Wednesday, October 26, 2011

The Big Kid Has New Pajamas


Somewhere in the midst of the vampire cloak and the mermaid skirt and the biography fair project and painting the kids' new bedroom purple and orange and putting our community garden plot to bed, the big kid's new pajamas got themselves sewn.

The pattern is an old McCall's 6535. I like the style of the shirt quite a lot, but the sizing is way off--this eight-year-old kid is lost in her size 7! 

Fortunately, the size 7 pants are perfect, and may find themselves sewn up some more in fleece this winter. Time will tell if I attempt to re-size the shirt for another go, or if I just use a different pattern next time:


The kid chose the fabric, of course. Now that I've given up craft fairs for the foreseeable future I don't thrift constantly, and thus don't have a huge stash of thrifted material always on hand, so we're visiting the fabric store a lot more these days--thank goodness for sales and my educator's discount card!


I still try to keep my rule that every project must include SOME components from the stash, however, so these pajamas are made from a flower flannel purchased for this project and a purple hearts fabric purchased who-knows-when:


I made a second pair of these pants in that flowered flannel, and I think that one pajama top with two matching pairs of pajama pants will serve nicely in lieu of two complete sets of pajamas. The little kid is getting one pair of pajamas and one nightgown, AFTER the Halloween costumes are finished:


And then both kids are getting some pairs of fleece pants for the winter, for everyday wear accompanied with thrifted T-shirts (or thrifted elaborate party dresses, in the case of the younger sister).

And what will I wear this winter?

Eh, who cares?

P.S. Want to follow along with my craft projects, books I'm reading, road trips to weird old cemeteries, looming mid-life crisis, and other various adventures on the daily? Find me on my Craft Knife Facebook page!

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Last Class

I taught my final (at least, what I assume to be final--who ever knows, you know?) cloth diapering class at The Green Nursery last weekend:


Since my kids are now five and seven, it's really time that I stop having to keep up with all the cloth diaper trends (wool! hemp! bamboo! one-size! hybrids!), but still...all those pregnant mommas taking notes, all those adorable colors and patterns and teeny-tiny little diaper covers, all those well-padded baby butts...

...sigh.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Poetry Speaks: Sydney Masters Robert Frost

She did it!

Willow mastered "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," by Robert Frost, back when I first asked them to memorize it last winter. Back then, however, Syd just found it a little too challenging (although she had memorized the entirety of "A Visit from St. Nicholas" just a month prior!), and so I dropped it when she seemed to get frustrated at always forgetting one line or another.

Our impending homeschool biography fair, however, seemed like a good time to finish a good job, so I suggested to the girls that they make their presentation on Robert Frost, and then they could each simply recite one of his poems for the oral component.

Done and done, and an excellent excuse to get that tricky Robert Frost poem under one's belt once and for all:



Done and done, kiddo. They are going to CONQUER at that biography fair!

Thursday, October 20, 2011

WIP Wednesday (and into Thursday): Magnetic Skeleton

A skeleton pdf that has had so many uses in our family in the past four years gets yet another iteration on flexible magnet paper:

I don't know if the addition of a layer of paper and a layer of Mod Podge onto the sheeting overwhelmed its meager magnetic force, however, or if the magnetic sheets are just crappy (I'm a magnet snob, yes), but this particular skeleton just plumb fell off the fridge.

And so we overcompensate, turning this into a skeleton with adequate magnetic force that won't be fully cured until this evening:

And thus begins the research into stronger magnetic sheets.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Melted Beeswax Play all Day

This is the season in which beeswax simply lives in the crafts crock pot, which in this season lives on the living room table. I was the most recent person to turn the crock pot on to make beeswax paper (at which activity I was, of COURSE, kept company):

That crock pot did not get turned off, however, at least not for several hours. All day long my girls, who are as familiar with beeswax as they are with any other art supply, simply played with it, turning the heat down to  partly solidify it then up again to melt it, stirring it and studying it--

--scooping out bits to play with--

---and just generally have the most intense, creative, joyful time that two little children can have, quietly and gently and occupied for hours.

I got SO many things done that day!

Monday, October 17, 2011

Magnetism Unit Study: Ferrofluid

The girls' interest in magnetism has primarily served as my excuse to spend all our homeschooling budget on all kinds of awesome magnets--teeny-tiny magnets, square magnets, spherical magnets, magnets that form a perfect circle when you link them just right, magnets so powerful that they have to be stored separately and played with carefully.

Along with the magnets, I've discovered a whole world of magnet accessories, not the least of which is this incredibly awesome material known as ferrofluid. Ferrofluid consists of nano-sized ferromagnetic particles suspended in a fluid and coated in surfactant--it's a magnet-loving fluid that flows.

I put a healthy dollop of ferrofluid into a Mason jar, filled the rest of the jar with a water/glycerin combo, and then glued the lid on (I've heard that ferrofluid can be QUITE messy, of the leaping out of its container and splashing all over the wall because you've got a magnet stuck there kind of messy).

To play, you run a magnet along the outside of the Mason jar, and the ferrofluid will be attracted to it, the power and shape and location and number of the magnets all adding new variables to explore:






Of course, there are a million more ways to play with ferrofluid--some of them involving open containers, gasp! And no, I'm STILL not done buying magnets!

Sunday, October 16, 2011

The Homeschool Shelves


One of the best things about switching the kids' bedroom with our study/studio is the mindful reorganization that has taken place. Fabric is neatly folded and visible, reference books are accessible, the paint is all together in one place, what was once lost is now found, etc.

In our NEW study, I've been paying special attention to how we store and display our homeschool supplies. I try to follow the kids' interests from week to week, which means that most of our homeschool work is done in unit studies, which means that the more I can keep like-minded materials together, the better.

The big and unwieldy stuff sits on the floor, so here we've got the conventional globe and the chalkboard globe, a model rocket kit, a crate containing all the base ten blocks (nine thousand cubes, nine hundred flats, and loads of ten bars and unit blocks) and the Cuisenaire rods, and the state quarter map.

Above that is the math shelf--math games and boxed activities, a Playskool abacus and a traditional Chinese abacus, playing cards and dice, a binder for worksheets and flash cards (I'm a big proponent of math fact memorization), lots of workbooks (I'm also a big proponent of math drills), and math manipulatives, such as pattern blocks, tangrams, mosaic tiles, and a geoboard. To the right side of each shelf I've glued little magnets to hold the various accessories of homeschool work--scissors, bar magnets, drawing compasses, staplers, etc.

Moving to the left and up a level:


That lower shelf is science stuff--magnets, board games, the plaster of Paris volcano, science activity books, the microscope and its accessories, and a chemistry set. Above the science shelf is the art shelf--specialty markers and crayons, extras of the crayon, marker, and colored pencil sets that we use regularly, the stapler and extra glue, books for cutting up, extra lined paper and dry erase boards, pipe cleaners, the UV-reactive beads, and the acrylic-dyed school glue.

To the right, on the same level:


The lower shelf on the left has biology stuff, with the plaster of Paris skeleton mold, the human x-rays, a couple of anatomy books, and several biology and medicine DVDs. Then we've got some environmental science stuff, with sun-reactive paper, a kite, and wind energy stuff. In the front is ferrofluid and iron filings for more magnet play, then biology encyclopedias and children's magazines, and then books on all branches of the sciences.

The top shelf is still art, with a glass bowl of acorns on the far left, then Waldorf window star paper, professional-grade art supplies, and modeling beeswax in the front. To the right is language arts, with workbooks and mad libs, sticker letters and sight word flash cards, and Scrabble and Boggle on the far right.

Higher on the shelves is the stuff that requires my prep work, or the stuff that the kids don't usually choose without my encouragement:


The lower shelf there is history on the right, with Magic Tree House books (the kids have these memorized, and regularly re-read library copies, so I usually only bring our own copies down when we're studying something relevant), all the Story of the World activity books and other children's history books, a copy of the Declaration of Independence, U.S. presidents flash cards, and the ink that we use with our quill pens.

To the left on the lower shelf is geography--a map quilt project of the big kid's, some atlases, a blank U.S. map paper pad, and a sailor's valentine kit from Florida. Above that is the art materials that require either adult prep or adult supervision--powdered tempera, professional-grade artist's acrylic paints, watercolor paints, things like gesso and sealant, and beads.

The top shelf is stuff that we're not ready for yet--higher-level workbooks, and cut-and-assemble paper model kits. There's also a bag containing a ridiculous number of little paper bags, good for goodness knows what.

Here's what the shelves, or most of them, at least, look like in panoramic, including one show-off and a colored dinosaur picture:


And when the kids aren't simply digging around in the dirt or playing with toy ponies all day, that's some of what we have to do!

P.S. Want to follow along with my craft projects, books I'm reading, road trips to weird old cemeteries, looming mid-life crisis, and other various adventures on the daily? Find me on my Craft Knife Facebook page!