Tag: baby

gluten-free play dough recipe

Last I blogged about homemade play dough, gluten was still a hot and heavy part of our diets. After my diagnosis (and coming to terms with the fact that my son also has trouble with gluten), I got rid of all the gluten in our home, and stopped making dough. In the back of my mind I kept a mental note to Google gluten-free play dough recipes. I mean, one had to exist, right? Right! I have no idea what took me so long to investigate.

I used this recipe, and had little issue with whipping up a fresh batch, only that I cooked it a bit too long which left it on the drier side.

I also finally got around to putting together a little play dough tool kit, an aspect of Meg’s post which I just adored. It’s been so fun to watch how my son uses the tools.

Just as before, we still use these fantastic containers,

which make clean-up and storage a snap.

I purchased the little suitcase at Michael’s on a super sale, and opening and closing it is half the fun of the whole activity.

Happy Playing!

Note: the craft fair, for all intents and purposes, was a success, and I loved my visitors! I most certainly had higher expectations than what was reasonable, and I may have 13 baby bibs still in my possession among, sigh, many other things. It was a learning experience, to say the least. Expect a giveaway in the near future!

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5. Give, Create, Nurture

kcwc: foxy pocket pants

My first Kids Clothes Week Challenge creation. These are the pocket pants pattern from Meg’s book Growing Up Sew Liberated. I sewed a size 3T given her recommendation of sizing up for cloth diapers.

This pattern is excellent, full of lovely little details like the bias-binding around the pockets and contrasting waistband. There is so much reinforcement going on when sewing the “No Itch” seams, that these are truly built to last.

I really appreciated her method of attaching the pants cuffs. It’s simple yet brilliant really, as the cuffs can be let down as the child grows, extending the life of the pants.

Yeah. No letting down necessary in this house. I could tighten the elastic and shorten the pants (or…any ideas?), or save these for the future. What do you think?

Pattern: Pocket Pants from Growing Up Sew Liberated (size 3)

Fabric Main: men’s repurposed cargo pants (I had to do some slight piecing to make it work)

Fabric Contrast: Organic Fox in the Henhouse Print from Monoluna via Bolt

What are you sewing yo!?!

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1. Sew, Create

sew: 20-minute toddler pants

The night before we left for Chicago, we learned that the weather would be much cooler there than what we were experiencing in Portland. Oh cuss word. I had not a single pair of warm pants that fit my child and felt too pressed for time to run to the store. What to do? Sew pants. Stat.

This heinous sweatshirt which was slated for the Goodwill, was chopped up and quickly sewn into sweatpants. After the backpack, this was laughably easy.

Running around Chicagoland in awesome new sweatpants.

I was so stoked with the speedy results, that I re-purposed another sweatshirt…

and then a striped sweater

Super fast, super easy, super eco-friendly. I used Carla’s quick tutorial for the how-to and was so thankful for the easy-to-follow photos and instructions. Here are two tips:

  • If you don’t have an existing pair of well-fitting pants (like I didn’t), make sure to account for extra room where needed. For example: if your child is long and needs extra length, move the existing pants up the sweatshirt sleeve by an inch or two before cutting. This is totally obvious of course, yet I have to mention it considering I learned it the hard way.
  • Edgestitch the top of the waistband to help keep the elastic from rolling and twisting if you don’t have any “no-roll” elastic in your stash.

Happy Sewing!

PS – are you participating in the Kids Clothes Week Challenge next week? If you are, then I bet you’ve been stoked by all the sewing posts as of late, and if you are not, well, please be forewarned that you might have to endure yet another week of sewing-related posts…that is, if I get my act together. I seem to be very ambitious, but very, very exhausted these days. I’ll be back to the more varied jibber jabber later this month.

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1. Sew, Create

handmade for a one-year old girl

A few months back we attended a first birthday party for a darling tot, and I made a thrifty, art-centric gift.

Homemade play dough

Warm cornstarch paint packaged in small repurposed jars. Next time I’ll use the vinegar paint instead, as I’m not certain how this paint would handle being reheated. I may have given three gelatinous, unusable blobs. Whoops.

A sweetly sewn crayon roll, for on-the-go fun.

I used the Prudent Baby crayon roll tutorial, which was very straight-forward and easy to follow.

Prepping and cutting fabrics is always the least enjoyable as well as time consuming part of sewing for me, so while I had all the fabrics out, I cut a second set, ready to be sewn up for another recipient.

Primary color fabric: Aunt Bea’s Teal Solid: Mill End Polka Dot: Joann’s

Have you made a special gift lately or have any go-to gift ideas? For more gift-giving inspiration, check out my list.

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1. Sew, 5. Give, Create

a gift for a new mama

Those early days after my son’s birth were magical, emotional and overwhelming. Pre-birth nesting habits consisted mainly of being in total denial of my son’s arrival by sipping cool drinks while window-shopping at local boutiques and having lunch with friends. With labor as my main focus, I spent a considerable amount of time lying in bed, air conditioner blaring over my huge pregnant belly, listening to Marie Mongan chant the rainbow colors until I fell fast asleep for siesta numero diez of the day. Incredibly important, yes, though virtually all of my efforts went into preparing for labor; pretty close to zero were spent educating myself about how to care for a newborn and equally as important, myself.

The Gift

So a couple months back when an old friend gave birth to a beautiful baby girl, I knew I wanted to give a simple gift that focused on new mama care. A lesson that I personally (and quickly) learned was of great importance.

Postpartum my midwife gave me a bottle of calendula tincture and instructed me to squirt a dropperful in my peri-bottle to aid in the healing process. Calendula is a wonderful healing flower that reduces inflammation, controls bleeding, is anti-viral, and is an overall healing super plant. While I didn’t have a fresh bottle of the tincture to give, I did have beautiful dried flowers. In addition to using a peri-bottle, I also took many sitz baths, in a wonderful infusion of incredibly interesting herbs, flowers, and I believe even roots and bark. My husband would brew up big pots of this, letting it simmer all day long, and made our house smell so incredibly earthy and wonderful. My gift was an extremely humble (and much less involved) version.

Postpartum Calendula Flower Infusion

Method #1

  1. Place dried petals in a pot and cover with water.
  2. Bring to a slight boil, reduce heat to very low and let simmer for about 20 minutes. Turn off heat and let it rest for several hours.
  3. Strain; pour into sitz bath water. Relax.

Method #2

  1. Place dried petals in a clean sock.
  2. Attach to bath faucet with a rubber band or string.
  3. Turn on hot water and fill tub to sitz bath level.
  4. Wring out sock into tub, or place in tub during bath. Relax.

I also made up a little bottle of herbal hand sanitizer for visitors and those on-the-go moments when clean hands are a must.

Several bags of my favorite nursing tea.

A jar of delicious high protein Spiced Nuts & Seeds, along with the recipe (granola would also be a nice)

A handmade bib.

And a bundle of ceremonial sage for purification and healing.

A couple months after my son was born I was able to go to a Closing of the Bones ceremony, a womb wrapping ceremony which “honors the postpartum mother. It is a setting of intentional space, to nurture the mother after her passage through giving birth, as an initiation into the flowering of motherhood and beyond.” I will not be able to adequately express the experience I had during this ceremony. Whew. It was a life changing experience, highly emotional, highly spiritual. Unbelievably…necessary.

I was so pleased with how this gift turned out and it really got my brain swirling for other interesting, mama-centric gifts. Do you have a special go-to new parent gift or Mother’s Day gift? How will you be honoring yourself and other mamas this weekend?

P.S. – There are still two days left to enter the anniversary giveaway which includes some of the items mentioned in this post.

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5. Give, 6. Mama & Baby, Beautify, Create