Monday, December 28, 2009
Christmas kitchen
Materials: main structure - One 15" lower cabinet with two drawers, one 12" cabinet door, a few scraps of wood; Backdrop - 2x2s and hardboard, paint; Stove - interior rack is a cookie cooling rack, burners were made in photoshop from an internet photo and then printed on sticker paper, stove knobs are from two liter bottles and a juice bottle, sink is a baking pan, faucet is a hose adapter and the faucet handles are a single drawer pull cut into two.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
New Monster Boxes on Etsy!
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
DIY Christmas tree

It was a big project, and I'm glad I didn't try to hurry it up and finish it for last Christmas. This took lots of planning, and about a month of nights on the couch hand sewing branches. These long term projects are always a little scary. You invest so much time and energy into them, and are never quite sure if you will be happy with the end result, but I'm thrilled with the way it turned out. Now we have this wonderful tree that will hopefully last many, many years. Yay! Now I just have to start on those presents...
Monday, November 30, 2009
Child size crafting table

I'm pretty happy with the way it turned out, and Z loves working at it. Another bonus was that I was able to use some scrap OSB for the sides and leftover red paint, so the only think I had to purchase was the birch for the seats and table top. The pocket on this side of the table is working out really well for books and art supplies, and there is a paper roll and tear bar mounted on the other side that feeds right onto the table top.
Friday, November 20, 2009
Owl-o-lantern

We let Zoe pick her own pumpkin this year. She was very decisive about it, pointing insistantly to a rather large and bumpy specimen and then insisting on a second, smaller one as well. Originally, I had planned on keeping it simple, and just going for a basic jack-o-lantern. Of course, this is not what ended up happening. After pondering the dilema of ending up with two pumpkins instead of the one I had planned on, it dawned on me that it would make a really good head and body. I'm not sure why I haven't seen this arrangement before - it works really well, and could be adapted to any number of animals. We went with an owl - which seemed like a really good non-scary Halloween design and perfect for our toddler's first pumpkin, but just about any animal would work.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Assemblage Creatures

Monday, January 5, 2009
Needle Felted Animals

I made two projects from the materials in the kit, and discovered a couple of things about needlefelting.
First let me say that these things take longer to make than I thought. One little bunny (about 3” tall) took me about an hour. Now, maybe this amount of time would go down with practice, but that’s a chunk of time for something so small. On the other hand, once it’s done, it’s done – you don’t need to paint it or sand it etc. like you would with another media, so that’s nice.
Second, there’s the pain. Yes,it’s true I’m a bit of a klutz, and I’m not as carefull as I should be when handling dangerous objects (on my left hand alone I am currently sporting a large burn mark from baking Christmas cookies not to mention the permenant scar from a wood carving incident), so of course, I hurt myself. Your working with a very sharp needle and jabbing it into a small fluffy object that you are holding with your other hand – it’s kind of inevitable that you’re gonna stab yourself. It wasn’t really that bad though, I barely drew blood, so no big deal.
Overall, I found the experience kind of fun, not necessarily something I want to do lots more of. Yes, the creatures are cute, but there are so many other ways to make creatures. I don’t know. Maybe I’ll try it again. I’m kind of hesitant to go and buy a bunch more roving (raw wool) at this point, but I’m gonna hang on to the needle. It may come in handy for voodoo dolls and such.
Friday, January 2, 2009
Child's Butterfly Rocking Chair

Whenever starting an unfamiliar project, my first step is always to find a completed project that is similar (at least in structure) to what I want to make. I had the inspiration chair, but I wasn’t able to take measurements of it. For the size of the seat, angle of the back, curve of the rocker, etc., I needed more information. Luckily, I found this instructional to fill in those gaps. All of the structural measurements I got from that chair. As long as I kept those the same on my chair, it would function properly and I could change everything else to fit my own design.
My next step is always to plan. This can go on for ages - anywhere from a couple of hours to months. I make sketches and measured drawings. After staring at the inspiration chair for a while, the sides started to remind me of wings. Eventually, the idea of a butterfly came into my mind. I found some examples on the web butterfly chairs, including this one. After blending all these ideas, I came up with the basic design for my chair.
My next step was to go to the computer and overlay my design and the structural drawings from the instructional using a scanner and Photoshop. Once I was happy with these, I bought a 1/4" thick piece of MDF and made a pattern for one side and one half of the back using a jig saw.
For the finished piece, I chose 3/4" Birch plywood. I rough cut the outside of each piece using the jig saw, and then finished cutting them by clamping the pattern to the underside of the birch and using a flush trim bit on the router (after first drilling pilot holes in each section) which copies your pattern exactly. After each piece was cut, I rounded over every exposed edge with the router and cut dadoes for the pieces to fit together per the instructional using a straight cut bit.
It was a lot of work, but I'm pretty happy with it. The finish isn't exactly what I hoped (amber shellac), but I can always go back and paint it later it it's still bugging me. For now, I'm just happy to call it done.
Merry Christmas and happy crafting!
What I'm working on now: learning needle felting
What I'm thinking about working on after that: birch lap desk