- Dinosaur T-shirt quilt for the girls' bed
- Star Wars T-shirt quilt for Matt
- Winter pajamas for the girls
- These booties: My theory is that I can resize the pattern to make winter slippers for the whole family.
- Huge felt board, with felt cut-outs, for the girls' playroom
- Curtains for the girls' playroom
- Dino quilted wall hanging for the bathroom of the girls' playroom
- At least two birthday presents for at least two special kiddos in my girlies' lives
- Headbands for Willow
- Tied tutu for Will's little girlfriend
- New pattern templates for my growing girls, based on my most favorite book, Short Kutz
- Halloween costumes
- Little girlie winter pants out of old sweatshirt and sweater sleeves
- Lasagna gardens for next year
- A good scrub for all the grungy house using the recipes from my other most favorite book,
- Kid-made Halloween decorations
- Mom-made Halloween decorations!
- Must try dryer lint modeling material!
- Rain barrels!
- Scrapbooking at least some of the backlog--there's a big backlog
And that doesn't even include all the randomness, such as this brown pillowcase sitting on my desk that is begging to be made into a pillowcase dress for Sydney even though she doesn't need another pillowcase dress, and if I make a pillowcase dress for her, I might as well make one out of this black-and-white pillowcase for Willow, but I could then use the leftover material to make matching headbands, and that counts for my list...
In other news...I didn't have a chance to ask Willow to talk about this art that she created this morning, because she worked on these two pictures literally from the moment she got up and grabbed an adult (one of whom only wanted coffee, the other of whom only wanted a shower) to get her "markers and beautiful paper" to the time that I told her, "Listen, get some pants on or we are going to miss the bus to the library!"
Any interpretive thoughts?


Such a lucky day.

Here are just a couple of shots of my booth...
...and a worm.














The logo is freezer paper stencilled on a green raglan tee, originally from the Gap, but new to me when I bought it at Goodwill some time ago. All the fabric paint on all the T-shirts will need to be heat-set with the iron tomorrow night or, since I teach, Tuesday morning. After that, I can iron some tear-away stabilizer to the back of the shirt and sew on the pumpkinbear applique--I freehand stitched it on my sewing machine with green thread on black flannel, and I am quite proud of how it turned out. I've never tried freehand stitching words before, but now I'm going to do it every day pretty much.
It looks really cool and butch and I can't wait for him to try it on.
I was able to hover a little less this time over my expensive fabric paints by allowing each girl to choose a color, which I then poured a little of into an individual cup. Halfway through, they switched colors, and then when they got bored I used up the rest of the paint in their cup by painting some simple little designs that I can later cut out and applique as patches onto their clothes or to cover stains:




We didn't really get a lot of toys for the girls--Willow picked out a toy pony (of course), Syd picked out a wand, and I bought them a set of dinosaur flash cards (of course) and an addition to their Lincoln logs collection: 




--and the end result might be a little wacky--
--but you can surely tell that some joyful children participated in its creation. 




