11.15.2011

like minky?

We are low on chenille right now! Please note that your order may be sewn up with minky fabric if we are out of chenille.

Our loss is your gain! Use coupon codes MAKEITMINKY or MAKEITTERRY to save 20% by having your order sewn up with minky or terry cloth for a limited time!

1.19.2011

for the super wonder women


A supermom put together this superhero treasury last night while trying to get her superbaby to sleep. ;)

1.18.2011

more samples on sale

I just added a bunch of bibs to the sample sale in my Etsy shop. Click here to see all the bibs offered!



some minky bibs added too! regularly $8 each, on sale for $6

and don't forget about the New Year discount code - enter HNY2011 during checkout for 11% off of your order!

newest treasuries






Thank you to fellow Etsians DevinPrather, summergirl80, appletreeboutique, HandmadeWhimzy, cthings, and AveryLane for including our bibs in their treasuries this past week!



1.14.2011

halfie birthday


My oldest's half birthday falls on my birthday, so there's always a lot of cake and cupcake baking around this time of year. :)


She told me she wanted to make these cupcakes, and I silently squealed for joy. These are so much fun to make. So messy, so fun.


Sprinkles and fondant for that extra punch o' sugar I'm sure her teacher was thrilled about!


Colby's new favorite color is no longer pink (I cried a little when she told me) and is now BLUE. :)

1.11.2011

I pi-tea the fool



hahahahahahahahahaha (I ordered one)

okay I love this too:

CatyLou Quilts

I took inventory of our fabrics, patterns and bolt-ends and have been busy listing them in our fabric shop on Etsy. Lots to go, but progress is being made! ;)


1.08.2011

texas-ware



I love Texas-Ware as much as I love Pyrex. The same night we found the chocolate chip cookie bowl, we also found a set of Texas-Ware speckled cups and saucers.


I was surprised at how many Texas-Ware mixing bowls we found too (think Rachael Ray's garbage bowls), but they were all priced at $30-$40 each. You can find the bowls on Etsy and eBay too. I reeeeeaally want one, I'll have to stalk them for awhile.


When we found them in the bottom row of a booth, we agreed they'd be perfect for tea parties.

So of course they had to come home with us. Another happy birthday to me! Now all the hubby has to get me is some more Ceylon cinnamon from Penzeys and he's set. I make it so easy for him. ;)

There is a 51 piece set on Etsy right now that includes dinner plates, cups, sugar bowls and more fun stuff...please buy it so that I don't have to.

Zak! Designs has a newer version of confetti bowls available too, you can find them on the Rachael Ray website and on Amazon.

diy bangles

a package of goodies arrived from diybangles.com this morning:



time to find the mod podge and wood burning tool!

the chocolate chip cookie bowl

I love me some vintage Pyrex. Especially this bowl:



My mom has the exact same bowl, and hers is the one we always mixed up batches of chocolate chip cookies in. And served up a meal of spaghetti cabayero in. So I knew when I saw the same bowl last night for $12.50 at the antique mall, I had to buy it. Happy early birthday to me!



It was like deja-vu a thousand times over washing the bowl in the sink last night! I can't tell you how many times I washed that bowl growing up. Or as a grown-up home for Thanksgiving a few weeks ago. ;)

We had to break in the bowl.

The bowl worked!

This is hubby's micro rock crawler. He put beebee pellets in the tires so that it can do all sorts of cooler things. Like span huge cookie obstacles.



Chocolate Chip Cookies

1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, softened
1/2 cup shortening*
3/4 cup brown sugar
3/4 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs, room temp
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 1/4 cups flour**
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
chocolate chips*** (lots)

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Cream together the butter, shortening and sugars. Mix in the eggs and vanilla.

In a separate bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda and salt. Combine the flour mixture with the butter mixture. Then fold in the chocolate chips.

Drop by spoonfuls onto a cookie sheet and bake for 8-10 minutes. Let cool on the sheet for a few minutes and then transfer to a cooling rack. Makes about 5-6 dozen.


*instead of 1/2 cup of shortening you can substitute a 1/2 cup of margarine, or use another 1/2 cup of butter

**we typically use bread flour because I buy it in the big honkin' bag at Sam's Club for cinnamon rolls, etc.

***I like to use 3 different kinds of chocolate: milk chocolate, semi-sweet and a super-dark (like Ghirardelli 60% bittersweet). We usually add about half a bag of each, or cut up chocolate bars. Or try butterscotch chips in place of one of the chocolates. So good!

1.07.2011

Etsy fashion plates

SimandCharlieDesigns is the Etsian behind this very cool idea for curating a treasury. She found 4 head shots and then created complete outfits for each of the girls. Love this idea! Kind-of like fashion plates, Etsy style. I have a feeling it's going to start a new treasury trend.

(side note: just emailed my mom to see if she still has my fashion plates set...I'm hoping they didn't meet the same fate as my She-Ra castle)

After you check out the treasury, check out SimandCharlieDesigns' Etsy shop. It features colorful Etsy banners and printable art, including this fill-in-the-blank dry erase love letter:

and this Alice in Wonderland-inspired Impossible Things:


I might have to order that one. We love Alice in Wonderland. It would be fun way to coerce a smile out of tired grumpsters in the mornings when I'm trying to get them to eat their Froot Loops.

1.06.2011

baked love

I have a love/like relationship with brownies. I love the box mixes. And up until this point, I've only liked all of the from-scratch brownie recipes I've tried. Box mixes = yum! From-scratch recipes = eh. I don't want my brownies to taste like Texas sheet cake, or to taste like they came from the school cafeteria. Or maybe the brownies I'm remembering from the school cafeteria were actually Texas sheet cake. Who knows. But, up until this point, that's what all the recipes I've tried have tasted like.

There's nothing wrong with Texas sheet cake. It's just not one of my personal favorites in the baking world. And I'm Texan so I can say that. Ok not really. But my dad is from Texas so when I was little I always thought that meant I was Texan, the same as I was Irish/Czechoslovakian.

(but since Czechoslovakia split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia...where does that leave my family? Czech? Slovakian?)

Anyway, back to brownies. Basically what I have been searching for is a from-scratch recipe that tastes just like a box mix. This makes no sense. I know this. But it is what it is.

Enter Baked. Or, my Baked: New Frontiers in Baking cookbook that I ordered earlier this year. More specifically, The Baked Brownie recipe.

Mercy. Crunchy top, gooey chewy center.

Can I get a brownie Amen?

Finally, a brownie recipe that is not only as good as a box of Betty Crocker - it blows Betty Crocker out of the water (or the Willy Wonka chocolate river).

And it's Oprah-approved. She totally dubbed it her favorite brownie.

Look at those two in the background. All ready with their glass of milk even.

Tips from Baked: A great brownie is easy to make, but you have to be aware of several factors.

1. Use a dark cocoa powder, like Valrhona. A pale, light-colored cocoa does not have enough depth.

2. Make sure your eggs are room temperature and do not overbeat them into the batter.

3. Make sure you check your brownies often while baking. Once the brownies have been overbaked slightly, they have reached the point of no return.

Oh, and buy the new Baked cookbook too: Baked Explorations.

milk day


Thank you to BlueTurtleCrafts for including our Moo bib in her January 11th - Milk Day treasury.

1.05.2011

goodbye paper napkins

We go through paper napkins like water. Each night after supper I'd make a mental note to look up cloth napkins, but with a million and 2 distractions I'd forget about my mental note.

Until yesterday!



You can find gorgeous handmade napkins on Etsy, and I'm sure the big box stores all carry them. But I needed a lot. So I went to Sam's Club. They had 8-packs for just under $8.00.

But leaving them white wasn't any fun. Bust out the Rit! I wanted to bust out the Dylon but for some reason the big box didn't have them anymore and I was too lazy to go to Joanns.

I filled up the sink with enough water for 6-8 napkins to move around freely, added 4 tablespoons of salt, and then mixed the dye into 2 cups of warm water before pouring it into the sink.

I added the pre-soaked napkins and stirred them around. You're supposed to stir constantly for 10-30 minutes according to the directions. I tried to do this - but it just didn't happen (it never happens). I stirred for maybe a few minutes and then walked by every 10 minutes or so and stirred them around.

After the time was up I rinsed them in water until the water ran clear, ran them through a couple cycles in the washing machine, and then threw them in the dryer.

The napkins are part polyester, so I didn't expect the dye to take as well as it would have to 100% cotton, but they still turned out to be really pretty, soft colors. The kids love them! And yay for no more paper napkins.

These would also be fun to dress up with fabric embellishments for different holidays or to match to your kitchen colors.