"Mom why do you do this to me?" |
I am a part-time L&D nurse and full time mother of two toddlers. I have used this blog occasionally in the past during big events in my life, but considering how much of my life is effected by other people's blogs, I decided to keep mine up to date. We shall see how that goes.
Saturday, November 23, 2013
Getting Ready for Christmas....Christmas Cards
Last year all I had was a point and shoot camera so I was super excited to see what this year's would turn out. I took more time with these and adjusting my settings. Connor was not a fan of the wrapping paper so this made this difficult. I had bought a cute Santa hat for him to wear....yeah that wasn't happening.
I'm going to have to try the ones with the ornaments again. The color was way off since I didn't take the time to figure out the setting. Nap time was getting too close.
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
How To Make A Fitted Carseat Cover
For some reason all the tutorials I could find online were for more of a carseat canopy. Since that's not practical for an Ohio winter, I decided to wing it. I must say it didn't turn out too bad. Since every carseat is different I'm not giving measurements though. What I did was lay my fabric face down and place the carseat face down on top of that.
From there I cut my fabric making sure I had enough to reach where I wanted the elastic to sit. I then flipped the carseat right side up and busted out the pins. I started with the top and bottom, then sides and curves. In my opinion the more you pin the easier this will be.
I sewed around the pins leaving about 1 cm seam to slide the elastic through. I left about an inch gap where I could place the elastic. Now I've used paper clips in the past where you tie the elastic to that and then work it through. I find it easier to tie the elastic to a crochet hook and work that through. I then placed the cover on the carseat and pulled the elastic tight to where I wanted it and trimmed. I used a zig zag stitch to sew the two ends of elastic together and then finished closing that last inch gap.
Now for the window. I eyeballed it then placed my pins. Then I measured them and adjusted as needed. After measuring a few times to be sure, I made my cut.
I wanted the window to look nice when open so I chose a matching pink minky that I sewed on the other side of the flap.
I am doing velcro closures, but buttons are another fancier option. For the velcro I'm doing one at the center of the flap when open. And two at the bottom for when closed. The finished product!
From there I cut my fabric making sure I had enough to reach where I wanted the elastic to sit. I then flipped the carseat right side up and busted out the pins. I started with the top and bottom, then sides and curves. In my opinion the more you pin the easier this will be.
I sewed around the pins leaving about 1 cm seam to slide the elastic through. I left about an inch gap where I could place the elastic. Now I've used paper clips in the past where you tie the elastic to that and then work it through. I find it easier to tie the elastic to a crochet hook and work that through. I then placed the cover on the carseat and pulled the elastic tight to where I wanted it and trimmed. I used a zig zag stitch to sew the two ends of elastic together and then finished closing that last inch gap.
Now for the window. I eyeballed it then placed my pins. Then I measured them and adjusted as needed. After measuring a few times to be sure, I made my cut.
I wanted the window to look nice when open so I chose a matching pink minky that I sewed on the other side of the flap.
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
A Different Option For Your Little One's Name in the Nursery
For Connor's room, I went the easy route and bought a decal of his name off Etsy. Since I've learned a lot in the last almost two years, I've been toying back and for with what to do for Cora's nursery. Since we did such a fancy accent wall with the stencil (I will show you that in a later post when its completely done :) ) I didn't want it to seem too busy. I settled on making a C on fabric and sewing different colored turquoise buttons inside it then framing it. My mom threw a wrench in the plan when she told me about these wooden letters our Joann's had started to carry. They only cost 4 bucks a piece so I figured what the heck I'll give it a try.
This is what I used. Scrapbook paper, mod podge, wooden letters, and glue gun. Not pictured is ribbon, because this child is sucking my brain cells by the second.
Step #1 place your chosen piece of scrap book paper face down and then place your wooden letter face down on top of that. Trace around the letter making sure you're tight with it. For the special people who need pictures like myself, here ya go.
Step #2 cut out your letter very carefully so everything lines up. I chose to leave my letters white, but if that doesn't fit in your color palette you can paint the letters so the sides match what you're working with. Paint a coat of mod podge on your letter (now facing up of course) and then carefully line up your piece of cut paper and smooth down. Do another coat of mod podge on top of the paper and let dry 10-15 min.
Step #3 is when the glue gun comes into play. Now I haven't used one since the incident at the schizophrenic center of 2005, but I'm happy to say no one was injured and I didn't glue anything I wasn't supposed to. OK I might have burnt my finger, but nothing too bad ;) (Basically I accidentally hot glued the art project I was teaching in group during psych clinicals and was comforted by my patients...) Tie your ribbon and place on your letter how you see fit. I chose to use a bow to hang my letters, but you could also use command strips or double sided tape if you don't want the ribbon look. Use your trust hot glue gun to attach your ribbon to the back of your wooden letter and let dry. Trim your excess ribbon and voila! A cheap and easy way to bring your little one's name into the decorations of their room!
This is what I used. Scrapbook paper, mod podge, wooden letters, and glue gun. Not pictured is ribbon, because this child is sucking my brain cells by the second.
Step #1 place your chosen piece of scrap book paper face down and then place your wooden letter face down on top of that. Trace around the letter making sure you're tight with it. For the special people who need pictures like myself, here ya go.
Step #3 is when the glue gun comes into play. Now I haven't used one since the incident at the schizophrenic center of 2005, but I'm happy to say no one was injured and I didn't glue anything I wasn't supposed to. OK I might have burnt my finger, but nothing too bad ;) (Basically I accidentally hot glued the art project I was teaching in group during psych clinicals and was comforted by my patients...) Tie your ribbon and place on your letter how you see fit. I chose to use a bow to hang my letters, but you could also use command strips or double sided tape if you don't want the ribbon look. Use your trust hot glue gun to attach your ribbon to the back of your wooden letter and let dry. Trim your excess ribbon and voila! A cheap and easy way to bring your little one's name into the decorations of their room!
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