?
The glue was done and since I'm an awesome mom, I snuck into the twins' room and grabbed a wire hanger. NO MORE WIRE HANGERS...EVER!!!! I made it into a circle-ish shape and started getting the balls on. It didn't turn out too bad and I bought some little balls at Target to fill in some gaps in the wreath. 


I was/am so proud of this wreath, it looks great! 

So what the hell do I see in the Target ad on Sunday? 4 days later?????
A Christmas ball wreath on sale for SEVENTEEN freaking dollars! Bastards.


Now I'm in the process of making some felt garland for the tree. Don't worry I will use felt and hot glue. Shall I attempt sewing? Rebecca seems to think I should, what does she know? 


























Sunday, November 25, 2012

Crackers

Pardon my French, but I made fucking crackers the other day. Crackers! I think my thoughts on this can adequately be described the letters WTF.  I don't even know why I decided to make crackers. I saw something on Pinterest, one thing led to another, and next thing I knew I was in my kitchen with my tiny food processor, a cookie press, and cracker makin' ingredients. Oh, and E. She had put the iPad down and wanted to help.

I got the first idea to make little cheese cracker from Tasty Kitchen. Now, she goes way above and beyond and makes tiny little goldfish, football, and Pac-Man cracker cutters out of strips of a tin can. I could not even wrap my head around how to do this without ending up with bloody, sliced up fingers, so I skipped this step. And I actually used kind of a hybrid recipe between this and a recipe that came with my cookie press, which I was going to use to shape my cookies into bite sized little pieces of cheddar cracker perfection.

E helped me measure the ingredients. By help I mean she dumped the flour and cheese in a bowl and on the counter and started playing in it. Whatever. I was only making a half batch, because I've learned from my past mistakes not to go all gung-ho on experimental recipes (biscuits that taste like paste anyone?).

I made the dough, and it actually turned out well. I was so proud of myself. I put the dough in my cookie press. I decided the directions to use certain disc numbers in it weren't necessary and used a pastry? icing? tip on it instead. Why don't I just follow directions? I did get a couple little dough bits out, but they were getting progressively smaller. The tip was getting jammed up with dough, so I switched to a different tip. Then some plastic part got bent, a new disc got clogged, and  I had to push the dough out of the cookie press tube with a spoon.

Time for plan B. No way in hell was I going to be cutting out shapes form a tin can, so I scoured my kitchen for something to use for a cutter. I settled on a part from the cookie press. It was small and would make little circles, so good enough. I had to roll the dough out. We have a marble rolling pin, which I love in theory. However, I'm not really sure how to use a rolling pin. My dough was kind of uneven, but I made those little circles anyway. I did get a small blister on my finger from using my "cracker cutter," but it was worth it.

I had to almost double the recommended baking time, but they actually turned out not terrible. I should have rolled them out thinner because they were about three times normal cracker height and weren't crispy, but at least they were edible. I would call this recipe a success, and I didn't even think I needed a drink. Granted, I made them at about nine in the morning, and even I have scruples.


Saturday, November 24, 2012

Hot Glue, Felt, and Power Tools. Oh, My!


Hot glue is an essential to living.

I am not a pin mom. I think many ideas are very cool, but if they go beyond hot glue, I’m pretty sure I won’t do it. I’m married to a very wonderful husband and yep, you guessed it, I’m a mom. A mom to 2 very adorable 3-year-old boy/girl twins, E and K. Which makes them fraternal, not identical. I am also best friends with the other blogger. We’ve been friends for…20ish years. We had a sabbatical during college, but alas she saw the errors of her ways J and we quickly picked up where we left off. We are at the point when I was in recently in the ER, my husband said, “I told her everything, but I didn’t know what you wanted me to tell your mother.”
I too, was once a stay at home mom, very unexpectedly. I was a teacher in one state for 3 years. The year before I was to get to tenure status I was pink slipped. Go me! I stayed home with my then 7 month old twins. And no, it’s not like having 2 or 3 kids. There’s no comparison. I loved staying at home, was I blessed with staying home? YES! Would I do it again? Ummmmm, yes? Did I sometimes feel like I was the single worst mother alive? Oh, I had my moments.
I love to do crafty things as long as they don’t take a lot of time. Which means any type of craft that takes a long time, like those insane books people decorate and then put pictures in, scrapbooks! Ha, I’d never do that. I’m saying it takes patience and talent, which I have neither of. The things I like to do require either 1) hot glue, 2) felt, or 3) power tools.
Last Christmas I made a felt Christmas tree with ornaments for the twins, which okay, there was some heat and bond in there. Felt! Yay!
This past summer, I bought a $7 dresser at a garage sale (BTW, I love garage sales), on sale drawer pulls, sanded (power tools!), & repainted it a wonderful gray color. It is now some much-needed storage for my way too small kitchen.
For this Christmas, I decided I should probably figure out whose stocking belongs to who. So I let the twins pick and then used felt, heat and bond, then stitched, yes stitched the letters on. Very cute!!! I also wanted a wreath, those wonderful Christmas ball wreaths that are way too expensive. So Dollar Tree here I come! I don’t know how many packs of Christmas balls I bought but the only color they had left was gold. I made myself a wreath. A pretty nice wreath and don’t worry, I used hot glue.

An Old Couch, Some Sheets, and a Few Bottles of Beer Part II

For the couch-covering project, I needed three flat sheets. Or rather, assumed I needed. Which would be great if I had actually bought three flat sheets. What I actually bought were two flat sheets and one fitted sheet. Son of a bitch.

I needed a beer.

Okay, at this point I'm going to skip ahead about a million steps because I am about to throw this motherfucking couch out the window. I ended up cutting the elastic off the fitted sheet. I was going to take a picture of this step and the rest of this process, but when I went to turn the camera on, the battery was dead. I had to rearrange the cushions and sheets in about a million different ways to get everything to "fit" right. My husband said he imagined a game of Tetris going on in my head, and the screen was filling up fast.

I did some hemming of some bottom pieces. Of course, this didn't go as easily as everyone else makes it seem like it should. And of course my bobbin ran out of thread. And didn't wind correctly so I ended up have to pull all the thread off the bobbin and rewind it. And of course it didn't wind correctly the second or third times. I ended up with a lot of thread at the bottom of the bobbin and not much at the top. Whatever.

Eventually I got the sheets on. I did a lot of tucking, retucking, pinning, and swearing. It didn't look spectacular and looked like I had covered my couch in sheets, but it did look marginally better than what was underneath. And then my husband said six words I will never forget: "Are those sheets two different colors?"

It was like time stood still. I looked at the couch. I looked at my husband. I looked at the couch again. Yep, one of the sheets is a slightly lighter shade of grey than the other two. Fuckity fuck fuck fuck. More beer. The next day was Thanksgiving, and the day after that the dreaded Black Friday. No way in hell was I going to WalMart on Black Friday (good thing, too because it turns out a woman went complete batshit crazy at that WalMart and attacked a police officer on Black Friday).

I didn't care anymore. I had been defeated by a DIY project yet again. Le sigh. Really, you just kind of get used to it.

Maybe I could just get some fabric to re-cover the throw pillows. Ha, yeah....


Wednesday, November 21, 2012

An Old Couch, Some Sheets, and a Few Bottles of Beer Part I

Don't worry, this is a PG-rated post.

We need a new couch. Unfortunately, since I have yet to figure out how to turn being a stay-at-home mom into a lucrative career, a new couch isn't in the budget right now. I've read blogs about moms who buy everything  using money they make through SwagBucks, taking surveys, etc. I've tried them, too. At the rate I'm going, a new couch is only 362 years away.

Our couch has two problems: 1. The frame broke 2 1/2 years ago and has been held up with a stack of books since then. My husband, who is about as handy as I am crafty (i.e. not very), had said he was going to fix it, you know 2 1/2 years ago. 2. It is just getting gross. My daughter was an epic spitter-upper when she was a baby. Also, she wanders into our living room with food and occasionally her sippy cup. She drinks Pediasure with chocolate Carnation Breakfast Essentials, and that shit stains. So yeah, we need a new couch. 

Slipcovers are expensive. We have a chaise with our couch, and apparently they don't make a lot of slipcovers for couches with a chaise. So after some extensive research--really, I research everything to death--I came across some YouTube videos on how to cover a couch with a sheet or two. Bingo! I started to get that DIY high I get when reading about projects. So easy! No sewing! Looks...like you covered your couch with a sheet. Which was fine with me because anything would be an improvement really, and it would cover the books.

I'd buy cheap sheets on clearance; how much could it cost? Apparently no one wants 200 thread count sheets anymore, and my first three stops were a disappointing bust. That left one more place to try. I'm pretty sure I could actually feel my blood pressure rising just thinking about it. I had to go to WalMart. Ugh.

To say I am not a fan of WalMart is an understatement. I call it my flea bath, the place I hate more than a cat hates a flea bath. My husband calls IKEA his flea bath. Hmmm, as I'm typing this I realize that in the past I've marveled about the low cost of their sheets. I probably should've gone to IKEA....

Anyhoo, according to my online sheet research, WalMart had cheap sheets. So I went there. I am convinced their parking lot was designed by third graders. Seriously. The entrances all come in at an angle to the parking lot, creating a weird triangular intersection. Two sides have a stop sign and one doesn't, but no one ever seems to be able to figure out who's supposed to stop and who isn't. Gah! I did find sheets, but not at the super low WalMart cost I was expecting. At that point I didn't really care and bought three queen-sized sheets and a Snickers for $38 or so. The Snickers was going to give me the energy to tackle this project. The devil voice in my head told me me buy it. It was also telling me I should have just bought a slip cover.
(Pretend like there's an "n" in "Discout." I'm too lazy to figure out how to fix it.)

To calculate how many sheets I'd need, I measured the couch and used what I learned in high school geometry. Oh wait, no. No I didn't. I didn't even measure the flipping couch. I just figured king-size would be too big and twin would be too small. And that I needed three sheets because two didn't seem like enough, and I didn't want to pay for four. 

I'll continue with my couch covering adventure in the next post, but I'll give you a sneak peek: I told my husband this was the worst idea I've ever had. Oh, and I drink some beer.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Blogging, Yet Another Chance to Fail Miserably

Earlier this year I became a stay-at-home mom rather by accident. I had been working from home for a job that was less than ideal for a number of reasons I won't get into. I was burned out and needed a break. So for now I'm staying at home with E, who is 2 1/2. Eventually I will probably be going back to work, but for now I am an awesome rockstar adequate stay-at-home mom. I'm not the supermom that I see a lot of moms referring to themselves as, but I'm not horrible, either. E probably watches too much TV and listens to too much inappropriate rap in the car (Flo Rida, I'm looking at you), but she is polite to strangers, even the cable guy who rang our doorbell while she was running around completely naked.

I don't want to brag, but I am spectacularly good at not finishing anything I start. So for that reason my husband knows nothing of this blog. Scandalous. If I can keep this going for a year, then maybe I'll tell him.

Some of the recent things I've started, or have planned to start, but haven't finished are:
1. Crocheting. I've been "working" on a blanket for 11 months now. Mostly it just sits wadded up      on the craft table I just had to make out of my old work desk. I think I've finished exactly three projects in two years: A pot holder, dishtowel, and washcloth or something for E's play kitchen.

2. Speaking of play kitchen, I was going to make her a refrigerator for her kitchen. I got a little cabinet at  a garage sale, and it's been hanging out in the garage for a year. I even got stainless steel paint for the refrigerator, which I'm sure by now is a congealed mass.

3. An outdoor awning for E's play area. I got the idea from Pinterest, of course. I got a little lightheaded trying to figure out dimensions and calculate the cost of fabric on sale versus with a coupon, had a beer, and promptly forgot about that project. Oh, and I ran the tarp that I thought we could maybe use with the lawn mower.
   
4. Making fall window clings out of glue and food coloring. I bought a giant bottle of glue for this project. All I needed to do was find some leaf templates and get to work. Thanksgiving's in two days, and the glue bottle hasn't even been opened.

5. Couponing. What the hell was I thinking? I bought a newspaper subscription late one night, in bed (we know how to keep the romance alive), because it was a really good deal. I got myself a binder and special page protectors. I even divided the binder into alphabetical sections. It worked for about a month. Now? My coupons sit, uncut, on our computer desk, in a big pile. The only reason they're all on the computer desk is because we're having a party Friday night, and I was trying to clean out our front room. Somehow I don't think having stacks of uncut coupons, half of them expired, is the type of "system" the professional couponers talk about.

These are just some of my failures. There are many more, but it's after nine and I need to get my pajamas on. I wish I were kidding. Stay tuned for my next blog post (is that even the correct terminology?), recovering our couch with sheets.