Fimo Models

St Patrick’s Day round up.

Continuing in my theme of always being behind, here is a round up of the crafts we ended up having fun with for St Patrick’s Day. We did manage to find out a bit about the real story too, mostly because Amelie uttered the importal #homeedfail sentence…..

“What’s that story about St Patrick and the leprechauns???”

:roll: :roll: :roll:

In our quest to do every possible festivity in Fimo, Hama and pompoms,we really went for it.

One pompom leprechaun :lol:

I fell properly in love with Maddy’s Fimo green chap.

And her hat, made from card and covered in PVA and green tissue was nothing short of fabulous.

Maddy was in fact my main crafty compatriot in this. Her Lego was brilliant :lol:
Lego St Patrick's Day model.

She even helped me organise some new free Hama Bead patterns, though we didn’t get as far as making them this time.

Daffodils at WedEd

Wednesday this week marked a a big improvement in things generally. Not only was I able to drive myself to WedEd or the first time since having Ben but he was also manageable enough for me to be able to get on with being part of the educational offerings again.So this week I brought “Daffodils” along with me which marked a change in itself since I don’t think I’ve been able to read that poem for the last 19 years, never mind the last 2 years.

We started off by discussing the inspiration for the poem, which comes from a walk Wordsworth took with his sister, who then wrote about the day. We discussed the female influences on his life, the fat that his wife wrote two lines of the poem (rather enlightened really, for a man to accept literary assistance from a wife in those days) and that the death of his brother affected him deeply. We touched briefly on the English Romantic period and how that altered the nature of poetry to be more personal and emotional and to have more basis in nature and mentioned the idea of pastoral poetry rather than story telling poetry.

I’m planning to get them to start doing poetry appreciations soon, so one thing I want to do is create a timeline together of all the poems we’ve read so get a feel for how poetry changes and start to categorise poetry too. We’ll make a start on working at that next time and some of the older ones may start trying to work at poems in a way that will help them if they want to do a GCSE in literature soon. So this session was an exercise in looking critically at a poem while still hopefully enjoying it.

After reading the poem through to them I asked for first impressions. One group noticed the mood of the poet very quickly and that towards the end he was reflecting on something and feeling sad. The other focused more on him being happy at the time of the event. We spent some time getting them to think of odd memories of particular, trivial evnts that have stuck in their minds for some reason and the things that call them to mind; light, temperature, smells or other triggers and explored the fact that this memory is something positive for the author in darker days.

Next we looked at the language of the poem and the words used to describe the daffodils. One group picked up on the idea of precious treasure in the words golden, shines and twinkles, while the other saw a link between daffodils coming and going but being ever present as bulbs under the ground and the stars of the milky way being there but not always visible. We looked at the idea of the shape of the milky way describing the shape of the belt of flowers and found other words describing the nature and scene he portrays.

Next came a look at personification. I read the poem again and got them to listen for words that described the daffodils movement and they found their way to the idea of them as dancers. One child picked up on the poet also referring to himself as a lonely cloud so we talked about the idea in reverse, how a crowd of daffodils are portrayed as happy dancers while he, a human, is reduced to a lonely cloud. We linked this to the end of the poem and looked at how the emotions of the poem change from bleak to joyful and them back to a pensive but peaceful mood at the end. This led naturally into briefly looking at rhyming pattern and how it is similar in pattern to some love poetry and the shortened lines of the last verse adding mood after the flowing lines of the earlier verses.

For a bit of light relief, I took my iPad and showed them some Fimo daffodils and then let them loose to make some. I thought it might fix the poem in their minds :)

***

I’m never very good at describing the rest of WedEd, though it is always excellent but a lot of it goes over my head. I’m so unscience-y it is untrue :shock: However, Zoe organised them through Sketch Tuesday and Em did more fabulous animation things with them and Helen made batteries using foil, salt water and 2p pieces. They LOVED that.

I’m not sure what the pencil game was, but it kept several of them quiet.

There was some male bonding.

And Ben did this for a lot of the day…

…making up for it when he got home by feeding for 8 solid hours and then sleeping through the night for the first time. (Thereby terrifying the life out of me when I woke at 6.15am and he was still asleep.)

And excellent day. They are always great, my kids love them more than anything else; I must remember to blog them more often!

Mothers Day Card Crafts

This year I thought it would be good to reclaim Mother’s Day, given that last year it was right up there with one of the saddest ‘ignore it’ days of the year. I know the girls and Max found it hard to know how to deal with it. Given I’m also trying to get back into doing crafts on the blog/with the girls/ for the business blogs, I thought I’d try my hand at something pretty and quick in between baby feeds. Since I do love my Fimo, I thought I would make some Mother’s Day card toppers, using scrap Fimo & my icing cutters and see what happened. I was hoping the girls would get involved and help me, but sadly they were too deeply engrossed in making sock dolls on the day :lol:

Naturally my first point of call was Pinterest, to make up a design ideas board. Flowers, butterflies and cake seem to feature heavily in the stakes for pretty mothers day cards, so I went for flowers as easy to do in ‘between baby feed’ time slots.

I’m lucky to have lots of icing cutters that I’ve collected up through the years, which means that flowers in particular are relatively easy to cut out quickly.

As a quick and cheerful craft, I cut out, decorated and baked a pile of shapes in various colours, all left over bits from cheap kits the girls had done recently and then spent a bit of time arranging them in various patterns on card. Actually this was the point at which various girls pottered over to help and using some scrapbooking accessories, we had a lot of fun making designs of various sorts and seeing what the effects were.

Fimo is a great way to make personalised Mother’s Day cards, but you might not have access to all the cutters I do so, in lieu of the flower making tutorial I really must do, here are a few hand made versions. None of the ‘blue set’ flowers are cut out and all are made just with blobs of polymer clay pushed together or snakes of it rolled up.

I actually liked these even more I think and they’d be very achievable by younger children. What the girls liked was that we ended up with a stash of flowers and bits and bobs as embellishments and decorations; I’m fairly sure when I get my Mothers Day cards this year, I’ll recognise some of the pieces :lol:

A few weeks ago, I happened upon a set of metal stamps, so I used these to personalise the cards a bit more. I’m more of the ‘oh my goodness I forgot, I better do something online that can be delivered direct on a Sunday’ type person and am therefore permanently put to shame by my sister, who used to work in a card shop and NEVER. EVER. FAILS. to send cards :lol: so I’m more likely to be using a service like Hallmark Greeting Cards to cover up my postal ineptitude but the stamps were rather endearing and, once I had got over forgetting to check which way up they were, I got on famously.


Rubbing gold acrylic paint over the surface and wiping it off with tissue, proved to be a fabulous way to add some glam to them. If you are feeling educational, you might even call that spelling practise.

Having wended my way through this little project on my own (albeit at some speed, so I’m not sure these are my best work ever!) I realised that I’d happened upon a fair few ideas for expanding similar projects. One was that the girls could easily photograph their artwork, edit it and print it out, so that it was a card of their on design from the ground up, but ending in a printed piece of work. Just using a phone app, we came up with these quite quickly, which, printed on glossy paper, would look gorgeous.

All I need to do now, aside from being a nice enough mum to inspire them to have a go themselves, is to come up with some other projects to put these ideas into practise with and I can probably call this Design and Technology ;)

St Patrick Day craft.

One or other of the children pointed out that with rainbows and green as his theme, we should have called Ben Patrick instead. I did try, but no one would have it at the time :)

Today I wanted to do something crafty with the girls and got as far as pulling out some inspiration, including the pinterest board I did last year (but failed to be meaningful with then too). Unfortunately life got in the way again, with an infernal itch in my scar driving me mad till I had to go to the doctor to have a stitch cut out (which hasn’t really worked). Still Maddy, Josie and Amelie had a good go and tomorrow I will definitely find a story to read to them so they know a bit more about it.

 A while ago Maddy tried to do something without using fimo for any of it. However in the end she conceded that fimo is good for everything :lol: these look lovely and would make great fridge magnets I think. The letters are metal letter stamps thati got for the princely sum of £15 on eBay. We used some. Zoe’s last week, proper engineering ones. I don’t know why these were so cheap, given other sets were 10 times the cost, but I do love them and can foresee lots of crafting with them.

Christmas Camp 2011

I’ve got a group of friends who I met online when Maddy was tiny, using now wildly outdated ways of connecting with like-minded souls such as yahoo groups (before Facebook and Twitter, imagine!). They became real life friends remarkably quickly. We did our first camp together, some of us, when Amelie was 4 months old by which time I’d already met several others of them in person. Since then we’ve stayed at each others houses, shared holidays, become godparents to each others children and much more. We’ve seen each other through tragedy and triumph and waxing and waning fortunes and friendships. In some respects I feel I’ve grown up with them; they are my family of choice and rank up there close to my brother and sister in terms of the people I turn to in a crisis or tell news to first.

I’m incredibly blessed to have them; some of them are the only people who met Freddie, some of them are the only people who came to his funeral, they are people who chose the music and helped write the poem and know my darkest secrets. Among us, this group of people, are women who have been exactly where I am and because of them I am the parent and person I am. I was a very different emerging parent when I first met them and I’m so grateful and glad of the influence they have been on me. And they’ve championed our business, packed and carried boxes on visits in the olden days, bought from me when cash was tight. I’ve tried to do the same in return, though I am not sure I’ve had the opportunity to return all the favours :lol:

For the last few years we’ve done a Christmas camp together, getting together to share a few nights of fun and frivolity and friendship before the festivities start. There are always people who can’t go, through work, or school commitments or health, money or distance and this year, I was one of them :( I was fully paid up and intending to go, but the girls did the panto audition without me fully realising them implications and, because camp was in our busiest business week (so Max couldn’t ferry girls back and forward) and we only have one car, I was then in the position of having to let one pair or another of children down. I was gutted too as last year was a camp I barely made it through, it being filled with happiness when I was desperate and overrun with the latest batch of toddlers and babies who I could barely face. I’d been really looking forward to going this time, even if Fran might have had to stay behind for school.

Thankfully these friends offered (I may have hinted a bit!) to take Maddy and Josie with them and mum and dad them for the week. To my surprise Josie went for this idea without hesitation, not bad for a child who is only just 7 and was a real home bird till recently. Maddy, who basically needs no one but herself, was delighted by the idea, so everyone got to do what they wanted (except me, but I guess that’s a mum’s role at times!)


Josie decided quickly that any temporary mum with in car DVD players was okay by her ;)

In the entire week, I spoke to her and Maddy once; they were just having too much fun to bother with tedium like speaking to their parents. According to my friends, they were mostly seen as a passing blur as they whirled between friends. Josie was supposed to come home with one or other temporary head mum on Thursday but didn’t, preferring to stay to the very end – 5 whole nights away from home! She had so much to tell me; long walks, geocaching, dinners, who she played with, what they played – but not a single “I missed you!” I think that’s a good sign :lol:

Christmas Camp is characterised (apart from late nights and drinking!) by the Christmas dinner and Secret Santa which is done each year. We had originally had places, so we had pairs to make for (and receive from, thank you!) The girls are all pretty good at making their own now (they have to be handmade or charity shop or under £3) and here are our offerings.


From Fran. (Her best ever model, she was so proud!)


From Maddy. (Classy as ever!)


From Amelie (She has a matching bracelet as hers was for her BFF!)



From Josie. (Loved her models, she is getting good!)

I was charged with making one for the Secret Santa organiser who has just had a very exciting year!

No pressure then! I was very proud of it so you can see more photos and all about it over at my Fimo-Ideas blog if you wish.

I may have missed out this time, but I’m so grateful to my friends for giving my girls a great week, for including me and sending me updates and photos of them and for being people I could absolutely trust to keep them safe and well and happy. Love you all. Can’t be long now till the children are booking these weeks themselves and asking us if we’d like to be parked in the annexe while they stay up late and drink wine without us. I hope so anyway. I’ve got a lot of Christmas camping left in me yet :lol:

Fimo Christmas Penguin Tutorial

Josie had a belated birthday party this week with her friend BB. I’m a bit of a party failure and Josie was always going to be upstaged by BB’s amazing playable Angry Birds cake, but I made her some Fimo penguins to go on a (oh the shame) bought cake and she was very delighted with them.

It inspired me to have a go at making a Christmas penguin and creating a tutorial. I’m really pleased with it and I hope it will inspire you to have a go with this amazing craft material.

Fimo Christmas Penguin

Christmas Fimo Penguin

The girls have also been having a go with some tester snowglobe ideas, using tiny jars from Hobbycraft. Here is a taster of what they made – we’ve got more plans for these later!

Photo

I’d have got away with it too…

Now we are back in the swing of daily ‘normals’ work, which always leads for a happier household, we’re getting much more done in general. I like it when we swing back into these productive periods of time; even doing sensible if slightly boring stuff first thing in the morning tends to make the day better. A bit of maths, reading and spelling practise tends to lead into the later morning being used up with science experiments from various books which these days the girls will general facilitate themselves. Recently there was a huge amount of entertainment learning gleaned from a Galore Park book where you have to have a bowl of warm, cold and body temperature water and put one hand in warm, and one in cold and then both together in the lukewarm afterwards. Much excitement from how weird that felt! Then in the afternoons craft tends to lead to play and some down time before we head out to the evening activities, which are all back in full flow now.

The other week we got sent a free Scooby Doo Mystery House for review; in general this house doesn’t have a lot of plastic toys (aside from a recent spate of strawberry scented dolls and Playmobil) so it was a bit of a novelty. My initial reaction was a bit “argh” as it didn’t have any play figures in the set and I wasn’t sure it was going to be easy to review it without them; I feared population with strawberry girlies was imminent! But the company kindly supplied some too and the girls have had several fun days playing with it. Scooby Doo (who yes, really has got himself a Facebook page!) is a big favourite here; they like all the different series’ although I think they are as baffled as I am (I listen, I don’t watch) by the recent outbreak of romances between the characters. What next, a Fred flavoured Daphne-ette? But the vintage episodes have primed them well and so they entertained themselves with lots of monster and trap related games with the house. Luckily the girls are fairly careful players these days; there are lots of working parts, so plenty of play value, but some of them are fairly fragile. I do think it should have come with at least one character and monster too really. However, it has made them laugh and play nicely together, so that’s fine by me :)

As it so often the case, it is where a toy leads that counts. Maddy had masses of fun doing a photo shoot for me and setting up various scenes to see what looked most dramatic.

My absolute favourite thing though, was how she dealt with the absence of Fred and Daphne from the figurine set. Have Fimo, will create!

I think they are just brilliant :) And it ticked the product design box for that week too ;)

Thank you!
Mum and Dad Blog Awards 2012

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