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A Countdown Pillow | Sewing

September 3, 2014 By Laura 6 Comments

There is nothing like using crafts as a coping skill! Sometimes, you need to. And that is just what the 3 littles and I did this summer. My oldest daughter, Alexis Grace, (17)(and the littles’/triplets’ big sister), went away for 2 weeks!! (To a summer Catholic Collegiate program.)  Now, for some, 2 weeks may be no big deal. But for us? HUGE? Remember; for me, my kids are not away all day, most days, at school. My children are all homeschooled. I’m not even remotely used to this. We’re together most all of the time, except for extra-curricular kind of events. On the other hand, it’s not like my oldest has never been away. She has, numerous times. In fact, she’s away on a regular basis. 3-4 days at a time, with no contact, when she goes on retreats with her friends. But 2 weeks…. . And FAR away. Yikes.

It was a good thing. MANY very good things about it, that are now gifts for a lifetime for Alexis Grace. But one being, we all (she and us!) needed this trial run of her being away from home for an extended period of time. Because she’s a senior this year!  Which means she’ll likely be off to college next year!  So, we all had to give this separation-thing a temporary go.

This was the big-first, and well, needless to say, the kids and I…were struggling. I figured about a day in, that it would be fun to come up with a project the kids could make, that we could use to ‘count down’ the days until Alexis came home.  And frankly, I needed a busy-project!  The trio brainstormed, and came up with a few good ideas!  But ultimately they settled on one of them:
a countdown pillow.
Something that would serve it’s purpose for us, but end up being a memorable gift we could give her, when she came home.
And so that’s just what we made.

Now, I am no seamstress. In fact, umm, <gulp!>, I have yet to truly learn how to operate a sewing machine.
However, I do have my mother’s old one. And I do have a husband who knows how to use it!
(See? When I say I have a husband who knows how to do anything, I’m not kidding you!)

But of course, I really wanted the kids and I to do as much as we possibly could ourselves. The point was to have a project that helped occupy us, and kind of break up all of the crying jags! (Just kidding.  It wasn’t quite that bad. ) (Ok, I did have one big long boo-hoo in my husband’s arms, and I felt so much better afterwards).  Anyway, I did figure that creating a pillow slip-cover, would probably be easier than making a whole pillow from scratch.
So I got Googling, and found this easy and very helpful tutorial at the Happy Housie!   So if you need directions yourself, see her, not me. I am showing you brief descriptions and photo steps here, and my own musings to share. But I was following those directions myself.  Trust me.

It was this pillow that I decided to part with. It actually had beads dangling all around the edges, that the trio was happy to snip off before I got the pre-photo.
It was the perfect size for the pillow we wanted to create.
We knew the pillow would be kept in her room, and so we thought making one to be added to her huge, beautiful window seat, would be great.

To fit right in, we wanted to color coordinate with her other pillows there. So we took one to the fabric store with us, and then chose this pattern, ribbon and thread colors. They were perfect for our vision!


The kids and I got the fabric all measured, cut, pinned, and ready to be sewn.

Once the kids and I got the fabric all ready to be sewn, I set up my mother’s old sewing machine as best as I knew how, just in time for Michael to come home for lunch. (How convenient!  “Hi Honey!! Here is your lunch all ready for you!  Um, while you’re chewing, would you mind just sewing right up here, and here, and here…..like zip, zip, zip?  ๐Ÿ˜€  ”
He was happy to lend his domestic hand. We were grateful.

Now really came the tedious time consuming part;  hand sewing on each ribbon, right on each X that marked 12 spots.
See, Alexis was to be away for 14 days, but we weren’t counting the day we dropped her off, or picked her up. (No need to be dramatic, right!?  ๐Ÿ˜‰  )
This task really was a time-consuming pain in the derrie’re!   Because one hand had to be way inside the way-overlapped fabric. There barely room to receive and send a threaded needle in there!  I did prick my finger several times!
I cursed out loud every time. And Michael was like, “You should be using a thimble!”
Yeah, o.k. Mr. Martha!  Or you can!

The kids sewed some on as well. (And I chalked it up to things made with love rather than perfection, mean more.)
We were 3 days in before we got them all sewn on.

This is what the envelope-like opening on the back of the case looks like. It was a tight fit!  And it was not easy stuffing the pillow in there. I broke a sweat. I really made it to-size.

So we kept the pillow in an easy-access area, the sunroom, and we took turns as every morning, one of us tied a bow.
And we were one day closer to going and getting our girl!



It really did look perfect, on her window seat, all matchy-matchy with the others.

12 bows – 12 whole days.
We did it!  Is any one proud of us, besides us?
(I know. We’re pathetic. But we don’t much care.)


Alexis Grace really loved her gift. She felt loved, and thought of, and surprised!
And the truth is, she was happy to be home, too. If only for another little while.
Gosh, we’re going to miss having her around, most all of the time, next year.
But she’s got things to do int his world.
When she goes, I may have to cry in her pillow.
Unless, of course, she takes it with her.



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Filed Under: Crafts & Creations, DIY (Do-It-Yourself) Project, Faith/ Catholic, Sewing, Tutorial Tagged With: countdown-pillow-sewing-project, crafts, pillow-ideas, pillows, sewing, slip-cover-for-pillow

Back-To-School Mantels | Home Decorating Ideas

August 25, 2014 By Laura 1 Comment

There is something about the back-to-school season, that I have always loved.  With all of the fresh new supplies and clothes, and the whole new school year stretched out before us, with so much yet to be learned, it’s just always been an exciting time to me.  Even though we homeschool, and even school right through the summer, we (even the kids) still love the excitement that the start of a whole new school year brings!  All new books, fresh supplies, new experiences, and a new season to grow academically.

It’s that love for all things ‘back-to-school’ that inspired these mantels in our home! It’s a theme that fits just right, through the month of September!
items I collected from around the house, that fit with the theme.  I have fun taking photos, so this post is just the gallery of them, which are mostly self-explanatory, with an occasional comment. But think about some ideas of your own that you could add, and consider decorating a mantel or shelf as decor in your own home. It’s a great way to show your kids that education is something to be excited about!





I picked up this school hand bell at an antique store.

This world globe was also picked up at an antique/consignment store, and I love the warm tones and colors of it, as opposed to the traditional (dare I say, tacky) blue globes.


Some of my favorite papers my kids wrote.

I may just do this every year, but I’d want to switch it up a little. Do you have any idea(s) that would fit right in with this back-to-school decor theme?
We’d love for you to share them with us!

Thanks so much for coming by.
Wishing you all a fantastic new school year!

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Filed Under: Home Decor, Homeschooling, Mantel Decorating (Ideas), The Homestead Tagged With: Back-To-School, back-to-school-decor, decorating-mantels, globe, home decor, mantel-decor, mantels, school-bell, school-supplies

Our 8 Four Week Old Chickens, and One Sad Surprise

August 13, 2014 By Laura 9 Comments

Well Friends, our sincere hopes and intentions were to let those of you who were interested, watch the chickens grow up, with us. But what I have found is, they grow in size faster than I can possibly keep up with! It’s crazy!  Sometimes the growth spurts seem overnight. By the time I photograph them, load them into my computer, and prepare the photos for the blog (tasks all managed to have been squeezed into my otherwise busy Mama-agenda), it’s been a week, and the chickens have grown so much, the photos become instantly outdated!  So, we’re doing our best here, to share this new exciting chicken-keeping journey with you.

If you didn’t even know we GOT chickens, and missed their photo shoot at 4 days old, and introductions by name, you can go smitten yourself with the overabundance of cuteness, HERE at ‘Come Meet Our Chicks!’.

At some point I’m going to blog about the day we got our chickens, how we were prepared for their arrival, and what the first week with them was like. (It was all as FUN as we were expecting!  I can tell you that now!)  But just to update you, because we only wanted females/hens, we ordered 8 vent-sexed female chicks in June, and they arrived July 10, 2014. THAT was a very exciting day we look forward to sharing another time.
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Taking a Look at Our 4 Week Old Chicks

Today, we’re going to show you lots of photos of where they are all at now, a fun peek into their personalities (YES, chickens have personalities too!), and all of the latest news.

They turned 4 weeks old last week, and since it was a beautifully mild and calm summer day, we decided to bring them outside to play for awhile. You know, give them some time to practice scratchin’, and all that.
The cover to our old strawberry bed came in perfectly handy, as a playpen of sorts, for them.
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In the first few days of having them, I found I am very drawn to taking feathered-bum shots!  Their bums have gotten so much bigger, where they used to be so tiny. But my love for photographing them hasn’t worn off much.  This cute backside belongs to Kingston, who we’ll be talking more about in just a few minutes.

Having them outside in natural light, is where I’d most prefer to photograph them. So this day was a good one to take some updated photos of them. But keep in mind, all of them had to be taken through the chicken wire this time. We hold them all LOTS, every day. But they are just too young to roam free yet, and I didn’t want hands, arms and shorts in the shots.

So this is Plymouth, our White Plymouth Rock. Her beautiful snow white feathers are coming in so nicely.
At the moment, she is medium sized among our chickens. She’s a very curious one!
–

Here is another of her.
Call me silly, to compare a chicken to an angel but, I really love how the light shines through her outer feathers, and surrounds her in that glow.
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Duxbury, our Silver Laced Wyandotte, is about the same size. We have loved watching her fancy feather pattern develop.
She is competitive and determined.
–

This is Westfield, our Golden Comet. Also known as Red Stars.
This is a breed my brother recommended.  He and his family used to have chickens, and they live in Westfield, where I also grew up all of my life, until Michel and I got married.  The crazy colored mix of her feathers right now is so beautiful!  She’s pretty sweet. The kids call her ‘dainty’.  Incidentally, Olivia is quite drawn to her. Westfield is one of our smallest chickens.
–

This is Pembroke, our other small chicken. She’s an Australorp, but she sure has been resembling an ostrich to us, lately.
She is not nearly as feathered out as the rest of our chickens quite yet. But she sure gets lots of love. Especially from our triplet boy Shane, who seems to give her extra love and attention. He always says out loud, “I love Pembroke”.
Although it’s clear he loves them all, Pembroke seems to be special for him. Michael and I marvel at that fact, because as strange as it seems, Shane and this chicken seem to have some similar characteristics. For example, they are both very under-estimated by people in general, and are both physically lightening fast and clever. Even we can’t catch Pembroke, in the brooder!  Yeah, she’s going to give us a run for our money, TOO! ๐Ÿ˜‰
–

Boston, is just a super cool bird.  She looks like a hawk!  She’s our Easter Egger, and her feathering is so striking!  She is definitely one of our biggest birds, and she has command among the flock. She’ll definitely have high ranks in the pecking order. But she’s as easy to hold and cuddle as any of them.
That said, she is jealous as all get-out, when others get attention. Especially one, whom I’ll tell you about shortly.

This is her again. Although, she looks much smaller in this photo, or at this angle, than she really was.
They have all grown a ton since these photos from just over a week ago, now.

I was trying desperately to get at least one updated photo of every bird, so you could see how they’ve grown and changed.
I think the only one I did not manage to get, before we had to bring them indoors and go someplace, is Hanover. Hanover is our Rhode Island Red is pretty medium in size, and very uniform in color. A very dark reddish brown, right now. She is really so easy going.
–

So lets’s see…..you’ve seen Plymouth, Duxbury, Westfield, Pembroke, Boston, and we just talked about Hanover.
That’s six, so we have two more to cover.

Let’s talk about Weymouth next.
Ohhhh, sweet Weymouth.
Do you remember our Welsummer, Weymouth?
variety of chick chicken breeds photos At just a few DAYS old, that sweet point on her head had me at HELLO. It was impossible for any of us not to fall in love with her.
And I especially, fell hard.
–

About 10 days old here.
So sweet in demeanor at that age, and I just couldn’t get over that mark on her head.


Like a sweet soft version of a rebel mohawk, right?

Well, Sad Surprise Story
When she was only somewhere between 2 and 3 weeks old, one early morning while we are all still in bed, Michael and I heard the craziest screech, that sounded all too much like a real baby-effort at a cock-a-doodle-doo. Michael and I were both like, “Was that just a….noooooo!”.  After a second one, Michael got up and went to take a peek at who was freaking us out. After a third one, I heard Michael’s barefeet come back through the house to our bedroom, and he said a word I will never forget….

“Weymouth”.

I wanted to cry!

But the many days went by without another sound from Weymouth so, I let myself slip right into denial that it was some kind of fluke.
But then it did happen again.
And as we watched her grow, troubling features in her appearance began to emerge.
So I began to research, and the more I researched, the more I had to accept what looked like cold facts.

She’s only crowed now a good handful of times, and not always just in the morning.
But really, at 4 weeks old, there was really no denying it, anymore . . . . . .

We did special order for our chickens to be vent-sexed, to try and ensure we only got females.
But the company makes it clear that occasional errors are made.
But what were the chances that would happen to us?  I have since learned from our vet-friend, that vent-sexing is very hard to do, and it is such a special skill, that it’s a job that pays very well.  I thought that was interesting.  There error rate is about 10% though.

But they sure made a mistake with ours.

Lastly, we have Kingston, a Buff Orpington. Like Boston, she is a BIG bird.  And bound to get much bigger.
Michael and Kingston have a bond. Those two together, are just ridiculous. I knew Michael would *love* keeping chickens. But he actually loves it more than I even expected.  But Kingston adores Michael, like no other. If he is anywhere near her, she cannot fly to him and get ON him fast enough. And Michael just holds her, pets her, cuddles her, and grins with pride.  Yeah, Kingston is spoiled. She believes she is the Queen of all.  And Weymouth and Boston exude superiority as well.

Of course, Weymouth would ultimately hold the top of the pecking order. But HE can’t stay. So it’ll be interesting to see who remains in charge – Kingston, or Boston?

Here, Kingston and Weymouth forge contently, side by side.
They REALLY loved their time in the grass and sun.  Soon, that will be only life they know.
We just need to get that awesome chicken coop done! (It’s going to be SO cool!)  Because they are getting WAY too big for the house brooder, for much longer.

As for Weymouth, as much as we love her…..errr, HIM, he simply cannot stay. We never wanted a rooster, and cannot have a rooster.
I am a freak about being inconsiderate and annoying neighbors, and the ones right beside us (who are maybe a decade older than us) are so wonderful.  Even though I doubt they would ever complain. He is from Vermont, and I think grew up on a farm. A big burly outdoorsy guy, with curly hair, a mustache, and big dimples. Add to that though, that he seems to be quite hard of hearing. So I doubt our rooster would ever wake or bother him. But we love his wife too, and she can hear.

Besides, WE don’t want to hear a rooster crowing, or waking us up, and we also don’t want to be candling eggs. And if I’m honest, it would be hard for me to see our girls constantly pinned down to the ground for love (wanted or not), on a daily basis. LOL.  So…..we will find Weymouth another good home, soon.

Also, it’s important to mention, that we are not certain as of yet that any of our chickens, are not also roosters. That would be so heartbreaking to us, because we are so attached to them all, and Weymouth is hard enough to let go.  It’s just kind of early to tell for sure, and especially with different breeds, the evidence reveals itself in a varied time frame. So we’ll keep you posted.

And THAT my friends, is the update on our chickens!
We continue to work on their coop, which will be a reveal we’ll be excited to share.
As well as other blog posts not chicken-related.  Our creativity may have taken a little nap, but it’s picking up speed as of late. We’ll see what we can show you soon.

Thanks so much for spending a bit of your time with us, today!

– Laura and Family
******UPDATE******
As I type this update, it is one year plus a month later. I have just re-read this post, and wanted to share two things:

First, Weymouth, the rooster, ended up staying! If you are a regular follower, you know this, as there has been much talk, and many photos and posts on him. He’s a big and beautiful, traditional looking rooster. We never thought we’d be able to keep any rooster, but it has worked out so far.
Secondly, we expressed our shock and sadness in this post (Goodbye, Boston), when we learned my favorite, Boston (the hawk-like Easter Egger), was also a rooster!  (If you are counting, yes that was 2 of our 8 vent-sexed (for female) chicks, that were males. You can read more about our sadness of re-homing Boston in that post, and why he had to go.
All events were shared in live-time, on our Facebook Page!  So please join us there for instant shared moments.

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Filed Under: Our Chickens, The Homestead Tagged With: 4-week-old-chickens, Australorp, Buff-Orpington, chicken-breed-photos, chickens, Easter-Egger, Golden-Comet, Rhode-Island-Red, Silver-Laced-Wyandotte, Welsummer-rooster, White-Plymouth-Rock

Come Meet Our Chicks!

July 15, 2014 By Laura 7 Comments

We are so excited to introduce you to our chicks!
Many of you know, I have been wanting chickens for a dang – long – time.
It felt like forever, waiting to be able to get them! But that day has finally come.
I have loved every second of the process of learning all about keeping chickens, learning about breeds, picking out which ones we’ll get first, ordering them, and finally, getting them!  They are all hens, God-willing, if they were accurately sexed.  We don’t feel we have enough property for a crowing rooster, and getting one would be inconsiderate of our neighbors.

I took lots of photos of us getting the chicks, of their set up we’re keeping them in for now, and transitioning them into their temporary home. Their coop is all designed, and about to be built. We plan on sharing more on some or all of that soon.
But for now, we are just eager to introduce you to each one of our chicks!! [Read more…]

Filed Under: Our Chickens, The Homestead Tagged With: australorp-chick, buff-orpington-chick, chickens, easter-egger-chick, first-chicks, golden-comet-red-star-chick, rhode-island-red-chick, silver-laced-wyandott-chick, welsummer-chick, white-plymouth-rock-chick

Protecting the Strawberries Growing in Gutters

July 15, 2014 By Laura 1 Comment

 I’ve been procrastinating doing this post that some of you have been waiting for, on the topic of how we’re protecting our strawberry gutter plants from birds, squirrels, and other small creatures that may be drawn to our delicious berries, and have their fill of our harvest.  The reason I have been hesitant, is because I’ve come to realize I’m not thrilled with our solution, nor excited to share it with you.  I’d even go so far as to say that in all of the years Michael and I have collaborated together over creative projects, and problem-solving, this is one we just never saw eye to eye. Our visions and plans were completely different, and……being the clever guy he often proves to be, I let him do it his way.  As a result, well……I’ll just say he may have been having an off day. My idea was far simpler, and I think would have been easier for me to manage. (I may be wrong. I’d need to experience it, to know for sure. But it works in my head!)  Does this system do the job? [Read more…]

Filed Under: Gardening, Home Projects, The Homestead Tagged With: Gardening, protection-for-strawberry-plants-in-gutters

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