Archive for July, 2011

Ice Cube Painting

Friday, July 29th, 2011

This is the perfect messy activity for a hot summer day, painting with ice! And it is easy too.

I’ve used watered down tempera paint before, and food coloring and water, but this time we used diluted (washable) liquid watercolors, and I think I like that the best. It doesn’t stain like the food coloring, and when you freeze the tempera paint it works, but it separates out the water and pigment and the texture of the ice is sort of odd.

Whatever your paint though, just put it in an ice cube tray the night before, and break it out when you need something cold to play with. (Please use a dedicated art ice cube tray unless you are using food colors, art materials and food just don’t mix.)

Sometimes I add handles with popsicle sticks, (say if it is winter and we are painting inside…) but this time I really wanted them to play with the tactile coldness of the ice, since it was a nice hot day.

You can rub your melty ice cubes all over the paper, or just shake them in your hands to make a fun drip painting!

Texture Blocks

Monday, July 25th, 2011

I love FabMo. I’m not allowed to go there very often, because I come home with a bunch of interesting fabric and bits, and then I don’t get to doing anything with them. But here is a quick project I did do:

Texture Blocks. I brought home all these interesting leather samples in different textures and finishes, I think originally I was planning on doing something Montessori-ish, like texture matching cards, or perhaps I was going to make a book. I don’t remember, and that’s for the best, because I came up with something much simpler, that I actually finished!

I have a bunch of wooden craft blocks that I was using to make little houses, which incidentally is where the name for this blog really first came from, (you can get them here) and I cut up the different leather scraps to the same size as a block face, and glued them on with a paint brush and some ModPodge. I could have cut them so that the edges of the leather overlapped, so the block would come out as a perfect cube, rather than a cube with all the corners missing, but I wasn’t confident I could pull that out without it looking like a mess, so I went with the corners-missing ‘style’. :-) I’m a total cheater.

All of the textures are fun to investigate, especially the hairy one. It’s hard to see, but the sides in that black row above is actually covered in stiff, flat, cow hair. That’s the real deal! The other textures are embossed, I’m pretty sure, but still very cool to touch.

Fizzy Sidewalk Painting

Friday, July 22nd, 2011

This is your basic – “Hey over here I have an acid, and hey over here I have a base, lets mix them together and make carbon dioxide! Woo!” – type activity.

First we mixed up three different batches of fizzy paint:
Washable tempera paint with baking soda,
Washable liquid watercolors with baking soda and corn starch,
Washable liquid watercolors with baking soda, corn starch and bubble formula.

Pair this alkaline paint with a spray bottle of vinegar and you have a very fizzy driveway! Woo, spray bottles!

Disappointingly for my experiment but yay for you, all of the formulations pretty much worked the same, and I can’t say the proportions matter all that much, I used roughly 1:1, adding in the baking soda until I didn’t think it would stay paint if I added any more. I hypothesized that adding bubbles to the mix would result in bigger more long lasting fizzy bubbles, but it didn’t seem to have an effect, I’m guessing it was too dilute. Next time I will try dish soap.

In any case, the girls were crazy about this, so my ‘research’ has shown that you can take whatever paint you happen to have, mix in a bunch of baking soda, and hand it out along with a spray bottle of vinegar and the result will be lots of squeals, running around, and a very messy driveway!

Happy Friday!

Sometimes You Need to Fix Things

Wednesday, July 20th, 2011

Or maybe it’s just me? Before I had children, I was fine with your generic alphabet book. But then I had children, and I started reading about the Montessori way of teaching literacy, by calling the letters by their primary phonetic sound rather than their name, which leads much more naturally to reading, which lead to me trying to figure out exactly how you were supposed to pronounce short ‘o’, and learning about how words that start with the letter ‘a’ are actually pronounced using 50 bajillion different phonemes, and learning about some other pronunciation discipline that I can’t even remember now because I had a second child in the interim, and there goes my brain.

But anyway, I had this book, that I really liked, the vowels were all great, (and it has neat indentations for tracing the letters with your fingers, almost as good as sandpaper letters), but every time I got to ‘X’ I got really irritated. ‘X’ does not say ‘zzz’ (xylophone), it says ‘kss’! (I finally figured out why people write ‘x’ for kiss!) Don’t get mad get even! Or better yet, just fix the darn thing. There pretty much aren’t any ‘x’ words that start with the proper phoneme, so you just have to go with ox or ax and emphasize the trailing phoneme rather than the leading one. Personally I think that’s better than the ‘correct’ phoneme being no where in the word. Sure ‘x’ says ‘zzz’ sometimes, but most of the time when you come across it in a CVC type word it is going to be saying ‘kss’. End of rant. FOR THE MOMENT!

Holi

Sunday, July 17th, 2011

Holi is a Hindu festival of spring. Spring. It isn’t remotely spring anymore, but I was just looking through my photos for something else, and aren’t these beautiful? I love Holi. This year I was brave/foolish enough to take my good camera, and although my camera survived it needed a good cleaning, and my camera case was an entirely different matter. Well, it did survive, but I think I spent over an hour trying to get the red powder out of its many cracks and seams. I seem to remember eventually resorting to the hose… So I don’t know what it was I was doing in April that was so important, but obviously what I *should* have been doing was sharing these!

Now go make a mess!

Mesh Collecting Bag Tutorial

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011

This no-internet thing is killing me. Technically it isn’t no-internet it is 300 Bytes per second internet, 2KB/s on a good day, when you can actually download your email. Expect posts to be sparse (as they have been!) until we get back in the middle of July. But I really wanted to get this tutorial written! So I am sitting in a parking lot one town over getting internet over my cell phone via bluetooth. (^_^) If only we had cell coverage at the house! No cell phone, no texting, no data! (>_<)

These bags have been really useful, especially since my husband has started collecting rocks like a mad man! He can fill a bag up with dirty rocks and leave it in a creek to wash off, hanging off one of the many fallen logs around here, and then sort through his clean-ish rocks before carrying all (five pounds of them) home. Really that just lets him find the right five pounds of rocks to carry home. Good thing orange bags are sturdy. I love you sweetie!

These will be fabulous for carrying our sand toys to the park too. (The sand toys do *not* come in the front door, they live outside in a plastic basket.)

    Materials:

  • one mesh (orange or other) produce bag
  • a foot or more of canvas strapping or salvaged car seat belt
  • 8″ x (length around top of bag + 1″) piece of fabric for top binding –
    or duct tape, brief alternate discussion at bottom.

Start by stretching your bag vertically, this will compress it horizontally. Decide how long you want the mesh part of the bag to be, and trim it straight across. Look, I’m being good and using my paper scissors not my fabric scissors. I probably shouldn’t admit how may pairs of scissors I have. I gave one to my husband and he immediately wrote ‘no cutting fabric allowed’ or something like that all over every surface. I was impressed with how many places he managed to fit it in, both blades, each of the handles possibly more than once, three star job. If I wasn’t in Vermont I’d go take a picture. But anyway. Trim your bag, or not, either way give it a vertical stretch though.

Gently flatten the opening out without stretching it much if you can, and measure the width. If you stretch the bag out too much before you sew the binding on it will go all lettuce-y around the top edge when you try to carry something heavy in it. It doesn’t much matter structurally though, it’s just an esthetic thing.

We are going to make a 2″ wide binding next, I went with the grain of the fabric rather than cutting it on the bias because I am cheap and we aren’t going around any curves. Since the binding is going to be double fold we need the fabric to be 8″ wide by the circumference of your bag + 1″ for rough seam allowance.

Cut your fabric 8″ x (width of bag * 2 + 1″)

So if you measured the width of your bag at 6″ you would cut your strip 6*2+1 or 13″ long.


Press your fabric flat. I hate ironing too, but you can’t make clean double fold binding without some ironing.


Fold it in half (hot dog bun style!) so that it is 4″ tall and press the fold.


Unfold it and fold one edge up almost but not quite to the middle crease and press the fold (don’t press out your center fold.)


Fold down the other edge almost but not quite to the middle crease and press that fold. (Bet you didn’t see that coming.)


Re-fold it in half and give it one more press all together.


Unfold all your careful creases and pin the two short (8″) edges wrong sides together. Sew together with a 1/2″ seam.


Open up the sewn seam folding it open or to the side with your fingers, and then re-fold the outside edges of the binding to the center.


Slip the binding into the opening of the bag, lining up the top edge of the bag with the middle of the binding. (It’s hard to see the purple on purple, but there is netting over the lower half of the binding in that picture.) I found that pins didn’t work very well to hold the bag in place, so I used removable scotch tape. Whatever your device secure the bag evenly around the binding. Sew the binding to the bag 1/4″ to 1″ above the bottom edge of the binding – it will only be visible from the inside of the bag, so pick where you want the extra seam. Remove the tape as you go, if you sew through it it will get your needle gummy. I learned my lesson with the duct tape…


Fold the binding over the outside of the bag, along your handily pre-creased fold line.


Stitch around the binding 1/4″ or so above the bottom edge for structure, and 1/4″ from the top for pretty.


For each end of your strap fold the edge under and pin on the inside of the binding.


Stitch a square with a cross through it over the end of your strap for that ‘I know what I’m doing’ kind of look. Preferably do not use a needle covered with duct tape goo, because it will skip stitches. I’m hoping I don’t have to clean out the inside of my machine now…

and play!

For the duct tape version, the instructions are pretty much the same, except instead of making a binding, wrap (gently) one piece of duct tape around the outside of the top edge, one around the inside of the top edge, and then one folded over the top edge. I sewed the strap on the same way, but frankly that was a dumb idea because I trashed my needle, I cleaned it, but I still couldn’t get the tape gum out of the eye, and there may be some inside my machine. If I made it with duct tape again, (which was great and quick and really satisfying) I would probably give it a tape handle too.

The end! And I can’t wait until I get back to the land of internet, where I can actually open multiple pages simultaneously in links, rather that one every five minutes! Ironically, DSL is finally coming to these sad lands, due to be installed three days after we leave!!!