Sunday, December 25, 2011
Monday, August 01, 2011
Tuesday, June 07, 2011
List #6: Bubble Theme ideas
We are working on some themes this summer. This was/is my favorite way to teach early childhood. My gals are super intested in Dinosaurs, Bubbles, Super spys, Beauty and the Beast, and Gardening.
First up. Bubble ideas!
This idea of Bubble Refill Station is a great idea.
I keep seeing this Bubble Recipe popping on the interwebs.
Bubble Snake Maker
Bubble Machine, I recommend this so much. Toddlers for the life of them can't blow bubbles very well. Toddlers love bubbles though. This does it for them and their mamas. :)
We also got this Bump N Go Bubble Bug as a birthday present and it is equally fab. Must have a flat surface, kids love it.
For some bubble art, this eraser stamping in blue would be really fun.
Love the idea of this bubble art too.
We are going to also make a big B and a little b out of tagboard and use bubble wrap as a stamp to press onto the Bs for our summer alphabet book.
First up. Bubble ideas!
This idea of Bubble Refill Station is a great idea.
I keep seeing this Bubble Recipe popping on the interwebs.
Bubble Snake Maker
Bubble Machine, I recommend this so much. Toddlers for the life of them can't blow bubbles very well. Toddlers love bubbles though. This does it for them and their mamas. :)
We also got this Bump N Go Bubble Bug as a birthday present and it is equally fab. Must have a flat surface, kids love it.
For some bubble art, this eraser stamping in blue would be really fun.
Love the idea of this bubble art too.
We are going to also make a big B and a little b out of tagboard and use bubble wrap as a stamp to press onto the Bs for our summer alphabet book.
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Hey friends!
If you read this blog in a reader then click on over and see the new banner I just made! I have had this on my to do list for over a year and finally figured out how to. Here is the tutorial I used.
I am also currently using Clover Lane's tutorials and info on digital scrapbooking. Check out her info here. Our girls are 2 and 3 now and what I have documented has either been pictures taken, blogging here, or scribbling a few notes down and throwing them in a box :(. I have always wanted to do a scrapbook for each of their first year and then one for every few years from then on! Thanks to this idea I have already done about 20 pages in the last 5 days.
Maggie turned 2 last week. I'll be back with more pics on that soon. Such a sweet spunky girl.
Oh and that quilt. I put it down because of flair ups. It will be brought out again soon...
Thanks for checking back. Oh and the banner looks fine on my computer, but let me know if it is a weird size, cropped, or stretched on yours.
If you read this blog in a reader then click on over and see the new banner I just made! I have had this on my to do list for over a year and finally figured out how to. Here is the tutorial I used.
I am also currently using Clover Lane's tutorials and info on digital scrapbooking. Check out her info here. Our girls are 2 and 3 now and what I have documented has either been pictures taken, blogging here, or scribbling a few notes down and throwing them in a box :(. I have always wanted to do a scrapbook for each of their first year and then one for every few years from then on! Thanks to this idea I have already done about 20 pages in the last 5 days.
Maggie turned 2 last week. I'll be back with more pics on that soon. Such a sweet spunky girl.
Oh and that quilt. I put it down because of flair ups. It will be brought out again soon...
Thanks for checking back. Oh and the banner looks fine on my computer, but let me know if it is a weird size, cropped, or stretched on yours.
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Progress
Tuesday, March 08, 2011
Girl's room part 2

I told you a while ago of goals for decorating my girl's bedroom. Dorothy's birthday came and went and there were plenty of other distractions for her at her August birthday and even at Christmas for her to remember that she was suppose to get a quilt from me. It was also a dilemma for me because I couldn't decide if I wanted to make it a toddler bed size or twin size. I knew the toddler bed wouldn't last much longer than a few months or a year before it was passed on to our escape artist, Mags so I hoped to make a twin size. That just meant a lot more work for me. Like twice the work. Luckily the decision was made for me by waiting so long to pick the project up again.
Here is the tutorial I have been using. Here is the quilt that started it all. I started this last June and only worked on it about 2 weeks (10-15 hours maybe) before completely packing it up in preparation for rearranging the house (like trading rooms with other rooms). I unpacked it this past last month and have been working on it quite a bit. Today I finished piecing and trimming the 80th square. I have spent about 40-50 hours on it so far.
I am like a deer in the headlights getting ready to sew all the squares together. I can't possibly pull it off.
The colors of the quilt are what I call bubblegum, cotton candy, cherry, lipstick, sage, and lime. Or something like that. I am loving the color scheme and excited to have an almost complete room.
Labels:
Birthdays,
Dorothy,
Maggie,
Making,
Sarah Cosper Textiles
Monday, March 07, 2011
How my memories work in my head.
When I was say 9 or so, my parents took me to the Vouge to see Henry V. I remember falling asleep and possibly that we left for a vacation the next day. Weird. I need to ask them.
My parents were very good at culture-ish stuff. Things slightly out of the ordinary from the family down the block, like taking me to foreign films, nice restaurants, visiting every single historical site in the region, and listening to classic bluegrass. You know what I hated as a kid though? foreign films, nice restaurants, visiting every single historical site in the region, and listening to classic bluegrass.
BUUUUT you know what I adore now as a 30 year old. ALL OF THOSE THINGS.
Dale and Sue for the Win!!!
However, I tried watching Henry V this week and snoooooreee....I fell asleep again!
My parents were very good at culture-ish stuff. Things slightly out of the ordinary from the family down the block, like taking me to foreign films, nice restaurants, visiting every single historical site in the region, and listening to classic bluegrass. You know what I hated as a kid though? foreign films, nice restaurants, visiting every single historical site in the region, and listening to classic bluegrass.
BUUUUT you know what I adore now as a 30 year old. ALL OF THOSE THINGS.
Dale and Sue for the Win!!!
However, I tried watching Henry V this week and snoooooreee....I fell asleep again!
Wednesday, February 02, 2011
Romans 8:26
26 In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us through wordless groans.
Amen and amen.
Sunday, January 30, 2011
List #5: Hibernation activities
Hibernation: to pass the winter in a torpid or resting state
Torpid: having lost motion or the power of exertion or feeling
We are hibernating. In these cold months we have had colds, viruses, stomach flu, RA, back injuries, etc. We are in a resting state. We have lost motion. I think I am OK with that. Some of of our inside winter activities I had planned to do as Advent activities and round 1 and 2 of Mr. stomach flu pushed those back to January.
Here are some of the things we have been doing to keep the fun going around here while at home so much.
Muffin Tin Rainbow Lunch: Freeze dried Strawberries, Goldfish,
Barilla plus pasta, Peas, Blueberry juice, and an Oreo (see I totally break my own rules).

Torpid: having lost motion or the power of exertion or feeling
We are hibernating. In these cold months we have had colds, viruses, stomach flu, RA, back injuries, etc. We are in a resting state. We have lost motion. I think I am OK with that. Some of of our inside winter activities I had planned to do as Advent activities and round 1 and 2 of Mr. stomach flu pushed those back to January.
Here are some of the things we have been doing to keep the fun going around here while at home so much.
Muffin Tin Rainbow Lunch: Freeze dried Strawberries, Goldfish, Barilla plus pasta, Peas, Blueberry juice, and an Oreo (see I totally break my own rules).
- Muffin tin lunches. Does your one to two year old only eat processed snack food to sustain herself and even then only a tiny bit a day. D did this at that age and Mags is on the same track. I think it is partly all the teething that takes place and partly the new found battle of wills, etc. I remembered reading about muffin tin lunches in the blogoshere and looked them up. Basically it is adding fun to eating, packaging your meal into muffin tins or other cute containers. Most grown ups and kids fall for something if it's presentation/packaging is pleasing to the eye. Dorothy prefers her muffin tin lunch to be rainbow colors. I try to have just 1 or 2 to be a processed snack and at that hopefully with no corn syrup, since I know it makes my RA flair up. I don't always follow this. To each his own. This really does not take me much extra time, I just use what bits of food we have and don't make this complicated. The green cup is almost always peas or green grapes because in the winter those are some of the only green food we ever have :) As they get older, I see us branching out into themes to go along with the season or a favorite book. For example, look at these great examples: Thanksgiving, Chicka Chicka Boom Boom Book, Valentine's Day.
- D is working on writing her name. She use to hold her pencil naturally and then I think her teacher and I both made comments on holding the pencil properly and she got nervous and now questions how to hold it. Well we had a million character band aids around that never stayed on when the girls needed them so we began using them as stickers. I wrapped her pencils with a Dora or Mickey and now she knows to place her grip where the band aid is. It really seems to help.
- D also needed a boost in her confidence about writing in general, not just her grip. She told her Aunt Dawn and I separately that it was one of the hardest parts of preschool (Is that not adorable?). While sick, we didn't spend as much fun time doing art or drawing at home, so I have a writer's work shop basket where she can doodle, draw, and explore whenever. It doesn't seem like such a chore now at preschool or when I give her specific tasks, because she has lots of opportunities to do it on her terms just the way she likes it (This is our approach for reading/letters/phonics too). Right now we have just a basket that can be put out of Mag's reach. When Mag's can be trusted to have pencil access it will be on a lower level for both of them to use whenever they want. Here is a super inspiring Writer's Workshop for young writers. Love it.

- Mags is really into sorting and stacking. Sometimes I help and show her colors and sizes, but a lot of times I just let her do it her own way and have fun. In the picture above she is lining up our Mickeys and Minnies by size. No that is not even all of the ones we own. I guess we hoard -I mean collect Mickeys and Minnies :)
- Speaking of hoarding. I watched a couple episodes of Hoarders to kick start a much needed donation pile in our home. We are going to be in this house a couple more years and we need to get rid of about 1/4 of our things since there is no space or need for them anymore. I though that show would kick me in the pants and inspire a house purge. Then I watched Toy Story 3. Darn it if those two shows don't cancel each other out....sob. That Andy and Woody. House reorganization to. be. continued...sob.
Labels:
30 lists,
Dorothy,
life,
Maggie,
Mobile uploads,
Pictures,
Teaching Dorothy
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