Found Marbles

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We have been doing a lot of work in our back yard, in hopes that the girls can get out there next year.  (When we moved in, we mistakenly told them they could play outside before we realized how much trash and glass and creepiness was back there).  About a month ago we replaced the chain link fence with a cedar one, had an overgrown (15 ft!) shrub cut down and ripped out the strange metal carport that someone installed as an awning.  Chris has devised and built an amazing soil-sifting contraption that fits over the wheelbarrow and he has been slowly working through the rich, but trash-filled soil that was the former back yard.  He has come across so many marbles in his sifting!  We found a few marbles poking out of the ground when we first started looking back there, but digging has unearthed so many more.  We are up to 37 now, which we keep in a glass in Ada’s room.  Marble hunting has become a sport at our house.  We wonder where they all came from.  Were they put there to decorate a garden?  Left by kids playing?  I love the mystery of an old house…

Vintage Finds: Globe Banks

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We picked up this little pair of vintage globe banks at a Brooklyn antique shop this weekend for $10 each.  These banks are small- about 5″ tall and a good start to an inexpensive collection.  Ebay has quite a few globe banks listed here.  I love that they combine saving money and geography.  Banks used to hand these sort of globes out to kids to promote saving, (presumably in the institution stated once the globe was packed with pennies).  Our girls usually put extra change in our big glass jug by the front door.  Maybe these globe banks will be the start of their savings to travel the world.

H Mart Love

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I am a sucker for good packaging.  Leslie told me about an Asian grocery called H Mart on an excursion with the kids this weekend and we were excited to check it out.   We stocked up on noodles and rice and dumplings among other things.  The Korean pears we found were the best we have ever tasted and the acorn pudding was an unexpected savory flavor, (which Ada declared delicious – a small miracle coming from the girl who lives on cereal and PB&J).  The girls had fun spotting things they had never seen before and eating rice and noodles at the food counter.  I dragged the family down every aisle and found lots of new groceries to try.  (OK, maybe I got a few just because they had pretty packaging).  The market carries products from Japan, China and Korea.  You can order online, but it is more fun to go wander around the store if you can.  Our favorite finds are these:

*Dried Noodles

*Little Animal Forks for Lunchboxes (I am saving these to use for a future party, despite Ada’s pleading to open them right now)

*Aid Helper Emergency Plasters

*Knife Sharpening Stone (Which technically we need, and how could I say no to that box?)

Inspiration

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Instagrams from the week:

*Walking over the Williamsburg Bridge

*Pictures (made with these awesome stickers)

*Sister Picture Made from Color Chips (Ada cut and taped and Josie colored)

*Butterfly Girl. (Technically it is no longer butterfly season around here, but the girls play with this net constantly)

Have you ever noticed how when you start thinking about one color or shape you see it all the time? I always love when a group of similar things ends up in my bag at the end of flea market shopping, or how colors and lines repeat through Instagrams from the week…Makes you wonder what other beauty you would see more of if you invited it in.

Have a happy weekend!

DIY Hanging Fall Leaves

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I remember making leaf rubbings when I was little. It seemed magical to see the veins and lacy outlines appear as the crayon was rubbed across the paper. We have been working on quite a leaf collection on our walks home from school, so we decided to preserve some of them by making rubbings. To make your own leaf rubbing cutouts you will need:

*Various Fresh Leaves (These are less likely to crumble under paper).
*Card Stock
*Crayons with Wrappers Removed
*Scissors
*Hole Punch
*Twine

1. Place leaf under card stock.
2. Rub crayon above the leaf until outline and veins are clearly visible. Be sure to hold paper still so leaf doesn’t shift.
3. Cut out leaf shapes.
4. Punch hole in leaf shape and string up.

Happy Fall!

DIY Tulle Jellyfish Costume

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Our Halloween costumes seem to have taken on an ocean theme around here.  Josie Jellyfish was considerably faster to make than Ada’s Mermaid costume from yesterday’s post.  The tulle gives a sort of underwater-floaty feeling and Josie was having fun spinning around and watching it move.  This costume is easy to make into adult or larger kid sizes.  You could whip out a whole family’s worth of jellyfish in an hour or two!  To make your own super easy Jellyfish Costume you will need:

*A Variety of Tulle

*Tank Top to Match Tulle

*Matching Leggings

*Scissors

*Needle and Thread to Match Tulle

*Crocheted Hat (Optional)

1. Cut tulle into strips.  (Ours are about 1 1/2″ x 12″).

2. Stitch the tulle strips one after another around the neckline of tank top.  Use small stitches on the front and larger stitches inside shirt.

3. The tank can be layered over warmer clothes if you are going outside.  (I always hated how Northern weather ruined my Halloween creations when I was little).

That’s it!  Happy Halloween!

DIY Knitted Mermaid Costume

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“Mama, can you knit me a mermaid costume for Halloween?”
“Sure!”  (How hard could it be to find a knitting pattern for a child’s mermaid costume?)  Hmm… Well, it proved to be rather difficult – impossible actually, at least where I looked.  So I had to make up a mermaid costume pattern in a hurry.  Here is what we came up with:

To make your own Knitted Mermaid Costume you will need:

*2-3 Balls Sport-Weight Yarn (We used two skeins of chartreuse wool/acrylic by Orsetto 1oz3/4 for 165 yards)

*Size 3.5 Circular 17″ Needles

*Large Needle for Stitching Up

*Pipe Cleaners (To give shape to the tail)

*Small Amount of Stuffing

This pattern is worked in the round and then bound off and worked back and forth for the tail. I found it easier to hold the work and use the circular needles for the whole pattern instead of switching to straight needles.   This is a relatively simple pattern that knits up quickly and can be adjusted for length.

Body:
R1. Cast on 116 st.
R2-7. Mark first stitch and K in Rib in the round for 5 rows.
R8-. K in the round for desired length. (Ours is about 17″).

Decrease Before Tail:
R1-4. B/O last st at end of each row, turn work. You will no longer be working in round, so treat the round needles as straight needles alternating K and P rows (stockinette).
R5. *K 10,SK 2 tog*,repeat to last two stitches and B/O last st.
R6. P to end, B/O last st.
R7. *K 10,SK 2 tog*,repeat to last two stitches and B/O last st.
R8. P to end, B/O last st.
R9-. Repeat Rows 5-8 until 48 st. remain.

Top of Tail:
R1. P row, B/O last st.
R2. K row, B/O last st.
R3-. Repeat Rows1-2 until 36 st. Remain.

Tail: (**You will make two of these Tail sections**)
R1-4. K 4 rows in stockinette w/o B/O =36 sts.
R5. *K2, M1*, repeat to end. = 53 sts.
R6. P row.
R7. *K2, M1*, repeat to last st. K last st. =78 sts.
R8. P row.
R9-19. Work in stockinette for 10 rows. =78 sts.
R20. K 38 sts (the center of your work), B/O 3 sts. =38 sts. per needle.
R21. P 38 sts, join second ball of yarn after B/O and P 38 sts separately. *The tail is now split and will be worked as two pieces at the same time*.
R22. Turn work, K across 38 sts. Switch balls of yarn and K across 38 sts on second half of tail.
R23-25. Work two tail sections in stockinette for 3 rows.
R26. K 19, M1, K 19 for both sections. =39 sts each.
R27. P row for both sections.
R28. *K1, M1* to end for both. =41 sts each.
R29-36. Work in stockinette for both tail sections.
R37. K1, K2 tog, K to last 3 sts, K2 tog, K1 for both sections. =39 sts each.
R38. P row for both sections.
R39. K1, k2 tog, K to last 3 sts, K2 tog, K1for both sections. =37 sts each.
R40. P 17 sts, P2 tog, P to end. =36 sts each.
R 41. First fin: *K 1, K2 tog*, repeat to end. Second fin: *K2 tog, K1*, repeat to end. =24 sts each.
R42. P row for both sections.
R43. First fin: *K1, K2tog*, repeat to end. Second fin: *K2 tog, K1*, repeat to end. =16 sts each.
R44-47. Work in stockinette for both tail sections.
R48. *K1, K2 tog*, repeat to end for both tail sections. =11 sts each.
R49. P row for both sections.
R50. First fin: *K1, K2tog* repeat to last 2 sts, K 2 sts. Second fin: K 2, K2 tog, *K1, K2 tog*, repeat to end. =8 sts each.
R51. P row for both sections.
R52. First fin: *K1, K2 tog*to last 2 sts, K 2 sts. Second fin: K 2 sts, *K2 tog, K1*, repeat end. =6 sts each.
R52: First fin: *P1,P2 tog*, repeat to end. Second fin: *P2 tog, P1*, repeat to end. =4 sts each.
R53. K2 tog to end for both sections. =2 sts each.
R54. B/O.

*Work up second Tail section as above. Begin by C/O 36 stitches.

Strap:
R1. C/O 4 st.
R2-. Work in Rib to desired length and B/O.

Finishing:
1. Bend pipe cleaners into tail shape, twisting together if more length is needed. Whip stitch pipe cleaners onto one half of the tail as shown. (This should be done onto the wrong/purl side of tail).

2. Place a small amount of stuffing on top of the tail piece stitched to pipe cleaners.

3. Layer second piece of the tail on top (wrong sides together), sandwiching the stuffing.

4. Stitch tail pieces together on all sides, carefully containing the pipe cleaners and stuffing.

5. Stitch on strap to form halter.

6. Work in loose ends.

7. Go for a swim!  Happy Halloween!!

Redecorating for Fall

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I like to change the painting in Ada’s room to match the tree outside her window.  I noticed some yellow leaves out there, so it is time for some fall colors.   It is also time to lay the girls’ rug back down on their floor.  The bare wood seems to keep the house cooler in the summer.  A warmer spot to sit and play is needed when the temperature drops.  We turned the heat on last night for the first time, (after a call to the repair men),  and I am getting out the warmer blankets this weekend.  Our (first!) spring-blooming bulbs arrived in the mail yesterday from White Flower Farm.  We are excited to get started on our new garden and will get the plants snuggled in the ground this weekend.  I can’t seem to stop thinking about soup and pie recipes.  This Cheddar Apple Pie from Gourmet is amazing.  What are you doing at home to get ready for fall?

Inspiration

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Instagrams from the week:

*Knitting Ada’s Mermaid Costume

*Flying Josie

*Reading

*Sleepy Baby Feet

Have a great weekend!

DIY Lemon Honey Apple Jam

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We are getting addicted to canning things around here.  When I saw these Meyer lemons at Greene Grape Provisions I decided to work them into a jam with some of our abundance of apples.  I love planning food around what looks good at the market.  We used this recipe from the Food in Jars blog and added 1/4 teaspoon of nutmeg and the seeds from one vanilla bean to the cooking apples.  (I like to keep the split bean in there too).  The resulting jam is very honey/lemon flavored.  It is a bit odd on a PB&J sandwich, but I just put some on toast with blue cheese and avocado and it was delicious.  It would be great with cheese and crackers or stirred into a hot drink as the weather gets chilly.