stuff I made and mailed away

Here are a few things I made lately and then sent them away.

a gift sweetpod

My brother served a 2 year mission in Mexico and a friend from there just had her first baby.  She wanted a baby carrier that was more than a long piece of fabric, so I made this up for her.

zipper and lining

The lining is a honeydew green which I think is a fun surprise.

rolled up

I’m also behind on some baby gifts, but it’s always nice to get a surprise when your baby is 8 months old, right?  And the weather now is just right for a Sweet Pea pilot cap or two.

sweet pea pilot caps

I found this pig fabric a while ago at The Fancy Tiger which was crying out to be made into bibs.

piggy bibs

Wouldn’t you agree that piggies are for bibs?

homemade geometric insets

homemade montessori geometric insets

Here is our newest Montessori activity– the geometric insets.  I’ve read about them and their use in all of the books I keep checking out from the library about Montessori education, and in the books I own as well.  It was after watching this video, though, that I really saw all the potential they held for our creative family.  I’ve been struggling with helping the kids see the value in good handwriting, but using this material properly gives practice in holding and using a pencil carefully.  And it’s fun!  Just what we need.

diamond tracing

I made them from red mat board I had left over from making my set of sandpaper (well, felt, really) letters which I’ll have to show you sometime.

concentration

I used some wooden trays I found at Joann’s (they fit perfectly in our cubbies) with some book board cut to fit at a slant to display and transport them.  The knobs are from Joann’s too.  I also made a drawing tray for Ian so his paper and inset are held in place when he traces.  It’s just 2 layers of book board, the top one with a 6″ x 6″ square cut out of the center.

geometric inset work

careful lines

The boys have all been hard at work.  Since I am insisting on them being used properly–  carefully traced and then colored in by drawing lines from left to right– Brenna is pretty resistant.  Oh well.

this book helped me out

geometric inset instructions

I used this book that was given to me by my mother in-law for instructions, along with a protractor, a ruler, a compass, and a sharp exacto knife.  I made a hexagon instead of a pentagon because hexagons just fit in geometric patterns better.

The results are lovely, and my three year old is intent on holding his pencil properly, and he’s happily occupied for long stretches of time.

designs by the 6 and 8 year olds

(by Jonah and Logan)

all triangles

by the 3 year old

(by Ian)

Sunday afternoon

We played a game of pictionary, pulling words out of a bowl and drawing them for all to guess.  The big kids thought Ian’s drawings were too cute to erase until they were documented with photos.

owl

After he was done drawing each one he insisted on copying the word from his slip of paper.

tie

Can you stand the cuteness?

rainbow

He was much more eager to erase than anyone else was.

erasing the rainbow