Posts Tagged ‘drawing’

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!

Birthday Crown

Sunday, September 26th, 2010

So this night weaning thing has been rougher than I was expecting, two and a half weeks since my last post, wow! I think that’s a record. And while normally I might post after the girls go to bed, I’m writing this at 6:30 in the morning. The first week I was useless and made myself sick from not getting enough sleep, but I’m mostly functional now, and getting about the same amount of sleep I was before, while spending an extra hour or two in bed… woo. We aren’t nursing at night, we also aren’t sleeping. Who is winning here??? So far, no one. Right. I’m starting to think about buying a new bed (for me) and coming up with a new plan… But meanwhile.

A month and a bit ago, with great rejoicing and an enormous built-by-mom-and-dad piƱata with pop bottles and, right next post, Penelope turned one. Yes! We have met the basic infant survival goal. And I made her this cute little birthday crown. There are tutorials around if you want one, basically I cut the orange layer, sewed it down to the blue layer, leaving holes at the edges to insert the back elastic, and then trimmed the blue layer to fit the orange one. I always trim the back layer last, it makes it neat. Then I handstitched a casing for the back elastic out of crinkly blue kimono silk from a scrap bag I bought in Tokyo Fabric Town, which I have been hoarding. I slipped the (loose) casing over the elastic, and tucked both the casing and the elastic into the holes I’d left at the edges of the crown, and stitched both openings closed with a running stitch matching the rest of the running stitch embroidery. You’re just going to have to imagine all of that.

Here’s my little diva working on her thank you notes. I feel like thank you notes are such a great fundamental thing to work on with your kids, involving gratitude, personal narrative, and writing/drawing skills. I am good about getting my kids to do them promptly, and then I fall down on the distribution! Since Penelope started scribbling like mad around when she turned one, she was quite happy to sit through all 10 or so thank you notes, scribbling on most of them with several colors. I was expecting her to get through about three before loosing interest, but I was neglecting the power of big sister worship. Because after all, Rebecca spends a lot of time drawing, so now Penelope does too. Also, she can get the tops off the little crayola markers herself, so if Rebecca leaves one lying around, watch out!

Drawing Bugs

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

This is a silly little idea, but fun. Glue or stick something round on your paper, and draw lots of little legs and heads. The jewel stickers work well for this, but buttons or pompoms or circle stickers would be just as fun. How many bugs can you draw?

So, I’ve been keeping up with my laundry, but not my blog. This is a ‘no apologies’ blog, so I’m not feeling sorry about it, that’s just where things are. Mostly because I have been falling asleep with the girls, and that is when I usually find a few minutes to sort through my photos and write. I really really really need to night wean Penelope, she is over 1 now. But I have been too tired at night to do it! Which of course leads to more tired. So, going to bed early for a while. Not the first time I’ve tried to night wean her, hopefully this time I will keep getting enough sleep to remember what I am doing until we get through it!

Refreshing Markers & Mixing Marker Colors

Saturday, August 21st, 2010

We have lots of dried out markers. We *had* lots of dried out markers. I bet you do to. I’ve tried soaking them in water, which sort of works, but what *really* works is soaking them in liquid watercolors. They aren’t the most common craft supply, but if you have some they are perfect for recharging your markers. If you don’t have any you can probably justify the cost by saying they will save you the price of buying a new set of markers every year. :-)

To recharge your markers just put a little liquid watercolor in a paint tray or small jar and stick your markers in them, they will slowly soak them up and be ready to draw like new. Keep an eye on them, and if they suck up all the dye, add more. For a really dry marker you may have to leave it overnight with a good supply. Our liquid watercolors are washable (like most), so our finished markers stay washable, very important! Also, if you think your old colors are boring, you can even give them a long soak in a new made up color. Which brings us to activity two:

Have you seen those Crayola color mixing markers? They are basically just two markers that snap together point to point, and mix their colors through diffusion, then when you draw, the color gradually fades from the mixed color back to the original color as the dye is sucked out of the tip of the marker by the paper. Well, you can buy special markers to do this (which we technically did, my husband and daughter came home from the craft store with them, which is how I even know what they are…) but you don’t need to, you can just dip the regular old markers that you have into your liquid watercolors and get the same effect. Cool! You can do all kinds of neat washes and color fades. So go get mixy with those markers!