I LOVE segmented plates. Love them. I have ever since I was serving my babies rice cereal and pureed vegetables. There's just something about them that lends itself to evening things out. Balancing them. Covering all bases. I always feel like a segmented dish forces me to come up with at least three different things to give my children to cover more food groups. (The sad lacking of fruit on this lunch plate is due to a very fruit intensive breakfast this morning!) The segmented plates make me think. They make me balance. And they work for me!
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Friday, May 9, 2008
Totally free needlework...
Completely inspired after reading about Crystal's redwork project, I really wanted to get back into handwork. It had been years since I picked up needle and floss and indulged that part of myself! One afternoon, I started scavenging my house and came up with: a plain white muslin sheet, a skein of deep red floss, my embroidery hoop, and a needle. A quick web search yielded a cute pattern by Barbara Parrish.
I'm very pleased with the result! More than that, I am utterly delighted to have spent no money out of pocket and been able to enjoy several quiet evenings of stitching and talking with my husband. He loved watching me work and, though he insisted on calling it "Redline", thought it was a wonderful project. He has now asked me to complete one for his mother, a project I will be happily beginning later today.
My first redwork (or redline, for my hubby) project-- my apologies that I hadn't pressed it yet in this photo-- appears above. I am so thankful to have rediscovered this hobby... and to have been able to do so for free!
Edited to add link to pattern.
I'm very pleased with the result! More than that, I am utterly delighted to have spent no money out of pocket and been able to enjoy several quiet evenings of stitching and talking with my husband. He loved watching me work and, though he insisted on calling it "Redline", thought it was a wonderful project. He has now asked me to complete one for his mother, a project I will be happily beginning later today.
My first redwork (or redline, for my hubby) project-- my apologies that I hadn't pressed it yet in this photo-- appears above. I am so thankful to have rediscovered this hobby... and to have been able to do so for free!
Edited to add link to pattern.
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Friday, April 25, 2008
Lingerie Straps
It's Frugal Friday over at Crystal's Biblical Womanhood.
I find that I'm always trying to come up with cute, crafty ideas to do with my 2 and 3 yr olds. Happily, I don't really have a shortage of ideas (and there's a wealth of them available to me online!), but it's some of these ideas aren't cheap. Buying craft supplies can easily become an expensive venture. I'm especially guilty of spending money on pretty, satiny ribbon.
The other day I realized something. I wear a lot of those camisole-style tank tops for layering. For some odd reason, most of them seem to have satin ribbon hanging loops inside. Now, I don't really know anyone who hangs up this type of top, but who knows? Since I do not, I find those loops to be an endless source of annoyance that I just have to keep tucking in. So I attacked them with my manicure scissors! I walked away with a pile of 12" or so ribbon lengths that are perfect for little projects, like this pasta cross that my son is proudly displaying.
My kids don't care where the ribbon comes from. I don't spend any money. I'm no longer irritated by those loops! win-win-win.
I find that I'm always trying to come up with cute, crafty ideas to do with my 2 and 3 yr olds. Happily, I don't really have a shortage of ideas (and there's a wealth of them available to me online!), but it's some of these ideas aren't cheap. Buying craft supplies can easily become an expensive venture. I'm especially guilty of spending money on pretty, satiny ribbon.
The other day I realized something. I wear a lot of those camisole-style tank tops for layering. For some odd reason, most of them seem to have satin ribbon hanging loops inside. Now, I don't really know anyone who hangs up this type of top, but who knows? Since I do not, I find those loops to be an endless source of annoyance that I just have to keep tucking in. So I attacked them with my manicure scissors! I walked away with a pile of 12" or so ribbon lengths that are perfect for little projects, like this pasta cross that my son is proudly displaying.
My kids don't care where the ribbon comes from. I don't spend any money. I'm no longer irritated by those loops! win-win-win.
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
7 Random/Weird Things About Me!
I've been tagged by Candace to list seven random and/or weird things about myself.
Here goes...
1. I gave birth to two babies in 2005, but they're not twins.
2. Everyone in my family is tall with tiny feet.
3. I was third in my graduating class... and the top ten was ALL girls!
4. I can eat embarrassingly huge quantities of pizza... seriously.
5. I really don't like being outside. At all. And I really, really wish that I did.
6. I always have my toenails polished. Always.
7. I think I just finally figured out how to do a link in a blog... how sad is THAT? Ha!
I am going to have to ponder who to tag... since this blog is so new and I'M so new to blogging and the etiquette involved, I would hate to "bother" someone who doesn't really even know who I am. But I'll work on that! Thanks, Candace, for thinking of me!
Here goes...
1. I gave birth to two babies in 2005, but they're not twins.
2. Everyone in my family is tall with tiny feet.
3. I was third in my graduating class... and the top ten was ALL girls!
4. I can eat embarrassingly huge quantities of pizza... seriously.
5. I really don't like being outside. At all. And I really, really wish that I did.
6. I always have my toenails polished. Always.
7. I think I just finally figured out how to do a link in a blog... how sad is THAT? Ha!
I am going to have to ponder who to tag... since this blog is so new and I'M so new to blogging and the etiquette involved, I would hate to "bother" someone who doesn't really even know who I am. But I'll work on that! Thanks, Candace, for thinking of me!
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
A few thougts on... curtains.
As Spring is (very slowly) making its way into central Indiana, I've been able to throw open my windows more and more. I LOVE that feeling! A side benefit has been the new realization of the joy my curtains bring me... here are a few things that never fail to make me smile...
-- the way the early morning light filters through my lace curtains in the master bedroom... I am ever-delighted to see these sunny patterns on the wall as I wake.
-- the way my son's white linen tabbed valances always look so clean and crisp... there is something so timeless and fresh about crisp linen.
-- the way my sheers billow in the breeze! I have sheers here in my office and I have smiled all day watching them fill with the gusts of air that come through my window.
-- the tiny touch of fussiness in the Battenburg Lace curtains that hang in my other-wise clean-lined and basic blue and white bath.
So there you go! I could wax on and on about my simple pleasures in window treatments... but for now, I'm off to wake my daughter from a nap... and check out her butterfly curtains while I'm there!
-- the way the early morning light filters through my lace curtains in the master bedroom... I am ever-delighted to see these sunny patterns on the wall as I wake.
-- the way my son's white linen tabbed valances always look so clean and crisp... there is something so timeless and fresh about crisp linen.
-- the way my sheers billow in the breeze! I have sheers here in my office and I have smiled all day watching them fill with the gusts of air that come through my window.
-- the tiny touch of fussiness in the Battenburg Lace curtains that hang in my other-wise clean-lined and basic blue and white bath.
So there you go! I could wax on and on about my simple pleasures in window treatments... but for now, I'm off to wake my daughter from a nap... and check out her butterfly curtains while I'm there!
Friday, April 4, 2008
Unity in Faith
As any parent who has had a baby in a NICU knows, there are a lot of heartbreaking situations there. Sadly, too many babies are there because of poor decisions during a pregnancy and these mothers often do not visit their babies. The whole thing can really break you down if you let it. On the other end of the spectrum, however, are some of the most dedicated, loving, faithful parents you'd ever want to meet. And that's who I want to talk about right now...
When our little girl was born four months early, at barely 24 weeks gestation, our world crumbled a little. With a ten-month old son already, we were torn and challenged. We cried a little. We raged a little. We prayed a lot. And we joined forces more than we had ever had to previously in our marriage.
We were not allowed to touch our daughter. She was too fragile. We were advised to speak softly, that she was aware of our presence and it was important. I spent many hours beside her isolette, crocheting tiny blankets and hats and singing hymns I have been singing since I was a tiny girl in the Catholic church.
We had such a lengthy hospital stay, it was inevitable that we would get to know other parents who also seemed to have made the NICU their second home. I would smile when I saw the Baptist father of another tiny preemie playing the guitar softly by her bedside. I looked forward to the gentle sounds of the flute played by a kind Mennonite father as they waited for news about his baby daughter's heart defect.
One day, one of the other little girls was having a very bad day. A bad day in the NICU world is not like a bad day in a typical home. A bad day at the NICU means your baby probably won't make it. The air was so thick, it was hard to breathe.
Though we had only known each other on a casual basis, somehow these two men and I all ended up by Kaylynn's bedside. And, despite our differing faiths, somehow we all knew one hymn in common. As we stared at the blinking numbers on this tiny child's monitor, Joe and Jeremiah started playing. I started singing. "Like a Shepherd" rang out in that NICU module. Doctors and nurses fought valiantly. And Kaylynn fought too. We saw that little girl claw her way back from the brink until her numbers were stable. The joy was overwhelming.
I saw one of the nurses, standing off to the side, looking dazed. I asked her is she was OK and she replied, "You know, it's easy to lose faith. To question the fairness of losing little babies. But then, when you FEEL God in the room like that. Actually FEEL his hands reach down to this child, you wonder how you could ever doubt."
I feel so blessed to have shared that moment with those two faithful fathers. I am so thankful that we found unity together and didn't see reason to nit-pick the parts of our beliefs that differ. I am so thankful for God's presence and his miraculous works in that NICU. All three of our daughters are home now. And thriving in their own ways.
When our little girl was born four months early, at barely 24 weeks gestation, our world crumbled a little. With a ten-month old son already, we were torn and challenged. We cried a little. We raged a little. We prayed a lot. And we joined forces more than we had ever had to previously in our marriage.
We were not allowed to touch our daughter. She was too fragile. We were advised to speak softly, that she was aware of our presence and it was important. I spent many hours beside her isolette, crocheting tiny blankets and hats and singing hymns I have been singing since I was a tiny girl in the Catholic church.
We had such a lengthy hospital stay, it was inevitable that we would get to know other parents who also seemed to have made the NICU their second home. I would smile when I saw the Baptist father of another tiny preemie playing the guitar softly by her bedside. I looked forward to the gentle sounds of the flute played by a kind Mennonite father as they waited for news about his baby daughter's heart defect.
One day, one of the other little girls was having a very bad day. A bad day in the NICU world is not like a bad day in a typical home. A bad day at the NICU means your baby probably won't make it. The air was so thick, it was hard to breathe.
Though we had only known each other on a casual basis, somehow these two men and I all ended up by Kaylynn's bedside. And, despite our differing faiths, somehow we all knew one hymn in common. As we stared at the blinking numbers on this tiny child's monitor, Joe and Jeremiah started playing. I started singing. "Like a Shepherd" rang out in that NICU module. Doctors and nurses fought valiantly. And Kaylynn fought too. We saw that little girl claw her way back from the brink until her numbers were stable. The joy was overwhelming.
I saw one of the nurses, standing off to the side, looking dazed. I asked her is she was OK and she replied, "You know, it's easy to lose faith. To question the fairness of losing little babies. But then, when you FEEL God in the room like that. Actually FEEL his hands reach down to this child, you wonder how you could ever doubt."
I feel so blessed to have shared that moment with those two faithful fathers. I am so thankful that we found unity together and didn't see reason to nit-pick the parts of our beliefs that differ. I am so thankful for God's presence and his miraculous works in that NICU. All three of our daughters are home now. And thriving in their own ways.
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