Of course, when they see me sitting at the table making some pinbacks myself (which I was doing for my pumpkinbear etsy shop yesterday)--
--it is GAME ON.Willow and I have toyed off and on with the idea, for over a year now, of letting her make something on her own to sell at my craft fairs. I should have thought harder, because last year I really wasn't able to come up with anything that she could make that I thought would actually sell--one time at Strange Folk a sweet old lady did pay one dollar for four of the turf clods that Willow had wrapped with duct tape and put on a shelf, but she wouldn't actually take them. So that's not so much success. But as the girls worked, and worked, and worked on their buttons--
--they came up with an idea that turned out really cool:
Smiley faces! I traced a button circle template several times on artist's paper, and gave each kid, with MANY admonishments and advisories, my very nice, fine-tipped Sharpie and Micron pens, and away they went. The simplicity of their creation works well, and it's recognizable to the average person (unlike a lot of children's art), and it ends up looking very unique without looking too childish.And in case you have doubts that the kids can actually MAKE the pinbacks by themselves, I present Willow:
And Sydney, complete with bonus sister-squabbling action:
It's a rainy day today, so even more pinbacks is not an impossibility.


These handmade coloring pages are the coolest thing:

--and little foam dinos to play with--
Suck it, Will Shortz! I OWN you on Mondays! The rest of the week...let's not discuss it right now.

It looks crazy yummy, right? And it is good. I think I'm just mad because Alicia Silverstone SAID that they were better than Reese's, and so I was all, "Mmmm, I'm going to eat these, and they're going to be better than Reese's, but not as bad for me, and also vegan!"
Because, you know, it's so hard to get kids to eat chocolate and peanut butter mixed with sugar.










