




For one dollar! That there is the stuff that legends are made of.
The sweetest finds, though, were a couple of pieces of genuine jewelry for the kids. Just look:
Awesome kid.
Anyway, now that I'm down off my soapbox, here are some highlights of today's photo shoot, most of which I'll probably be writing about in more detail later in the week:
Stash-busting:
Yes, I did make even more soldered glass pendants out of reclaimed images, but Girls Love Astronomy, too:
And, spinning...
2. Separate your record album cover into two pieces, front and back. Sometimes you'll need scissors, and sometimes the cover will be so old that it will easily separate by hand. When you're done, it will look like this:
You'll need to sacrifice a cover to your children so that they can do this, too, because tearing things up is fun. NOTE: The cover you sacrifice will NOT be usable after the children finish with it.
3. Starting with the cover you want to be the top, decide how tall you want your box to be. It will be a square box, and the taller you make it, the narrower the box width will be. 1" tall is wide and flat, 3" tall is tall and narrow, but 2" is a good height for a generic box. Using your ruler and your gridded cutting mat, if you have one--
4. Do the same with the side that you want to be the bottom of your box, only now you need to measure 2 1/16" from the edge of the cover on each side. This will make the bottom of your box slightly taller and narrower, and since the top of your box will be slightly wider, it will fit over the bottom snugly but not too tightly. When you're done your two covers will look about like this--
5. Notice that in each corner, your lines have crossed to make a square. On each side, cut the right-hand line up to where it meets the perpendicular line--
--and then fold all the ruled lines you made, making sure they bend easily at a 90-degree angle:
While you're doing this, your children will be emptying out the dress-up bin, looking for their tutus that they actually left in the car after the last dance class.
6. So you can see how, when you snipped the right-hand line up to where it met the perpendicular line on each side of your cover, you made square tabs, each 2" square. Take two adjacent edges of your cover and fold them up to a 90-degree angle along those lines you drew. On the side of that tab that has the cover art on it, you're going to spread hot glue, and then tuck it inside the box and press it onto the inside of the adjacent edge:
This forms one corner of your box. Press firmly until the glue cools down, and then repeat for your other sides. It should now look like this:
And your dancing daughter looks like this:
Repeat for the other half of the box until it's finished and looks like this:
And then quickly, while your daughters are blitzed out on Jumpstart Kindergarten--
This is Rusty T-Rex the Toddler Tee. It's screenprinted, a skill that, duh, I would love to learn. I can't believe this shirt doesn't come in adult sizes!
I'd also really love to learn beading and jewelry-making--all that wrapping wire, and making fastenings, and stringing beads. You know what you need for all that? You need tools! I especially love button bracelets. They tend to look really innocent and naive, but they can be quite sophisticated in their creation. I mean, look at the clean lines and subtle color scheme in this bracelet.
I'm always really happy when I check etsy for this blue skeleton plate and it's still there. I love it so much. The thing about etsy is, everything is one-of-a-kind, so you fall in love with something, put it in your favorites, think about it for a month, decide you can't live without it, go back for it, and bam!, somebody already bought it and it will never be yours. I still mourn for this pendant I saw once, with an image from a vintage medical textbook of a hand catching a baby emerging from the birth canal--beautiful.
What's beautiful to you?
From left to right you can see my wand, Sydney's (done with my help), Willow's (done independently), and Matt's (also done independently). Pretty awesome so far, right? But then, due to a lack of both the acrylic paint and the hot glue that the instructions called for next (I don't know what it is about dads, but DadCanDo loves itself some hot glue), we put the project aside.
Time passed, however, and at some point I bought a bunch of acrylic paint so that the girls could try their hand at professional art just like Marla in My Kid Could Paint That (my ultimate evaluation of their professional potential as preschoolers...um, no), and then I bought some hot glue so I could make record album cover boxes (tute for that to come), and then yesterday, in a fit of weariness at my stuffed stegosaurus sweat shoppe (must deliver by Friday. Must deliver by Friday. Must...), these unfinished wands caught my eye and I thought, "Hmm..."
And so without re-consulting the instructions (which may have turned out to be a mistake), the girls and I jumped right in. You do it, too. Starting with the recycled paper all rolled up and glued into a nice, tapered-tube wand shape, gather your tools:
You'll need your wands, hot glue, a hot glue gun, and some cereal for stuffing your face.
Now, you need to plug up the ends of your wand with the hot glue, at the same time filling the ends up with glue enough to provide a nice weight in your hand at the hand-end (If it's light like paper, it won't feel like a wand), and a nice-feeling counterweight at the tip. Sure, go ahead and let your three-year-old do her own hot-gluing; everyone loves tools:
With the girls' thicker tubes, I actually found it pretty difficult to get their handle ends filled up with the glue correctly. Eventually, I squeezed a bunch of glue in, stuck a piece of parchment paper over it, and stood the wand up on its handle end and balanced it there, so that the hot glue could all run down against the parchment paper. When the glue re-solidified, I peeled the parchment paper off.
After this, you're supposed to use the hot glue to run a kind of spirally decoration down and around your wand. I'm not totally sold on this part, but it involves the hot glue gun, which is a tool, so we did it anyway. Here's what mine ended up looking like:
I played mine straight with a brown wand and yellow accents----but my girls generally tend to be way more awesome than me. Willow did hers in pink and purple--
--and Sydney did her hands in purple--
--and then got some as a natural consequence on the wand.
On the whole, I think my wand turned out only okay, especially compared to the terrific photos on the DadCanDo gallery. All those wands, made by eight-year-olds, look completely realistic, whereas mine still looks like rolled up paper painted real cool. The sealer might be more important than I realized, or it might just be all in the details of painting--painting isn't so much my thing. Anyway, though, the wands work quite well enough to serve their purposes of being waved like mad while running around the house--