Archive for May, 2009

Shaving Cream and Paint – Art Playgroup Friday

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Squirting Shaving Cream

Rebecca has a cold, so no one else came to play today, but we had plenty of fun by ourselves. Two cans of shaving cream (on sale) and some paint.

Feet

Don’t you wish these were your feet?

Adding Paint

And there’s the paint. The shaving cream got stomped on, made into castles for leaf people, turned into bowls of macaroni and cheese, and painted. I spent the time playing with shaving cream marbling techniques, but Rebecca wasn’t interested in creating anything permanent.

Marble Prints

No Sew Felt Board Set

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Felt Season Boards

(This is from several weeks ago. I’m playing catch up now that I’m done with my daughter’s birthday party, there was an awful lot of crafting going on in May, but not so much writing I guess.) Originally I was going to make a book, and it was going to have eight pages, not four, but that was revision zero, and this project was very freeform. I didn’t actually do any planning, I just started cutting things out. What I ended up with was four felt story boards for the seasons, crammed into a folder made out of a manila file folder. Awesome marketing speak right? Also if you notice, I misspelled summer the first time I wrote it… I am so great, right? Rightio. But it was a fast and fun project, and I like how you can stick all the boards next to each other, and ignore the seasons, just play. And what is more summer than pirate ships on fire? I have no idea. That’s why I made a flaming pirate ship. But you could move the fire down to the rocks, or you could tip one of the ships up on end under the little wave piece and pretend it was a sinking flaming pirate ship. Because of course that’s what happens next, right? Or maybe it starts to rain next. And are candy canes traditional snow men arms? I’m not sure, but there they are. What are those strange orange rectangular flowers? Rebecca cut those out.

Yes I had fun making this, and it was a great low stress project. How far wrong can you go when you are just cutting shapes out of craft felt, and occasionally coloring in bits with permanent marker? Okay, so you can misspell Summer. I’ve always had a weakness with double letters. Moving on already.

I made the ‘boards’ by cutting out rectangles of medium fusible interfacing, and ironing felt down to them for the backgrounds. You get tightish ’seams’ if you push the felt pieces together to make a little mountain along the seam edge before you iron it. When you iron it the slight bump gets shoved around into a tight seam, whereas if you start with the pieces perfectly matched up they shrink away from each other when you iron them. I could have just used solid colors for the backgrounds, but I wanted a ground and sky look. After I ironed the felt pieces down I trimmed them to size with a quilt ruler and rotary cutter. Oh, and I forgot. I didn’t want the cut shapes sticking to the back of the board on top when they were stacked, so I used the super high end technique of gluing-sticking them down to some heavy art paper. It probably would have been cuter to sew around the edges stitching the paper to the felt and interfacing, but I was stubornly resolved to get the whole thing done without resorting to a sewing machine. Because that would have been so predictable or something. Because I felt like it. Maybe I was determined to use No Sew in the title for no good reason, and why do I keep typing New Sew and going back and correcting it? I don’t know. New No Know Sew Knows New No Sew, So Know Sew Knows and No Sew Sews.

Mostly the shapes are just felt, but in some places I wanted some extra detail without adding tiny little pieces, since I was making this for a turning two year old’s birthday. And realistically, half the pieces are going to get lost in the first week anyway. But it’s craft felt. If it’s enjoyed you can always add back pieces later with some scissors and a couple of 25cent investments. So I got out my sharpie collection and drew in the ships masts and candy cane stripes. If you actually wanted to put real time into this project, some embroidery probably would have been great, but then would you cry if the piece got lost? Depends I guess. A line of stitching isn’t that much effort after all. But then it all adds up, and sometimes you just need a really fast freeing project for a birthday party in a couple days.

folder

Check out that ‘leet cobbled-I-mean-stapled together folder. Classy I tell you. It’s so great when you can occasionally lock the perfectionist in the closet and just get something done.

Mono Prints – Art Playgroup Friday

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Flinging Paint

We were just going to be painting on Friday, but after painting a couple large sheets of paper Rebecca spontaneously started painting the table and taking prints off it. Finger painting, splatter painting, taking prints, I love that she’s so comfortable with paint and has so many techniques she can pull out when she feels like it.

It was a really productive morning too, Rebecca ended up with 10 prints and paintings, and Felicity had at least 6-8. It’s always nice when they want to spend time with the art materials rather than giving them a cursory touch and then running off to find the tricycles.

Also, I used a leftover mini muffin tin for the paint, 24 little compartments to fill up with whatever colors they wanted, that was a hit too, and seemed to work a little better than the ice cube trays we’ve used in the past. They aren’t as deep, and they’re apparently the perfect size for squeezing your hand into.

Painted Hands

Singing Snakes Prototypes

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

snakes

Ever since reading The Monster Show: Everything You Never Knew About Monsters almost a year ago, Rebecca has wanted singing snakes on her birthday cake. Well, her birthday is coming up, so it’s time to get started… Currently the plan is to make rotating fabric snakes on a drinking straw and spinning LEGO armature. Hmm. And I’m kind of running out of time.

Weaving Strawberry Baskets – Art Playgroup Friday

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

Cutting Strawberry baskets make great weaving frames, and we are always drowning in them. Well, we do take them back to the farmers market to be re-used, but we usually have a big stack of them in the pantry because I’m always forgetting to stick them in the market bag.

So today we got out a bunch of baskets, colorful 1/8″ ribbon, yarn, and some giant yarn darning needles. You can do this without the needles, but it makes it much easier to get the ribbon through tangles of other ribbon if you’ve got a good stiff needle on the end.

Rebecca is learning to tie knots, so she tied a couple of the first ones, but after that it was all mama knots… I tied one end to the strawberry basket, and one end to the needle, and let everyone weave until they ran out. There was a lot of cutting up ribbons too, cutting is fun.

We had a pretty full group today, just about everyone, five ~3’s, two little siblings, and five mamas. It may not sound like much, but our deck was pretty full!

For the Dolls

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

back

First a dress. I don’t know why I never thought of this before, but it is so much easier to get a doll into a dress whose straps snap than get their arms through fiddly little sleeves, and also this gives the gapping back with huge velcro pieces a miss too.

snail

I avoided the tiny tiny turned seams by just making the whole bodice fully lined, sewing it right sides together and turning it right side out. Okay, so turning those long skinny straps was a bit of a pain, but less of a pain than my usual route of tiny plastic doll dresses. (I think this is Barbie’s little sister, but I’m happily clueless and we got her at a flea market.) So now I can make as many dresses as my daughter wants, with very little hair pulling. Woot! And I bet I can even add sleeve caps to the strap shape.

Diaper

Next, diapers, necessary for any well turned out baby doll. This is the first one I’ve made, but it came out pretty well, and now I have requests to outfit the rest of her baby dolls. This one is reversible, partly to reduce diapering frustration, and partly because I couldn’t decide which should be the inside.

Open

Whenever I take off Sali Doll’s diaper Rebecca comes after me, exclaiming ‘What are you doing? Sali Doll is pooping all over everything!’ I had to take this picture fast.