Archive for October, 2008

Culture Swap

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

One of my tentative goals for parenting Rebecca is homeschooling, although I think she already has other ideas. It’s something I’m interested in though, and I read lots of homeschooling mom blogs. One is A Bit Of This and A Bit Of That by a Montessori home-pre-schooling mom in Japan, Jo Ebi, and she runs the occational swap. This is my second, her Culture Swap. The default swap plan gets you two swap partners, so you send out two culture packets, and get back two from different cultures. I thought if I was going to go to the trouble to put together a packet on a culture, I might as well do more than two, so I got three extra swap partners. Double the motivation.

Unfortunately, September was our get-your-swap-together month, and I spent more than half of it in Vermont, most of that busy getting ready, and recovering from, my sister-in-law’s wedding. In modem land, so I even had a hard time doing much needed internet research on my chosen culture, Finland. Oh well. I got started before we left, managed some library internet research while I was there, and managed to pull it all together in the final three days of September when we got back. I mailed it off October 1st, and practically broke my arm patting myself on the back. Normally I’m horrible about getting things into the mail, but I got this one. The whole thing was a lot more work than I was expecting! But now it’s done.

My Finland SwapWhat was in my swap? Half the work went into gathering the information and putting together a booklet. Here are some links that get you most of it:

Facts: Wikipedia and Virtual Finland

Craft: I put together a simplified birch bark box tutorial based on this HANDISCOLA pdf. I cut the wooden circles for the boxes the morning that I was mailing the packages out. Nothing like an inspiring last minute crunch.

Recipes: gingerbread men and kesaekeitto (summer soup). The summer soup is going to get added to my dinner repertoire, easy freeform recipe.

Games: Neppis and Mölkky

Music: Traditional Finnish songs from Joy: Hits From World Famous Children’s Choir

Biography: Tove Jansson, writer and illustrator of the Moomin books, I love them, her characters are so… intensely themselves, and great embodiments of personality traits and foibles.

Sorting StampsThat was my ‘required’. I also threw in some Panda licorice (from Finland, I couldn’t find small packages of salt licorice which would have been better), Finnish stamps (and some from Norway which had Scandinavian architecture and animals), a map of Finland, and a hand felted Finnish flag (my first, and wonky, attempt at needle felting). Also an extra CD with some public domain books with Finnish folk tales, my favorite of which is Mighty Mikko: A Book of Finnish Fairy Tales and Folk Talesby Parker Fillmore(1922). The PDF has some really beautiful woodblock style illustrations by Jay Van Everen, and I especially liked ‘The Forest Bride: The story of a little mouse who was a princess’.

But enough about me, this is getting too long. My official swap group swaps came in first:

China Swap Kim’s swap was on China, and her package was full of snacks and candy, most of which was from Japan, Taiwan and/or Korea (I’ve forgotten and we ate it so I can’t check!) which was fine with me because of all the China food scares! There was also a cute Panda booklet she made from a card, some chopsticks, some Chinese character sticker/tattoos, some kind of food container I haven’t figured out, and a nice package of origami paper, which included a cute pattern for folding a little tiny book that Rebecca likes.

Canadian First Nations SwapNext came Jen’s Canadian First Nations swap, which was full of great stuff too. Lots of pictures and quotes that she’d pasted onto card stock to make them nice, and a beautiful crocheted First Nations doll with a cloak/dress that comes off with a tiny snap that my daughter adores, and a lovely little dream catcher. I think the person who made the dream catcher is funny, because there is a tag on it that talks about how bad dreams get caught in the web, and the good dreams go through the hole in the center, but they didn’t leave a hole in the center! If you aren’t going to leave holes in the center of your dream catchers, then you shouldn’t write a tag about how important the center hole is. But perhaps they have small children, and are as absent minded as me. I really liked all the pictures.

Native American SwapNext came in our first extra swap, Laura’s Native American swap. She sent materials to make a dream catcher, and we will make sure to leave a hole in the center for the good dreams when we make ours. It won’t come out nearly as pretty as the one Jen sent, but it’ll be fun. There was also a rain catcher project that Rebecca wanted to pour the beads into right now mama so we did. Some little plastic figures that Rebecca also loves, and a teepee that was to small for them to fit in, so we had to go and make a larger one out of bamboo skewers and cloth, although we made that one too big! Not that she minds, as long as they can fit in. These two swaps made me realize that if I want to teach Rebecca about different cultures the most important thing for her is to have a doll, probably with a story, from that culture. Laura also sent three nice books, including a great craft book covering many different tribes all across North America, which is nice because it talks about how all the different tribes had different cultures and you can’t really lump them together any more than you can call someone European and hope to be accurate, and a beautiful Caldecott Medal book, The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses. And there was a CD and a spinny drum. Lots of stuff in that box.

England SwapThen just the other day we got our fourth swap, Mary’s England swap. It came packaged in a cute pretend letter with an english stamp stuck to the front. Mary made a booklet similar to mine with lots of great information in it. One of the recipes was for making butter, which I’d read before but never thought of doing with kids, good idea. The craft she included was for making a Thaumatrope, which I’d never heard of, but seems like a great trick for little kids.

We’re still waiting on our fifth swap, but Souzzann said it got mailed off last week, so hopefully it will get here next week. It will be on the Navajo culture, that will make the third indigenous North American culture out of five. :-)

Ribbon Doll Dress

Sunday, October 19th, 2008

Or how to spend a couple hours procrastinating with your daughter when you are sick of working on the 20GB of wedding photos you have to post process and send out to people.

Afternoon Project

In another couple years I’m sure I’ll be called on for doll clothes, right now, honestly, Rebecca doesn’t much care and mostly wants to pull them off, but it’s good practice. And we picked up four little girl dolls for her doll house at a flea market this weekend, and one of them didn’t have a stitch on. That’s my excuse.

Next time I’m going to use cotton though, this filmy stuff was awful to work with. It’s nice and thin, which was why I got it many years ago when I thought I wanted to make dolls, easier to make clothes to scale when you aren’t using really thick fabric, but Rebecca isn’t that picky, and I shouldn’t be either. That or I need to singe the edge to keep it from fraying. Or just glue trim on. I tried to use a turned ribbon binding for the hem, but I pulled some threads sticking off the edge after I stitched the bottom of the ribbon, and then the seam was no good in a couple spots. Oops. So I ended up fixing it with some fabric glue. The ribbon bodice ended up needing some glue to keep it from fraying too. I didn’t cut it long enough to fold both edges, and really that makes it too bulky anyway. So I put a tiny bit of glue around one edge, and then wrapped a narrow gauzy ribbon around it. I should have done that for both edges. And the velcro. I’m tempted to try an all-glue dress next time.

Afternoon Project Detail

But really, what’s with dresses, I should be making pants! Okay, I should be making wrap dresses right now, because anything else is a bit much for Rebecca to get dolls feet and hands through. It was sweet though, while I was sewing the dress Rebecca wanted me to open a bag of buttons, and after a suggestion she started sorting them by color, and then found a narrow ribbon out of my ribbon drawer and started stringing them by herself. I was surprised that she could get the ribbon through the buttons. She got frustrated after a handful of buttons, and I put a needle on the ribbon for her.

And now I need to see how many more photos I can tweak before I need to cook dinner.

More Felt Bottles, Paraplegic Bear

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

More Felt Bottles, 3/4 Done Bear

Last weekend we drove down to San Diego for my brother’s wedding, (where I played official photographer, and now oh my goodness I have too much RAW photo post-processing work to do, I think I need a new computer!), which is an 8 hour drive with a toddler apparently, so I had a little time to stitch some felt, when I wasn’t being mesmerized by the monotony of I-5.

Actually I think I got half of this done the week before, I can’t remember now. I have Mama brain. Anyway, I got through the bottles, and then when I was trying to convince Rebecca to let me work on more of the kitchen, she told me she doesn’t want a kitchen for her new doll house. It doesn’t need a kitchen, it needs more dolls. Right. Most of what it has in it, collected from around the house, are dolls. Small bear dolls, small stuffed animals, some plastic pigs, some wooden little people made out of dowels and masking tape… I have a doll loving girl though. So I diverted from the kitchen project, which really is for me, I know that, I just forgot… to work on a bear. And Rebecca picked the colors, so he is red and pink. Thus I’ll have to call him aka-chan, which is what you call babies in Japan, and translates something like little red. I guess because babies are small and red? I’ve forgotten. Chan doesn’t mean ‘little’ literally, it’s just a diminutive that you attach to kid’s names or when you are trying to make someone a cute nickname…

Anyway, it’s done except it has no legs yet. I needle felted the face and tummy and ears, My first needle felting ever was some wonky Finnish flags for a swap I spent too much time on but mailed off October 1st, so that’s off my list. But the needle felting was a lot of fun. I need a real felting base, right now I’m using one of my daughter’s hair brushes, which tends to move around when I felt since the brush bristles aren’t stiff enough. I’ve given myself two really good needle jabs so far. I think he’s coming out pretty cute though.

I think this reads as scatter brained as I am feeling. Also today is my birthday! Not that that means much to me anymore. Time to go make/figure out dinner, the troops are restless.

Clay Doll House Plates

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

I don’t often work with real clay, but after all the weddings when things were calming down, and we were still visiting my husband’s mother Jennifer, Rebecca wanted to play with clay. Conveniently Jennifer has a pottery studio in her basement, and she gives classes there to kids, so everything is all set up for child created mayhem.  Excellent.

So Rebecca got some time to poke and prod sticky clay, and I got some time to hand build some plates for her doll house.  They’re a little wonky since they are hand built rather than thrown on the wheel, but they looked a lot better after I got to put lots of little dots all over them.  I was inspired by one of the bowls that Jennifer’s friend had decorated for their ‘Empty Bowls’ charity auction, which reminded me how much I like tiny dots.  The dots on the plates that I did first came out too big, I like the square cups better.  I hope they fire okay.

Dollhouse Plates & Cups

MixTapeZine Prize

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

I got back from vacation on Sunday, and one of the first things I did was open the package that I had gotten from MixTapeZine for winning their a little goodness contest.  So exciting to open packages with little green customs labels on them.

MixTapeZine Prize

Awesome.  I am so in love with the linen tape that reads “I am drinking!” with pictures of different drinks on it. I think it would be great for a maternity shirt, because they are constantly telling you to drink water. But that is a silly association, I don’t need a reason, I just love it.  I do need to come up with something to do with it though, because it is too cute to languish in my stash.

The ‘home made’ stamp is really cute.  It should belong to someone with super-cute-japanese-powers-of-wrapping. Which I am not, but that’s definitely an area I need to work on – wrapping presentation.  I’m afraid if I use it that it will look pretentious instead of cute. I’ll have to surround it with flowers and smiley faces.  :-) (^_^) (-:  I need more confidence in my cuteness. 

The clothes pins are already scattered around my daughter’s doll house, she adores them.

Thank you MixTape!