Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Halloween 5k

Saturday we ran the Halloween 5k that I ran last year. During the awards ceremony they gave a bag of Halloween candy to the kids who ran the race and LMS decided then and there that she had to run the race so she could get a bag of candy (yes, we know one of her motivators).

About a month ago I signed us both up and then tried to think of costumes to wear. I couldn't think of anything particular, so we just went the mini-me route and tried to find matching outfits, which isn't as easy as it sounds. I eventually found very similar tech shirts at Target and matching tutu-floofy skirts in the costume aisle at Walmart.
You can't see LMS's skirt in the pic above, but you can see it below. She's covering her face because she didn't want me to take a picture of her smiling.

Last year it was very cold and rained the whole race. This year the weather was perfect: a slight chill, but still warm enough to wear short sleeves, and no wind or rain to contend with.

We started training for the race this summer, but getting sick derailed our training program and we never quite got back on track. So I wasn't expecting LMS to run the whole 3.1 miles, and she didn't. I had to coax her along after the first mile, but we were able to finish in 46:33 (my slowest 5k ever, but it wasn't about me, it was about LMS).  I think that's a great time for our 6 year old's first 5k. I think I was 13 or 14 the first time I ran a 5k, so I'm super excited that she's starting so young.

During the awards ceremony after the race, kids 8 and under who finished the race were invited to come get a bag of treats. LMS was way more excited than this photo suggests. And it instantly erased the memory of all the complaints she'd had during the race. On the way home, I asked her if she wanted to do the race again next year, and she immediately replied "Sure!" in an excited voice.
crappy indoor photo

LMS's next race will be a lot shorter: the 1/2 mile Turkey Trot fun run on Thanksgiving day. 
And yes, we will be doing some training before then.

How old were you when you ran your first 5k?

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Sunday Funny

having fun at the park

Earlier this week I looked over at LMS, who was quietly doing her Japanese- filling in the Hiragana chart. I noticed she'd written the characters very lightly, so I asked why she'd done that.

"Because it's invisible ink!"

Of course, why didn't I think of that?

Friday, October 26, 2012

Princess Buttercup Halloween Costume


A few months ago the Little Miss decided she wanted to be Princess Buttercup for Halloween. I figured she meant the wedding dress
but she meant the red riding dress

Ok, not a problem- the red dress would be easier and a lot less fiddly than all the trim on the wedding dress.
I started by using the pattern I made for her Princess Leia dress last year, but I added a lot to the sleeves to allow for the very full sleeves.  I also added a bit on the sides and to the length to bring the pattern up a size.

After cutting it out though, I realized the bodice needed to be four separate pieces, not one, so I modified my pattern and fiddled with it a bit before it finally fit LMS right. I lined the bodice (but not the skirt) by doubling the fabric, but I don't think it was necessary, and I think the seams would lay a little flatter without the extra bulk. This would really depend on the fabric used, though. I used a polyester fabric with a really nice drape. It seems pretty similar to the fabric I used for the Princess Leia dress- it had a nice drape, also.

After getting the bodice sewn together how I wanted it, I sewed in the sleeves, then did all those gathers in the cuffs. The costuming site I consulted called it cramming, and while I don't know if I used the proper technique, I can say that I definitely crammed a lot of gathers into a tiny cuff.
Has anyone else noticed how hard it is to photograph the color red? 
I ended up graying the photos to make it easier to see the details.

After getting the sleeves just right I pinned the skirt pieces on, inserting pleats in the front and back for fullness. Then it was just a matter of sewing the bodice to the skirt, and then sewing the the side seams starting at the cuffs and ending at the bottom of the skirt.

The finishing touches were the hem and the grommets in the cuffs- I used my Crop-o-dile for the grommets and it was super easy.


Buttercup also wears a belt and a hairnet thingy, so of course I needed to make them too. I used some gold trim, some lightweight fusible web, some ribbon, and a small piece of velcro for the belt. 

I ironed the trim to the ribbon, then sewed around the circles to make sure it stayed on. I then cut the belt to fit around LMS's waist and sewed some velcro to the ends. I sewed the leftover pieces so they'd hang down on the sides, just like in the movie.

And since the Little Miss now has short hair, I made a wig for her to wear. I used one of the sleeves from the white t-shirt I used for the candy corn ruffle skirt as the base, and made it the same way I made the Rapunzel wig I ended up not wearing in the Disney Half Marathon. I hot glued some bead trim in a grid pattern, then glued it to the wig along with some trim around the outer edge of the thingy (not quite a crown, is it a headdress, a fancy hair net?).



I also pulled the hair back in a knot, like Princess Buttercup's.

We had our ward trunk or treat last night, so we took most of these photos before the activity. It wasn't till I started writing this post at 10:30 pm that I realized I forgot all about the belt, and LMS went around all night without it. 

Ooops. 

So we had to do another round of photos this morning so we could get the full effect. I love how it turned out!





Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Ruffled Candy Corn Skirt

While browsing blog posts in Google Reader, I came across the cutest ruffled candy corn skirt here.

She upcycled old t-shirts, but I didn't have any old t-shirts to use. I checked the dollar store, hoping to find some cheap shirts there, but they only had black t-shirts. So I went to JoAnns, where I bought 3 adult size L shirts for $9. Not as good as free or $3, but $9 isn't terrible, and I have some scraps leftover for other projects.

Because I used adult L shirts I had to cut down the white shirt to use for the skirt base, but from there I followed her directions except I made the ruffles 5" instead of 4", which resulted in a longer skirt.

Getting the ruffles evenly spaced is always the part that takes the longest, but other than that, it was a quick and easy project. And it turned out large enough that she can wear it next year, too :) She got lots of compliments when she wore it the other day. I think we got the t-shirt at Target on clearance after Halloween last year.


Have you sewn any cute Halloween outfits?

Monday, October 22, 2012

48 Hour Trip Across the Country and Back


Last weekend we had a 48 hour whirlwind trip to California and back for the funeral of one of my uncles. In hindsight, we should have spread out the trip a bit longer (all that travel time was very intense), but I’m glad we were able to go.

We were up super early to drive to the big airport two hours away (we prefer the small airport 10 minutes away, but because of the short notice had to go with the big airport). Two flights later, my brother picked us up from the airport and we drove to Monterey. We had a few minutes to spare, so we drove past the houses we used to live in then went to the church for the funeral. It was a very nice service, and we were able to see most of my aunts and uncles on my mom’s side, as well as a good number of my cousins. It’s been quite a few years since we had a family reunion, and it’s sad that it took a funeral to bring us together.

We conked out pretty early (local time, but late our time) but got to sleep in a little before heading back to the airport. Our layover on this leg happened to be 3 ½ hours long in the airport closest to Mr M’s and my parents. So his parents, my parents, my youngest brother (who’s still in high school) and Mr M’s sister and her kids all drove out and spent a couple hours visiting with us. Since out of that group we’ve only seen my dad in the last 15 months, it was a really good visit. So good that we were almost late for our plane.
The Little Miss with Mr M's parents

The Little Miss with my parents

Technically we got to the gate after the time they should have started boarding, but for whatever reason they hadn’t started yet. Which was nice, since we really needed to visit the restroom before getting on the plane.  On the trip out we were stuck in our seats for the first 2 ½ hours because of turbulence and the Little Miss was NOT happy. Luckily I was able to distract her and she made it till they let us out of our seats. Several adults didn’t and got lectured by the flight attendants on the dangers of being out of their seats in turbulence. But when you gotta go, you gotta go. We didn't want a repeat of that, so we hit the bathrooms one last time before boarding.

We landed after an uneventful flight and drove home on nearly deserted freeways- 2 am is about the only time that happens. Which was nice till the car in the left lane a ways ahead of us suddenly flipped two complete donuts before swerving across the remaining lanes of the five lane freeway and pulling off to the right shoulder and turning the headlights off. 30 seconds later, the headlights were back on and they pulled back onto the freeway.

?????????????

Despite the donuts, the driver seemed to be in control- no blown tire, no wild veering off into the concrete median thingy. It was really bizarre. I’m just glad we weren’t closer when it happened, though we did have to brake a little to make sure we didn’t get too close to the craziness.

We drove the rest of the way home and crashed in our beds- 48 hours after we left.

What’s the craziest thing you’ve seen on a freeway?

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Sunday Funny

What happens when I leave my camera laying around? 

Little Miss Sunshine takes pictures of her Nannie.



She did several versions, and while the exposure is off and they're not in focus, I think it's hilarious.
Obviously she's watched me taking multiple pictures of the same thing, trying to get it right.

Friday, October 12, 2012

Fun with Fireplaces

This week was a vacation week for us, and I spent my time diligently working on projects around the house instead of going on fun road trips with my sister

** I painted the vanity in the upstairs hall bathroom. The paint is still curing, so I haven't reinstalled the hardware yet, so no picture.

** I FINALLY finished painting the shelves for the bookshelves in the library. They're now curing also, so again, no pictures. While I was at it, I finished painting some other wood projects also.

** I worked on our living room. This included spackling and sanding the tongue and groove paneling, then priming it and painting it.  I then spackled the walls where the crown moulding used to be- I used an exacto knife to cut the caulk, but still managed to peel the paint when I took down the crown moulding. Then I sanded and primed in preparation for new paint. I also ripped out the fireplace surround and spackled and primed there as well. After that I taped off all the woodwork, and am now ready to paint the walls- no more dull gray!

I don't have pictures yet of the fireplace in it's spackled and primed glory, but here's a before picture. The black slate is ugly and I detest the 1 inch wide mantle- it's completely useless.

And here's a picture with everything ripped out, and the mess not yet cleaned up. I had to take a hammer to the slab in front of the fireplace and break it into 4 or 5 pieces to remove it- it was firmly glued to the plywood that was screwed to the 2x4 frame. Way more work than I anticipated, but at least it's done.

If you look closely, the hole above the fireplace looks a lot different. Turns out that the previous owners built a box that was smaller and less deep than the original TV hole (which is two feet deep). Our neighbors had mentioned that there used to be a TV above the fireplace, but I could never figure out how- the space was too small and there were no plugs. It all made sense once I pulled the trim off. We're still deciding what we're going to do with the gaping hole: drywall over it or create some hidden storage. I'm leaning toward the latter, but haven't yet figured out how to make the hidden storage look good and not be obvious.

 I'll post more pictures next week as I get more done. The fireplace probably won't get finished right away, as we're still deciding what exactly we want to do with it. Anything should be better than that nasty black slate, but we don't want to just slap something up.

Friday, October 5, 2012

Cub Scout Bat Neckerchief Slide


Not too long ago I was released from my calling as Relief Society president and called as a Cub Scout den leader. I've never done Scouts before, but I'm looking forward to learning new things, which happens with all my callings. I remembered that my mom was a Scout leader for a number of years and that she had quite a collection of neckerchief slides that they had made, so I gave her a call and she sent me some pictures of the slides for visual inspiration.

We'll probably do a new slide each month, which will help the boys build a collection, which is one of their requirements (at least it is for the Wolf Scouts). For our first slide we did an easy bat, which I thought was a good choice for the month of October.

Materials:
Black felt
1.5" black pom poms
.5 or .7mm googly eyes
1/2" conduit, cut into 3/4"long pieces (I used electrical conduit because it was cheaper than pvc pipe, but either would work, and I used a pvc pipe cutter that we already had to cut the pipe. A hacksaw would work also.)
cardstock for wing pattern
low temp hot glue gun (so the boys don't burn themselves)


 Draw a bat wing shape and cut it out of the card stock.

 Using card stock pattern, cut bat wings out of felt. A white marker of some kind would be helpful here. I didn't have one, so I just carefully held the pattern on the felt and cut around it.

 Use the glue gun to glue two googly eyes to a pom pom. I put a tiny dab of glue on the back of the eye, then stuck it to the pom pom.

 Glue the pom pom to the wings.

Then glue the wings to the conduit piece. My conduit had black writing on one side so to hide it I glued the bat wings over it.



All done and ready to be worn!




Thursday, October 4, 2012

Living Room Paneled Ceiling Progress


The night we moved into our house, I took a nice long bath in our new soaking tub. While I was drying off, I heard water dripping downstairs. I rushed downstairs and found water dripping from the ceiling.  I grabbed some plastic bins for the water to drip into and some towels to clean up the mess. The next day was Sunday (of course), but on Monday I called a plumber who came out and found the source of our problem: the coupler between the drain and the drain pipe had crumbled. Unfortunately, he only found this out after cutting 3 holes in our ceiling. After replacing the coupler, he patched the holes, but left the mudding and sanding to us.

After very close inspection (once we knew what to look for), previous water damage to the ceiling could be seen. We figure the prior owners (who only lived here two years) used the tub once, it leaked, and they never used it again. And they didn't tell us. Not cool.

We discussed just breaking out the mud and finishing off the patch job. There was two problems with this: I was doubtful we could make the patch job really look good, and I'm really allergic to the dust that comes from sanding down drywall mud. I get sick even if I'm using my face mask. And the dust would spread throughout the house, continuing to cause problems.

After some thought, I decided I wanted to put tongue and groove paneling on the ceiling. Mr M didn't have a preference, especially since he knew he wouldn't be doing the work because of his crazy work schedule :) Once we decided what we wanted to do, we still had to wait till some in-progress projects were finished. Which, of course, took a while.

So for the last year and a half, the ceiling in our living room has looked like this:

We bought the boards back in July because I thought we'd be able to finally get started. Of course, it didn't work out that way, so they've been sitting in a pile on the floor of the living room.

Until Friday night.

Friday my dad came for one of his short visits. Since we still hadn't gotten the paneling up, I asked my dad to help me finally get it done. He was kind enough to agree and to stay up till 1:30 am with me as we powered through the project. It's a good size room, but it only took 5 1/2 hours to cut and fit and nail all the boards.

I love how it looks! It totally changes the look of the room- my dad got a farmhouse vibe off it, and I'm hoping once we're done with everything it will have a beach cottagey feel. I have to spackle and sand all the nail holes, but then I can paint it and put the crown moulding back up.

I had originally thought I could do this project myself, with the help of a tall tripod that would hold up one end of the board while I worked on the other end. After installing the boards with help I have to say there is no way I could have done this on my own- not with the 8' tongue and groove boards. I'm so glad my dad was able to help me with this!


Materials:
21 pkgs of 5 1/4"x 8' primed composite tongue and groove boards (4 boards to a package)
Lots of 2" brads (already had)
brad gun
radial saw (for cutting boards to length)
table saw (for ripping the boards that were put in last and needed to be narrower)
jig saw (for cut outs around the electrical boxes for lights)

Method:
These boards are actually quite lightweight and only 1/4" thick, so we didn't bother with adhesive or even finding studs- just used lots of brads, especially on the corners of boards that butted up to each other. We started in one corner and worked our way across the room. We also moved up and down the room, turning when we came to the wall and working our way to the other wall, where we turned again. We tried to stagger where the seams were by using boards of varying lengths, which sometimes meant chopping a board shorter before nailing it up so that the seams weren't too close to each other. Because I'll put the crown moulding back up we didn't worry about butting the edges right up to the walls. Since the boards are tongue and groove, each one has to be fitted into the one next to it. Most of the time this went pretty well, but on occasion we used a section of a 1"x12" board that I pulled out the scrap bin to help push the boards together. We had to be careful not to ruin the tongue of each board, and the 1"x12" did a good job.


Why did we decide on the composite boards rather than solid wood boards? I had read some reviews that cited many problems with the tongues and grooves of the solid wood boards (they were in a package and couldn't be inspected before purchase). There were no such problems cited for the composite boards. Of the 21 packages we went through, we only had one board that truly could not be used- the groove ended up on the bottom of the board rather then down the middle of the board.  We set it aside, but we ended up ripping it down and using it to fill in the narrow space between the last full width boards and the wall, so we were still able to use it. The composite boards are also lighter and thinner than the solid wood boards, which is good, since we installed them on the ceiling. We could have used adhesive, but I didn't want to do something quite so permanent. I was a little concerned that it would be obvious that they're composite, but I don't think that will be a problem, especially once I've painted them.


Now I'm trying to decide if we should put white fan blades on the ceiling fan. I like the gray metal and it's a decent style as far as fans go, but I don't think the cherry wood fits with the beachy feel I'm aiming for. Thoughts?

Monday, October 1, 2012

September Goals Re-cap

LMS has started her fall soccer season- and I'm not coaching this time (yay!)

Since I wrote down some new goals, I thought I should track my progress at the end of each month. So here's how I did in the month of July:
(August's progress report can be found here)
(July's progress report can be found here)
(June's progress report can be found here)

A few goals under Health:
1. keep strengthening my knee and start running for longer periods of time/distance
I'm still struggling to exercise on a regular basis. My sleep schedule has been off since I got sick, which has made it harder to get early am workouts in. Still working on this.
2. train for and run at least 4 races by the end of 2012 (at least one half marathon)
I ran the 4 mile race Labor Day weekend, which brings my total to three races this year, the first of which was a half. Now I'm working toward a 5k I'm doing with LMS in October.
3. be more careful with my eating and lose some weight
I lost 4 more pounds, for a total of 15 pounds lost so far (yay!). I'm still watching my portions and we've started eating our larger meal at lunchtime rather than at dinner time. This started because I was having problems with nausea and lack of appetite in the evenings after being sick in August. The stomach problems have mostly cleared up, but I like how I feel when I eat less in the evening. Now I just have to be more on the ball with meal prep in the am.

A few goals under House:
1. finish painting all the rooms
I finished the trim work in the upstairs hall, bath and master bedroom, and painted the stairway. More rooms to go still...
2. do the family room ceiling
Finally got the paneling up! post to come... I need to spackle and paint, but the hardest part is done.
3. finish building built-in shelves in the library
Still painting the shelves- I swear this is a never-ending project.

A few goals under Homeschool:
1. stick to the schedule I've worked out, as much as possible
We're still doing pretty good.
2. be more consistent with violin practicing
Since we started school we're doing better because it's in our school schedule.

A few goals under Habits:
1. practice the piano more frequently
No time yet, maybe in October...
2. index several batches every week for FamilySearch
Tried to do some, but I'm having problems downloading the program to my new computer. I've tried a couple times and it hasn't worked. I need to figure out why.
3. have more meaningful daily scripture study (start journaling as I read)
I found some great ideas here and have started a topic journal, focusing on people in the Book of Mormon. 
How did you do with your goals this month?