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Category Archives: Projects

Renegade

30 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by jeannerondeau in Likes, Projects, Shop, Vintage

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Acorn Toy Shop, Brooklyn, children's clothes, crafting, Etsy, headband crowns, Renegade Craft Fair, Soor Ploom, vintage buttons, vintage fabric, Williamsburg

I’ve been excited about making these headband crowns for kids lately.  Yesterday we found out that my friend Marissa at Soor Ploom and I got into Etsy’s Brooklyn Renegade Craft Fair.  Hooray!  We will be selling our children’s clothes and crowns on June 23 and 24 in Willamsburg.  I’ll put up more details as the weekend gets closer.  For now I need to get crafting!

(The crowns and Soor Ploom’s sweet clothes are also both available at Acorn Toys if you can’t wait until June).

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Storing

27 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by jeannerondeau in Likes, Organizing, Projects, Shop

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baby clothes, Craigslist, hand me downs, Ikea, metro shelves, Metro Shelving, plastic bins

This is a project I have wanted to get done for a long time.  Josie is now wearing a lot of Ada’s old clothes and finding the right size before she outgrows them was becoming a challenge.  So we went to Ikea and found these bins.  Their clear sides and tops make it easy to find a specific item.  Clothes are labeled by size and stacked on Metro Shelves.  We got all of our shelves cheap on Craigslist.  It is freezing here this morning, but finding Ada’s hat was easy.

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Cherry Blossom T

26 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by jeannerondeau in Likes, Projects, Vintage

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american apparel, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, cherry blossoms, cherry trees, fabric circles, fabric scraps, Hanami, organic t-shirt, pinking shears, spring, t-shirt, tulle, vintage buttons, vintage fabric

The cherry trees are just starting to bloom at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden.  The festival is not until April, but it is exciting to visit each week and watch the progress.  We made this T-shirt in their honor.  You will need:

*Blank T-shirt (we used a child’s American Apparel T.  They have great organic options too).

*Fabric

*Tulle

*Buttons

*Pinking Shears

*Needle and Thread

1. Cut fabric and tulle into circles with pinking shears.  We made 1 inch circles from vintage fabric scraps.

2. Layer fabric and tulle slightly off-center.

3. Place circle layers onto shirt with button on top and stitch down through button holes.

Hand wash, or turn shirt inside out to launder.  Hooray for Spring!

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Enamel Bowl

23 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by jeannerondeau in Likes, Organizing, Projects, Shop, Vintage

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antique shop, enamel bowl, hand washing, Maine

Washing fabric for a new project.  I love this enamel bowl.  I got two of them for $9 at an antique shop in Maine.  There are some similar ones here.  I use it is for hand washing delicate clothes and it was Ada’s favorite place to sit when she was a baby.  Simple, functional, beautiful.  Kind of perfect.

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Coffee Filter Flowers

22 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by jeannerondeau in Likes, Party!, Projects

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bouquet, coffee filter flowers, flower garden, food coloring, Martha Stewart, painter's tape, paper flowers, plants, watercolor paints

This was inspired by the new Martha Stewart issue.  We are ready for spring and Easter colors around here!  These flowers are made by gently folding painted coffee filters into petal shapes.  Ada liked using the paints and watching the colors bleed up the filters.  The finished flowers can be combined into a bouquet, tied onto gifts, or planted on the wall like we did.  You will need:

*Coffee Filters

*Watercolor Paints and/or Food Coloring (I used both, but kept the kids away from the messier food coloring)

*Bowls (for mixing the food coloring with water)

*Paper or Scrap Cloth Towels

*Green Pipe Cleaners

*Painters Tape (for wall hanging)

1. Separate filters into stacks of 4 to 6 each.

2. Fill bowls with a small amount of water and a few drops of food coloring.  We used about five drops in shallow water.

3. Dip the bottom edges of filter stacks in bowls and/or paint edges with watercolors.  More pigment and less water=brighter colors.  Filters can be dried and more colors added until you like your results.

4. Place filter stacks on towels to dry.

5. When stacks are still slightly damp, pinch the back center of the flower and twist all the filters together, (middle photo).  Secure with pipe cleaner and gently unfurl petals.  If you used food coloring, a bit may transfer onto your hands when flowers are wet but should stay put when dry.

6. When flowers are completely dry, make a loop of painter’s tape. Insert stem through loop vertically and stick onto the wall.

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Front Stoop Plantings

20 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by jeannerondeau in Projects

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Aubreita, back yard, clay pot, Columbine, cutting garden, flower garden, front stoop flowers, Lithodora, planting, plants, Salvia, spring, Viola

We are working on getting the back yard ready to use this year, but it looks like my cutting garden wish list is going to stay on paper until next year.  I am longing for flowers back there, but putting up a fence is a more practical first step.  So we decided to plant a big clay pot to brighten up the stoop instead.  We used a mix of purples and blues for our sunny spot.  You can adjust the type of plants based on your own climate and light.  This is a quick planting project with immediate results which makes it ideal for kids’ short attention spans.  If you want to do a similar arrangement you will need:

*Clay Pot.  (We used one that is 20″ high and 18″ wide at the top).

*Potting Soil

*Flowering Plants.  We used: Viola, Aubrieta, Lithodora, Columbine, and Salvia.

1. Place some rocks or broken pot shards on the bottom of the pot for drainage.  Be sure not to cover hole completely.

2. Fill 3/4 of the pot with soil.

3. Place in plants, following directions on soil tags and being careful not to overcrowd.  The top of the soil should be about 1″below pot rim so it will not spill out when watered.

4. Gently pack soil around plants and water in thoroughly.  Pick off dead flowers as they bloom to keep plants healthy and encourage more blooms.

Enjoy!

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Stitch

19 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by jeannerondeau in Likes, Projects, Vintage

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balls of string, darning, great-grandmother, Irish immigrants, mother during Depression, parachute slipcover, potatoes, repairing wool blanket, Saint Patrick's Day, wool blanket

Gram’s Blanket.  Baking potatoes for our Saint Patrick’s Day party on Saturday reminded me of sitting in my Irish Great-Grandmother’s kitchen.  She was a child of immigrants and a mother of three during the Depression.  She saved every scrap that could be of potential use.  I remember her balls of twine – meticulously pulled, knotted and wound from the strings on teabags.  She had two pale pinkish slipcovers that she pieced together from silk WW2 parachutes.  She showed up at family gatherings with paper bags full of costume jewelry and vintage toys for us kids, (which made her by far our favorite visitor).  I loved her house and her strange and beautiful collections.

Gram darned little holes in this wool blanket thousands and thousands of times using different color threads.  She was fixing moth holes, but the effect is the look of stars, or the ocean, or handwriting.  I love the humble repetition yielding such beauty.  She would like that the blanket has been saved and used by my children as she used it for her own.

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Bloom!

16 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by jeannerondeau in Likes, Projects

≈ 16 Comments

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bloom, Brooklyn, cherry blossoms, fake flowers, San Francisco, silk flowers, spring

We were walking along my favorite industrial area in our neighborhood yesterday and passed this tree in bloom.  It gave me a little surge of excitement about spring approaching.  I have been missing the lush greens and flowers from our San Fransisco visit.  Upon closer inspection I realized that silk blossoms had been tied on to the naked branch by a neighbor with a sense of humor.  Quite possibly the best use for fake flowers.

Happy Weekend!

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Instant

15 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by jeannerondeau in Likes, Projects, Shop

≈ 2 Comments

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family portrait, Fuji, instant camera, Polaroid

My heart was broken when I could no longer buy Polaroid film for a reasonable price.  I love the colors and the magic of instant pictures.  I love that they came with their own built-in frame and could be handed out to watch develop right in the middle of the action.  My grandmother had a giant, noisy Polaroid that she used for family portraits.  That camera seemed so out of place in her utilitarian household, but the images that it spat out flattened and tinted the setting into something beautiful.

Thankfully I have a new love.  This Fuji camera is itself adorable and the tiny photos are even cuter.  (Thanks Japan!).  A line of these pictures along a shelf makes a great installation of family photos- no frames required.

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Sister Dresses

13 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by jeannerondeau in Likes, Projects, Shop, Vintage

≈ 6 Comments

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Ebay, Etsy, Liberty of London, matching dress, McCall's pattern, sewing pattern, sister dress, vintage fabric, vintage pattern

Ada requested matching sister dresses recently.  I’d already begun one for her before Josie was born and the request was a good excuse to finish.  (Not to mention the  small window of time when they still think it is cool to dress like a sibling).  These are from a 1972 McCall’s pattern- #3470.  I love vintage patterns!  Etsy and Ebay always have several.  I tweaked the pattern a bit to fit Josie and used some vintage violet print fabric that I’d been saving.  The beautiful Liberty print I cut Ada’s from was no longer available.  Ada likes to point out that they are not technically matching, but they like to wear them together anyway.

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