Archive - November 2007

Martinmas

So Sunday was Martinmas.  It also happened to be Veteran’s Day.  Someone pointed out to me the wonderful coincidence that St. Martin of Tours was himself a soldier. Incidentally, it was also the weekend that local Boy Scouts and Cub Scouts collected bags for food for distribution to the poor in their Scouting for Food campaign.  Of course, St. Martin is best known for his kindness to a poor beggar. It’s wonderful how God takes care of the details like that.

Collecting food for the poor and honoring our veterans – a fitting way to remember the example of St. Martin.

Now since we made lanterns a couple of days ago, I certainly wasn’t going to let the Feast of St. Martin, or Martinmas as it’s called, pass by without a Lantern Walk.

First, Boo and Pumpkin Girl made a super easy Meatball Soup from the Pampered Chef’s kid’s cookbook.  Once that was made, we armed ourselves with the Cub Scout Songbook and set off with our lit lanterns attached to sticks.

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We started off singing “This Little Light of Mine” which just seemed appropriate.  A few more well known songs, like three versus of “Yankee Doodle”, and “The Brave Old Duke of York” and we were good and warmed up.  Our heavy jackets helped, too.  But we really got going singing in rounds.  “Down By the Station,” “Three Blind Mice” and “Row, Row, Row Your Boat” were the favorites.  Those songs have nothing to do with St. Martin, but the tradition is to walk along with your lit lanterns, singing songs, and those were the songs we knew.

We finished off with another round of “This Little Light of Mine,” then returned for our nice, warm soup.  Boo remembered to pray the homeless who were out in the cold that night.

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Veteran’s Day

In honor of Veteran’s Day, here is a picture of Boo and Pumpkin Girl in our backyard. The National Anthem is playing and Pumpkin Girl has her hand over her heart. Boo, like any good Jedi Knight, is saluting with his light saber, just like his daddy taught him.

To all of our Veterans…we salute you.

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Martinmas Lanterns

In a rare convergence of prior planning and creativity, the children and I made lanterns for Martinmas, which isn’t until November 11. I was planning on making them last year, but early in November we went on vacation and our house flooded, landing us in temporary housing for a couple of weeks until we could move into a new house. Kind of ruined our plans.

This year was different. I knew what I wanted to do and when I wanted to do it. I had all the supplies on hand anyway, so it wasn’t that hard to pull off.
First we read up on St. Martin of Tours. I was pleased to find out that Boo had already learned a little about him at his Religious Ed class, so I let him tell what he remembered of the story first. Then we talked a little bit about Martinmas traditions, including the making of paper lanterns, parading around and singing songs.

So now I present our Martinmas lanterns. You probably have most of the supplies at home, if not then you still have time to run to the store and get them.

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Here’s our basic supplies. A sheet of 12×12 cardstock for each lantern and tissue paper. 12 x 12 cardstock can be found with the scrapbooking supplies at your craft store. Or ask a scrapbooking friend, she’ll have a variety of colors to choose from and will most likely be happy to give you some.

So here we go! Cut 2″ off one end. Save the scraps!

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 Fold 3/4″ from the cut edge and glue it down. I used a Fiskars paper cutter with the scoring blade to help fold the cardstock. You can use the flat edge of a butter knife to score the paper, then use the handle to flatten the fold down.

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 Draw a line 2″ from the bottom edge, score along that line…

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 …and cut notches. Be careful not to cut past the line.

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Draw figures or shapes to cut out. If you enlarge the above picture, you can see that I sketched with pencil first, then outlined with a black marker to make it easier to see where to cut out.

I highly recommend basic shapes about 1″-2″ in size. The moon and stars on Pumpkin Girl’s lantern were about right. The little girl was way too detailed, even for me to cut out. I also marked off about 1″ on the right where the paper will overlap when glued together.

Below is Boo’s lantern. His has fall leaves which were easy to draw and simple enough to cut out. Remember that card stock is much thicker than paper, so simpler is better. However, his tree was much too big and open.

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 I highly recommend not drawing anything that is grounded on the bottom line, like the little girl and the tree. It weakens the lantern when you glue it together. Stick to things that are free floating like the leaves and stars.

Cut the shapes out carefully. The sharper the scissors, the better.

Cut tissue paper to fit the inside of the lantern. Don’t go crazy measuring and trying to get a perfect fit. You can use one piece for the whole lantern or use smaller pieces in different colors for each cut out. Glue the tissue paper over the cut-outs. Make sure you get the glue right up to the edges of the cut-outs so that the tissue sticks well when the lantern gets rolled up. I had my children use glue sticks for this part since tissue paper is so fragile.

Glue the short sides of the cardstock together to form a tube with the tissue paper inside. Overlap the edges where marked and use paperclips to hold together while drying.

Push the notches down to make a base. Here we used white glue because the cardstock didn’t want to behave itself. I also used scrap pieces of cardstock to make it stronger. For Boo’s I used the top of his cut out tree, for Pumpkin’s I used cut a 3″ piece from the strip we cut from the very beginning.

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 Below are the finished lanterns. You can attach a ribbon or string across the top so that the lantern can be carried on a stick for Martinmas lantern walk. Or leave as is for a table decoration.

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 Of course, these lanterns are highly flammable! Please don’t use real candles with them. We are using those fake tealights that are widely available. You could also use chem light sticks.

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 So there we have it – simple paper lanterns for Martinmas.  I hope you enjoyed my little tutorial.   I can’t believe that I both made crafts with my children AND remembered to take pictures for the blog.

Mama Mia

Have you noticed that I’ve been a little quiet lately? You’re probably thinking that I’m busy winding hanks of yarn into balls. Not so much. My ball winder somehow got itself attached to my computer table and my children think it’s fun to spin. The one who loves it best is Bip. To his 2 year old self, it’s just about The Ultimate Toy. He likes to sit on the chair next to me, turning the ball winder while I’m reading homeschool forums doing important research. Which is all fine and good except that like the rest of my children, he never stops talking.

“Mama, Me-a turn turn.”
“Uh huh, yes, turn turn.”
“Mama, Me-a round round.”
“Yep, it’s going around.”
“Mama turn.”
“No honey, I don’t need a turn. Your turn.”
“Mama turn!!”
“Ok, ok, mama turn. Ah yes, very fun. Ok, mama all done.”
“Mama, Me-a turn.”

And thus it continues.

Bip starts almost every sentence with “Mama, Me-a.” When you write it out, it makes perfect sense. Especially if you know that he calls his brother “Boo-a.” See, when Pumpkin Girl is angry at Boo, she says, “Boo- waa!!!” (Can’t you just hear the level of whining and exasperation in her voice?) So Bip calls him “Boo-a” on a regular basis and somewhere along the way, started referring to himself as “me-a.” Cute, huh?

But say it outloud. Go ahead, no one’s listening. Mama, Me-a. Mama Mia. Yep. Bip has somehow become Italian. All day, everyday, it’s all I hear – Mama Mia! this, Mama Mia! that. Sometimes it makes sense, like “Mama, Me-a eat.” Other times he just follows me around the house saying, “Mama mia.” Honestly, what did I ever do that warrants me being harangued by a tiny pseudo-Italian baker all day?

So where was I?

Oh yes, the ball winder on my computer table. The one not so much winding yarn as it being spun by a talkative toddler. I had a point, I think. Oh yes – you’re probably thinking that I’ve been busy winding yarn instead of blogging. When really I find it very hard to compose a coherent thought while Me-a over there is talking my ear off and requiring that I actually interact with him.

That and every time I sit down to tell you all about last Saturday, just thinking about it makes me tired. It went something like this:

9:45 am Arrive at Boo’s last soccer game of the season.
11:15 am Soccer game over, return home for hot chocolate.
12:00 pm Return to soccer field for the league end of year awards and party.
1:10 pm Leave soccer field, go to bowling alley for the team’s end of year party.
1:25 pm Leave bowling alley.
1: 50 pm Arrive in Arlington for Mexican folklorico dance lessons.
3:10 pm Leave Arlington
3:25 pm Arrive at Gadsby’s Tavern, Alexandria for Cub Scout field trip.
4:45 pm Leave Alexandria.
5: 15 pm Arrive home

Five separate events in three different cities, one right after another. Mama mia!

Merry Christmas

… to me!  Ho ho ho, look what arrived yesterday:

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For the non-knitters out there, it’s an umbrella swift and a ball winder.  I’ve wanted one for a while, but couldn’t really justify spending the money when 2 ladder back chairs and my own hands will accomplish the same thing.  However, having this pile waiting to be turned into usable balls of yarn:

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I decided I needed the swift and winder. It’s an early Christmas present, since they are kind of expensive.  Almost as expensive as the yarn waiting to be wound.  Ahem.  (I will not create a stash of yarn, I will not create a stash of yarn, I will not…stop laughing, Shanti!)

After dealing with cryptic Japanese instructions like “Thrust the yarn guide in over a boss posititioned at the reverse side of the base until clicking” and no instructions for the swift, I got it all set up.

So instead of spending 30-45 minutes winding one hank of yarn (and that’s IF I don’t tangle it,which has only happened once) it only takes 10 minutes to turn one of these pretties

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into this:

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And that’s including the time spent figuring out what to do. Let’s just say I love it.  Thanks, Philip!

By the way, Someone is getting a Christmas present  made from that yummy newly wound ball of yarn.  (It’s Lorna’s Laces Lion and Lamb and worth a small fortune every penny. ) I can’t tell you more than that.  But for more inspiration on handmade gifts, Dawn at By Sun and Candlelight is hosting The Loveliness of Handmade Gifts on November 8th.  It’s not too late to submit pictures or a post to this fair.

Scenes From Halloween

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Greetings from the Skywalker Family –
Anakin “You Can Call Me Darth” and Padme,
our children Luke and Leia,
and don’t forget Yoda!

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Boo carved his own pumpkin this year.

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Happy Birthday, Luke, I am your father.

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Help me, Obi Wan Kenobi, you’re our only hope!

We had a great time this year! We loaded Yoda and R2D2 in the wagon, along with the iPod playing the Star Wars soundtrack. I’m not sure everyone got that our characters were a family, but they all liked the overall theme. Yoda really made the whole thing. One group of kids was talking about how one family dressed up as the Incredibles last year. “They even had Jack Jack!” “Jack Jack, too?” “Yeah, it was cute.” I turned to her and said, “That was us!” Very funny.

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