Mon -
January 12, 2004

Haunted Gingerbread Houses


For Halloween this year, I continued my "new tradition" of making gingerbread houses for friends and family (I started two years ago). I made a simple pattern for the four walls and roof, and using a basic gingerbread recipe, rolled out and cut pieces for about four or five houses. I also like to cut out and bake little ghosts, windowsills, tombstones, trees, etc. at the same time. I attached them with royal icing (can I say how much I love meringue powder - just another benefit of those fun cake decorating classes I took last year. This year's weren't as elaborate, and were a bit...haphazard, but I'm still glad I made them.

I also dipped the tombstones in royal icing so I could "write" on them with a toothpick dipped in paste coloring . A fun extra touch - kind of a happy accident: I was getting frustrated with the roofs, and I thought, well not just make them flat - and then, well, if I'm going to do that, why not fill them with candy and leave the top unattached - trick or treat! I'll be doing this every year from now on! We also put a candle inside one big one as a Halloween centerpiece at our Halloween party - a la Martha Stewart. It looked verrrrry cool - until the house caught on fire. Can't win them all, I s'pose. Here are the pics (not of the fire though - that went undocumented!) The "leaves" on the ground are three colors of dried coconut I colored by shaking coconut around in plastic bags along with a dab of paste color (brown, orange, and red). Then I spread out the coconut and put it in the oven at low heat to dry out, and then mixed all of the different colors together to give an autumnal effect. :)

Trick ....


Or Treat!

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Posted at 09:42 PM    

Nicki's Baby Quilt


Nicki's baby is due any day now...and I made this quilt for the little one. The crazy star pattern is now near and dear to me! Directions for the pattern are here . I made enough patches to round out a baby size quilt, using an appliqued sunflower piece I had made last year for the center.... I backed it with a pretty striped remnant that brought all the colors together (as a bonus, it's upholstery fabric with stain-guard- especially good for a baby quilt!) , and used fusible batting. I quilted around each star, and made crisscross lines across the center of each star as well. The edges have a zig-zag border. The whole thing was hand quilted - I haven't attempted to machine quilt anything yet since I started sewing. I really like the blue and yellow combination here.... there are more picture of of the process if you read more...



here are the first few pieces....


And the quilt top laid out:


The fully assembled quilt....


And, or course, the dog getting in the way....

Posted at 09:25 PM    

Can't forget Papa


For my dad, we found some handkerchiefs - he is a strict handkerchief man - no Kleenex for him, and I wrapped them up with my mom and dad's favorite macaroons that I make every Christmas. The "recipe" follows...


Shannon's Macaroons

Whip 4 egg whites into stiff peaks, along with a pinch of cream of tartar.
Add sugar to taste - more if you're adding unsweetened coconut.
Pour in one bag sweetened, shredded coconut flakes and one tsp. vanilla extract.
Fold together JUST UNTIL COMBINED - you want them still nice and light and airy!
Using two spoons, spoon round mounds onto cookie sheets - I bake these on silpats, otherwise grease the pan well!
I usually bake them at 350 till golden brown.
* Using honey instead of sugar as a sweetener will keep these macaroons softer longer.

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Posted at 09:07 PM    

Christmas Trees


My mom is a craft fair junkie, which serves me well around holiday season - all about the folk art, people. So E and I whipped up these tallll christmas trees for each side of her hearth. Painted green, I added quilt batting around the bottom, giving it overlapping, wavy edges, and added a "garland" of cranberries and popcorn, painted on both sides so the trees are reversible or can sit at an angle. The bows were just to be fancy....

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Posted at 09:01 PM    

Sifl and Ollie Puppets


For J's 25th birthday we made his favorite puppets / t.v. celebrities , Sifl and Ollie. It involved much scavenging of craft stores, thrift stores, CVS, and my sewing box for the "perfect" parts. E and I were laughing because these puppets were obviously originally made from whatever was lying around - and here we are in search of "that exact leaf". The noses were elusive, so I made them out of Fimo. :)
Here's Sifl - a green sock from Marshalls, with two google eyes (modified by gluing the googly part in place, and adding a yellow background). I know I've seen yellow cat's eyes near the doll supplies in craft stores but that was years ago - maybe they aren't as popular anymore. A silk ivy leaf or two were sewn onto his head for the finishing touch.


read on for more ...

And Ollie - a white sock, with a piece of yellow felt, brown doll eyes, one of the Fimo noses I made (I made holes in the back and sewed them on like buttons), and some stitching to make the sort of dog like snout division he has.


And, of course, Chester... He's a yellow dishwashing glove turned inside out, highlighted by E who thought he wasn't the right shade of yellow. Since your hand doesn't go in very far this way, I made a sleeve or "turtleneck" out of the other green sock. He has a fimo nose, tow brown doll eyes, and two halves of a silk sunflower for "eyelashes"


And this is how we packaged them all up....


The gift was much appreciated :)

Posted at 08:58 PM    

Doorway Puppet Theatre


It's been a while! I'm moving over the project files tonight, AND all of the new projects -we've certainly kept ourselves busy here at the homestead - too busy to even blog about it. So read and enjoy!

This project was inspired by a link from Christy's blog, whom I also believe made some for the holidays as gifts. Anyways, now that K and fam are enjoying it, I can post pics and details:

* I took E fabric shopping with me, and we bought several lengths of fabric - I bought 3 yards of each just to be safe (what, me, measure?) Heck, I can always quilt with the rest. I dug around for the contrasting fabrics in my own stash and we also bought some blue satin ribbon to use as tiebacks, and tension rods - the kind you would use for curtains.

* First I hemmed all the sides, and made a pocket on the top for the curtain rod.

* Then I used my rotary cutter to cut out a appropriate "theatre" shape - in retrospect I would make this a bit smaller, although the problem of the size was solved later on, as you will see.

* I hemmed those interior edges, and then cut two pieces of contrasting fabric to act as curtains, which I hemmed and attached to the back so they covered the theatre shape.

* To those, I sewed on ribbon, which ties to ribbons attached in the back corners.

* As I said, the biggish cut-out shape posed a wee problem - the bottom wouldn't sit "straight" and after some brain storming we added a bottom border of a dowel that slipped along the back edge - this kept the edge nice and crisp for the perfect puppet show. :)

Ta- Da!

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Posted at 08:35 PM    


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