Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Moby baby carrier
After G was born I used the moby all the time. Walking around the neighborhood, at parties, grocery shopping... It was so great that I went and bought a white one off of Craigslist. It was summer and the black was hot.
I also had an ergo carrier but G was too small and I didn't have the infant insert. Now he is big enough and I love my ergo even more than I loved my moby, but as I prepare for our first family cross country trip I debated packing my moby.
G likes to face forward and I knew that the moby was my only option. I had heard negative things about carrying heavy kids in the moby and baby is at least 18 lbs now. I figured I'd give it a try before packing it. I'm tough and pretty strong so I figured I could do it.
All those women were right. I couldn't do it. Baby was comfy, and it wrapped well. I decided to do some work in the kitchen while carrying him and after 5 minutes my back was hurting. That will not work for a day in NYC.
Looks like I have one less thing to pack, and the mobys will sit in the drawer until the next little baby comes along.
Monday, December 17, 2012
Making simple holiday trees
You will need-
4 sheets of felt for each tree. I did solid green trees but you can mix it up, or even make red or brown.
Hot glue gun and hot glue sticks
Scissors
Pom poms. I got mine in the dollar bin at Joann's.
Poster board or an old thin box. I used a box. Whatever you use just needs to be the thickness of poster board to support the felt, and thin enough to bend.
Tape
How to make the tree-
1. Cut your poster into two rectangles. Basically, in half hamburger style.
2. Make it into a cone, and tape the pointy end together so it doesn't unravel. After you do this you can manipulate the bottom opening to be as wide as you want. The bottom will not be flat.
3. Tape the seam once you are happy with the shape.
4. Cut the bottom so that it is flat. There should be some point that your cone starts to separate. That is a good place to cut.
5. Fold two of your felt sheets into thirds and cut half circles out of it. You should be able to get 9-12 half circles out of each sheet. Fold the other two into 5ths and cut smaller half circles.
6. Starting at the bottom, layer your circles from largest to smallest going up the tree. Use your hot glue just at the flat part of the half circle.
7. At the end you should have a couple scraps of felt leftover to cover the exposed parts at the very bottom of the tree.
8. Put your Pom poms on however you like!
I realize I have no step by step photos. I realized this after I finished making the trees so feel free to ask me questions of you need clarification.
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Crochet candy cane baby hat
Fits most 6-9 month olds.
Materials
- 1 small ball of white
- 1 small ball of red
Instructions
1. In white - Magic loop. Double crochet 10 times in loop and tighten.
2. Chain 3. Double crochet 2 times in each dc. Join with top chain.
3. In red - chain 3. double crochet in first loop 2 times. Double crochet once in next loop. Repeat until end of row. Join with top chain.
4. In white - chain 3. dc twice in first loop and once in next two loops. Repeat until end and join to top chain.
5. Chain 3. dc in first loop twice, and once in the next 3 loops. Repeat until end and join to top chain.
6. In red - chain 3. dc in each loop once. Join to top chain.
7. In white - chain 3. dc around and join.
8-9. In red- chain 2. single crochet around and join. These two single crochet rows make a sightly smaller band then a dc would.
10. In white - chain 3. dc around and join.
11. In red - chain 2. single crochet around and join.
12. In white - chain 2. Single crochet around and join.
13. In red- chain 2. sc around and join.
14-18. In white - chain 3. Double crochet, then front post dc. Repeat around and join. Fpdc can be confusing, but watch youtube videos and feel free to ask me questions!
You can make 17 rows instead of 18 if you want a shorter cap depending on the child's head.
To add a bow
Chain 16 or so. Whatever length you want your bow to be. Sc until end, chain 1. Repeat in back loop only for 9 rows. Less for shorter bows. Join middle with yarn and secure.
There you have a candy cane baby hat, for a boy or girl!
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
The best socks for babies
If you've ever had kids you know that a huge challenge is finding socks that stay on.
My baby's favorite pasttime is trying to kick his socks off as soon as I get them on.
There are only two brands of socks that I've found that will stay on through all the kicking.
1. Old navy. Specifically the socks that don't fold and look sort of long. I love these for cool weather because they are thick and they go up to my boys knees. They are tight and leave marks, but it doesn't seem to bother him. He is 5 months but wears 12-18 months in these socks so buy big. Way big.
2. Gymboree. I'm pretty sure that the ones he has are too small, but they stay on somehow and are true to size. They are thin, so good if its warmer, or with shoes. They don't go up far, and have characters on them or are very colorful. Kinda pricey for socks.
Here he is in his old navy socks today. The one under that is his gymboree socks.
Monday, December 3, 2012
Baby Santa hat
Knowing Christmas is coming up, I wanted to make my own Santa hats for the little ones. I sent one off to my niece with some matching booties, and I made a hat for Griff as well. I gave the first one I made to Griff's friend, who was also adorable in his hat!
I followed this pattern.
As with many crochet patterns, it was ridiculously off and I had to adjust it. Here are my adjustments.
White brim-
1. Chain as many links as you want your brim to be wide.
2. Continue as the pattern says, but don't follow how many rows to says to make. Measure your child's head circumference and make the brim that long when slightly stretched. I ended up with 53 rows (which is way more than 37 or whatever it asks for). I followed the pattern for 6-12 months without measuring and it would be fit for a newborn.
3. When starting your red rows, just get 1 stitch into each row. I had 53 rows, so I made 53 red slip stitches into the white when starting the hat part.
4. You end up having to add some rows in at the end, but it doesn't make a big difference. Just follow the pattern until you are ready to stitch your hat together.
5. I stitch the entire white brim on the outside, instead of half. This is because I flipped the whole white brim up.
The hats turned out super cute! We got lots of compliments when going to see Santa.
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Pumpkin Crunch Cake with Candied Cranberries
How to candy cranberries (or anything really)
In a double boiler, bring 1/2 cup of sugar and a few tablespoons of water to point where the sugar has completely dissolved. It won't be boiling.Add in your cranberries. I didn't measure, but you don't want too many. I probably had a little over 1/2 a cup.
Cook for about 45 minutes, and take off heat.
Let the cranberries sit in the juice overnight, or at least a few hours.
Strain the juices off and put 1/2 cup of sugar onto a plate.
Put your cranberries on the plate with sugar and roll them around.
Tah-dah!
As you can see, I garnished the top and sides of the cake with the cranberries, and it was enough to cut the richness of the cake. Everyone loved it!
On that note, no cake I have made fits in my portable cake carrier. They need to make those lids taller...
Monday, November 26, 2012
Thanksgiving weekend
He seemed to enjoy the new environment and was pretty happy, which makes me hopeful for our week long trip/flight coming up before the new year...
Monday, November 19, 2012
DIY Baby Tree Ornaments
For the holidays I've always loved those ornaments that have the baby hand or footprint. I decided to make my own, and its so easy, I'm including a tutorial for you all to do it as well!
Materials
Steps
3. Poke a hole at the top of the ornament for the ribbon.
6. Take a wet paper towel, or wipe and wipe around the indent so that it looks how you want it. I wanted the higher parts to have less paint, and I wanted some of the color around the rest of the piece. Let it dry.
The back.
9. Take a thin piece of ribbon and fold it in half sticking the middle through your hole. Thread the open end through the closed end, and there you have it! All ready to tie on your tree!
Friday, November 16, 2012
Sitting up
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Santa Hat!
I'm on my 2nd attempt at Santa hats, one of which I will be sending off to my niece soon. Just needs a pom pom and some shaping.
Here is the pattern if you are interested. When stretched a bit the white brim just needs to be measured for your child's head circumference (don't follow the pattern). The rest of the pattern works just fine :)
The pattern for this hat was SO off, calling for 37 stitches across for a 6-12 month old. I ended up with 53 for my niece's head circumference, which means my boy will need a bit more...
The package will have a couple other surprises, that I will hopefully get some photos of!
I've got quite a few other projects, one of which I can share with you all one I begin, and that is a crochet Hobbes. The rest are gifts and will be shared after xmas.
I am glad to say that I am done with my xmas shopping for my little one, and my niece (babies are VERY easy to shop for) and even though I felt like I was being conservative, bought way to many things for their first xmas...
Friday, November 9, 2012
My petite popover
Luckily, I have a friend that is wonderful at knitting, and she agreed to make this for me!
Thursday, November 8, 2012
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Yummy Roasted Tomato Soup Recipe
You will need:
steps
This soup serves 4, as a appetizer serving. You can increase the recipe accordingly.
adapted from this recipe
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
40 cent bread
An easy bread recipe for any meal
Ingredients
Directions
Monday, November 5, 2012
Pumpkin Cupcakes with Maple Cream Cheese Frosting
You need -
FOR THE FROSTING
Thursday, November 1, 2012
Caramel Apples
First, gather your ingredients.
I used 6 apples, but you can make as many as you like.
You will need parchment paper, or a silicone baking mat (the best thing ever, get one if you don't have one)
Caramel Apple sticks. I bought mine in a restaurant supply store, but I'm sure they are available online. What isn't?
Toppings.
I used: sprinkles, chopped nuts, toffee pieces, mini chocolate chips, cocoa nibs, and white chocolate. The possibilities are endless.
For 6 apples I used one pack of Kraft Caramel Bits
Overall, a messy but worthwhile project! Your fall guests will appreciate the gourmet-ness of your apples. Who doesn't LOVE caramel apples???