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Friday, December 13, 2013

Crochet 2DS Case

Batman 2DS Case

Good morning, tiny corner!  I have missed you.  Between my new job and studying, I haven't really had too much time for much (except for wasting my time on Pinterest.... sounds like I need to get my priorities straight!)  Anyways, finals are over, and "it's beginning to look a lot like Christmas."


I promised a bit back that I was going to make my husband a case for his Nintendo 2DS that he got for his birthday. The case was super simple to put together, and didn't take very long.  I've actually had it completed for a while, but haven't gotten a chance to tell you about it.

I used Caron Simply Soft yarn in black and red, a size D crochet hook, and worked (for the most part) with double crochet stitches in the round.  How many did I initially chain?  Who knows?  I was constantly measuring my work against the handheld gaming system to see if it would be a good fit.  The logo is an attempt at the Batman symbol; I found the pattern here at Louie's Loops via Pinterest...but we all know I'm not very good at following patterns.



This was also my first attempt at adding a zipper to a crochet project.  It is really easy, though it would have been much easier if I had pinned it in instead of just trying to hold it in place with my fingers while I tried to avoid poking myself. Though as plain and simple as I may think it is, my wonderful husband loves it, and that's all that matters.

UPDATE
I know it's hardly a win at all for something so obscure, but this is the #1 hit on Google for "Crochet 2DS Case," and I think that's cool. Maybe I should come up with a pattern...

Monday, November 4, 2013

Squares and Stripes (pt. II)

Girly Granny's Fraternal Twin

[Insert clever name for boy blanket here]

I'm so excited to have a boyish counterpart to my lovely Girly Granny Baby Blanket.  I figured it might increase my chances of selling one if I offered two; one stereotypical for each gender.  (Not sure what to sell them for, though.  I'm thinking $25, but that's negotiable.)
It went together really quickly, but I ended up with a truckload of schoolwork dumped on me at once and didn't get the opportunity to finish it for a while.  Well, Friday night I sealed it off after most of my stress was gone, and I love the end product (though I did accidentally sew one of the small squares on backwards, but if you can hardly tell it up close, you DEFINITELY can't from far away!)  What difference does it make?  The stitches look slightly different from the two different sides.  So, really...what's the difference?  Nothing, really.  Slight individuality, I guess? (though it's already one of a kind.)
This blanket also measures 31 inches square, and features the colors Navy, Pistachio, and White (some white leftover from the other blanket!) in 100% acrylic yarn.
What do you think?  

Thursday, October 24, 2013

One Thrifty Thursday

Shaving With Savings (Plus Soup!)

I try to keep an eye on expiration dates, especially with my coupons and such.

It turns out, I had a dollar ExtraBucks due to expire today, as well as a coupon for razor blade cartridges that I had snagged a while back from coupons.com.  It didn't stay online for very long; I'm glad I printed it.

Anyway, since we needed milk, I had an excuse to leave the house before hours of homework...plus I could spend time with my husband!

So first we hit CVS.  Here I made use of the $0.99 Progresso Soup deal, plus a coupon that knocked 50 cents off of two, making them $0.75 each. (coupons.com)  Take the dollar off with that, and we got two cans of really good soup for $0.48... (however we bought some cookies, so our receipt wasn't that beautiful.)

Next we hit our local Walmart; I had previously discovered that the razor cartridges are significantly cheaper there.  So, I grabbed the $15 four pack replacement cartridges for my razor  that I purchased this past summer (love it!). With my $6.00 off coupon in hand I was already at least partially excited; then I noticed the shaving cream right below it.

What was so special about the normal-priced shaving cream?  It came with a free disposable razor. New product!  (Schick Hydro Silk, buddy!)  Can you say "travel bag"? (I love my travel bag...now it is complete!)


So, these three items cost me only 11.41!

I love saving money on things that I use anyway!

As a side note, I got some black and red yarn to make a little bag (case is probably a more masculine word) for my husband's new 2DS. Maybe I can get to work on it soon.

You have also now had a first glance at my desk.  Congratulations; this is probably what I see for most of the day.

Monday, October 14, 2013

Squares and Stripes Forever

Girly Granny Baby Blanket

It's cuddly, soft, warm, and not my bed!

I started a couple of weeks ago making some granny squares to see if I could get over my writer's block for English Lit, and here I am with a successful blanket project that I'm excited to share with you!  (Kate the Hippo wants to share, too!)



I developed the pattern myself, and really enjoyed working on it.  (In fact, I grabbed some pistachio and navy yarn to see about possibly making a boyish version).

 
Doesn't it make you want to curl up and drink some milk?

Hand-made in Mississippi with 100% acrylic yarn, it measures about 31 inches square, so it is just a little small for my use.  Maybe perhaps there's a baby out there somewhere who would love to feel its warmth.

Hopefully, I can have some time to work on the blue and green one.  However, it looks like my workload for school might be a little much this week as I have lots of stuff to read and a speech to prepare.  Maybe I should speak on how to crochet a blanket...

It was nice to (somewhat but not totally) take a school break today and catch up on some housework since last week was so crazy.  Plus, I baked a cake for my sweet hubby's birthday!  Needless to say... I made a mess!

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Simple Stripe Scarf

Simple Stripe Scarf

Hello, again.  It's been a while since I've shown anything that I've been crocheting.  Perhaps I'm a little busy or something...
Anyway, here is a beautiful scarf I made a few weeks ago while watching Scrubs. (Mindlessly crocheting while watching television pretty much rocks!)  There's not much to it: it's 100% cotton (I Love this Cotton! from Hobby Lobby) but it would work well with other kinds of yarns as well as it drapes nicely.  I may try it again with Caron Simply Soft. (Why have I just now discovered how great that stuff is?)

It's inspired by a scarf that I saw on Fiber Flux via Pinterest. 

I say "inspired" because I didn't actually use her pattern, but took the idea and made something similar with double crochets.
Fiber flux is a great blog for free crochet patterns, just be sure if you use her patterns not to sell the product or copy the pattern elsewhere, as it belongs to her.

Here's a look at the stitches:

I love the double crochet stitch!  Anyhow, it builds really quickly, so if you'd like to improvise one yourself, grab a hook and turn on the television.  (Or go follow the pattern for the inspirational scarf...or any of her others.  It really is a great blog.)


Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Free Cereal from CVS!

I LOVE Free Cereal!

Yep, you heard me right.  With ExtraBucks, all three boxes were free.  Who doesn't want free cereal?
I got an e-mail with $3 ExtraBucks that I used on the $2.99 Honey Bunches of Oats (that generates $1 EB).
I also used $5 EB from a previous purchase on 2 for $5.00 Honey Nut Cheerios.

One of the boxes even came with coupons on General Mills products good until July 2014, so I should have paid attention and looked for another one.  Oops.  Rookie mistake.  I'm sorry.  I also think the Cheerios currently have a coupon available on Coupons.com, but I didn't print it before I ran to the store, so that would have cut down on my already less than a dollar I paid out of pocket.  I'm learning.
Anyway, as an avid cereal eater, I love this deal, and all I paid was tax (plus some on-sale candy I got for my husband).

Monday, September 23, 2013

[Toe]tally Organized

Shoebox Nail Polish

I've been meaning to get my polishes together since my polka dotted bag has been overflowing for a while. Taking a break from my reading English Literature, I reorganized part of the main bathroom's closet, and put some things in a shoe box.  I came back in to the room that I use as my study (which also happens to have my closet and our pantry), and I saw another shoe box laying around on the floor, while my nail polish was a disorganized mess.  
Thus: My Idea-
So, first I got my sample sized collections together and stacked them (woo hoo! Christmas!) Then I organized the other polishes by color, and put them in.  (Maybe sometime I should try a diagonal gradient).  Ta dah! They are all in one place and fit quite nicely.  I admit, it's not a wonderful shelf display of hundreds of colors, but it is very nice and functional, and by re-arranging placement, I can have a little wiggle room next time I reward myself with nail polish for some reason or another.

Monday, September 16, 2013

If A Necklace Could Talk

What A Necklace Says...

I decided to give my necklaces a nice place to hang on the wall to try and keep their chains from tangling. I'm not really big into jewelry, so I don't have a decked out jewelry box or peg board organizing system.
Just a nail beside my desk is sufficient for me.

Clothes and accessories can say a lot about a person. The gold piece, for those of you who are unfamiliar, is an award given to people who complete the Personal Progress program of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and it's bee charm is the Honor Bee and is given for providing extra service and reading the Book of Mormon again.  As for the Personal Progress program, I am honored to have completed it, and do believe it has helped me to become a better woman (and wife now).  The building is called the temple, and in our faith, we believe that there we can make covenants with God so our families can be together forever.  I was married in the temple, and it is the greatest thing.

As for the second necklace, it is an Origami Owl Living Locket.  I really like the concept of these necklaces. My older sister gave this one to me right before I got married.  It's about the size of a quarter, and currently has 5 charms.  (The "J" is hiding near the diamond ring.  For some reason, it's almost never visible. I should have gotten a dangle. Oh well!)  There is a wedding ring, my husband and mine's birthstones, and a little charm that says "Forever Family."  I don't know how many times I've seen "Put Your Wedding Dress on a Necklace!" on Pinterest.  Do you see that burnout flower in the back?  Yep; wedding dress.  I know that usually the lockets, if there is something in the back, usually have a little plate with a word on it, but I felt that probably nothing could be more personal than sticking a swatch of my dress material in it.

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Free Toothpaste!

CVS Run for Free Toothpaste

Do you love saving money?  Of course you do; that was a silly question for me to ask.  My husband came in from class yesterday with a CVS receipt, and I had planned to make use of the milk for $3.29 this week when I ran across a $2 off of 2 toothpaste coupon on his receipt.  They usually have some kind of sale going on toothpaste, so I looked up the online sales paper and GASP!  There it was: $2.99 Colgate Total with $2 ExtraBucks, redeemable twice!  In other words I could get two tubes of toothpaste for 99 cents each (without coupons).  I had $2 ExtraBucks from another purchase that were going to expire this week, so I could use them, too.  This is my husband's favorite toothpaste, so I win!
Math time:

  • $2.99 Colgate - $2 EB = $0.99.
  • $2.99 Colgate - $2 off of 2 Coupon=$0.99.
  • Both of these generated $2.00 EB, so I get 4 dollars on my receipt.
  • $1.98-$4.00= -$2.02 pure store credit. (not counting tax since I kept all of my stuff in one   transaction this time. Sorry, I know that's like CVS Taboo when you're talking about paying as little as possible).

Free toothpaste! Woo hoo!

Basically, CVS paid me to buy the toothpaste.

Was this the whole story? No, of course not.  We needed milk (very nicely on-sale) and I decided to make use of the Progresso Soup 2 for $1.50 after instant and manufacturer's coupon (coupons.com) for food storage.  We also happened to run across some Oreos at 2 for $6 generating $1 EB together, so the Oreos were technically 2 for $5, or $2.50 each after rewards.  Who can't resist cookies?

It's nice to save money on things that you need (and a treat to go with).

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

My First Crockpot Experience

Chicken Taco Bowls

Good afternoon, everybody!  I finally used a crockpot yesterday, and it was awesome.  I like this whole "I can effortlessly cook all day and study all day all at the same time" deal.  It's great.  

The recipe I used is modified from budgetbytes.com, and that's a pretty cool website because Beth tells you how much the meals cost to make (with approximate prices for each of the ingredients), then thus how much they cost per serving.

I used:
2 boneless skinless chicken breasts
1 pint jar of home-canned diced tomatoes
1 pint jar of home-canned black beans
1 can of corn (actually store-bought)
Cumin
Minced garlic
Oregano
Salt
Pepper
1/4 cup of water
2 cups of white rice
Shredded cheddar cheese

I put everything (except the rice and cheese) into my crockpot chicken first, then the rest on top.  I gave it all a good stir, making sure the chicken was covered, and cooked on low for 8 hours.  

After studying for a while I decided to make some of my white bread to go with it, then when I had about 40 minutes left to go, I put my two cups of rice into my rice cooker, filled with water to the appropriate fill line, and at about 5:00 we had a delicious dinner, and I'd read quite a bit of my English Literature assignment (this week is Sir Gawain and the Green Knight...read it in high school!)

Funny thing about my camera: it seems that I have to take pictures of flowers on the food setting,
and pictures of food on the flower setting.
Tough cookies, right?
Thus, we have yummy Chicken Taco Bowls served with rice and a slice of hot homemade bread! (and a LOT of leftovers, being only two of us here)

Monday, September 9, 2013

Canning Time!

Canned Apple Pie Filling

My husband and I have had a cooler full of apples sitting in our living room for over a week, and I finally decided to do something about it.  (My aunt was blessed with an overabundant amount of apples this year, so one Saturday when I was tutoring algebra, my husband and father went and picked some). I'm afraid that I do not know what kind they are; they are small and green.

I had helped my mother-in-law can this summer a couple of different times, and had heard the process explained a couple more, so I decided that I would break out my canner and give it a try.  I didn't have to use my lid, thank goodness.  Baby steps are nice.

I found on Pinterest a post from Adventures in the Anderl House where some folks canned some apple pie filling, and I thought it would be a perfect place to start!  The post has awesome instructions, and was extremely helpful since I was flying solo.

Preparing

Fist things first, I had to wash my canner...in the bath tub, and I got black, grimy stuff all over my arms and hands!  Not fun for someone who does not really like to get dirty.  One of my co-workers this summer thought that was absurd since I'm from the South.  Do I have to like getting dirty?  Clean is nice... perhaps I did not fit his stereotype.

My Materials:
23 Qt. Canner with canning rack
Quart-sized mason jars (x7)
Cooler full of apples
Jar lifter
Lid Lifter
Canning funnel
LOTS of water
Sugar
Salt
Cornstarch
Cinnamon
Nutmeg
Vinegar (for cleaning)
Anyway, I cleaned up the canner and brought it downstairs to the kitchen and sat it on our stove.  Woo hoo!  (Photo op first, actually).  At that point I decided that I would heat my jars.  Needless to say, while filling everything with water, I made a pretty decent mess.  But, then again, it was just water.  I filled the jars and the canner with water to where it filled maybe an inch or so above the jars, and turned the heat on the stove to try to get things boiling.

Next up, I got to work on peeling and cutting the apples, and at this point my husband was still home, so he helped, thank goodness.  One thing about me: ever since I was a small child, I have pretty much avoided knives like the plague, so I am very inexperienced with knives, and my hands are extremely awkward with them.  Having an apple peeler helped, though...still a good chance at severing my skin off of my fingers, but the peeler helped.  All in all, cutting up the apples (at first) was a very grueling experience.  After maybe an hour or so, we had enough apples for almost two jars. (Remember: tiny apples)  That was it.  I had seven jars all hot and ready to go....quart sized jars!  So, instead of crying about it, when my husband left for school, I left for...Walmart!

My friends the sectioner and the peeler!


Thus, two of my three best friends of the day. (The third being my loving husband).  I went and bought a Farberware (I seem to like Farberware) Apple Sectioner for just under $6.00, and between it and my peeler, things went exponentially faster.  On Tuesdays, my husband has one class, and by the time he got back, the jars were almost filled.

So next came the pie filling concoction. I used a recipe that I found on Pinterest (where else?) coming from Adventures in the Anderl House.

So I mixed up the ooey gooey goodness in a pot and brought it to a boil. Now for the loveliness of my jar lifter and funnel!  Canning is so much easier with these beauties (plus a lid lifter, but I wasn't using it at the moment)!  I would bring one jar over beside the stove, ladle three scoops into the jar of apples through the funnel, take the funnel out and put it in the next jar, then took the hot jar back across the kitchen with the jar lifter so it can get ready to get its lid.

Filling

Before putting on the lids, I used a small spatula to work air bubbles out.  I do believe a plastic knife would have worked better, but such is life.  After poking around in each jar for what seemed like forever, I cleaned the jar rims with some vinegar (a trick my mother-in-law taught me) and used my awesome little magnetic lid lifter to put the lids on.  I tightened the rings really well, then took them over, one at a time, and sat them in my canner (still with the water in it from earlier), being careful not to touch the jars to the side of the canner or to each other.

Boiling Water Canning

Next problem: basic science.  The density of the jars displaced the water that was equal to the amount of covering the jars by an inch plus enough to fill the insides of seven, quart-sized jars.  The result: the canner overflowed with water.  After a sigh and a quick laugh, I grabbed a clean ladle, and started scooping out water. It took about eighty or so scoops, but then the water was about an inch or two over the jars, and I cranked up the heat.

No lie, getting the water to boil took forever, and honestly I wasn't watching the clock.  My husband and I made separate runs to McDonalds redeeming some BOGO coupons, so between two burgers and two smoothies, one of us got a free meal.  Thus, we didn't leave the big boiling bucket alone.  When it got to where it boiled, I set a timer for twenty minutes. (Yay! The end was in sight!)

The jars came out one at a time and found themselves sitting on a towel.  Here was the real waiting game: waiting on the jars to seal.  That's all I wanted.  It took a little while, but over the course of the night, I heard seven wonderful little POP noises, and when you're canning, that's music to your ears. Wednesday morning, I went and checked each jar's seal by pressing down in the middle of the lid.  Presto! I heard right.  I foresee some pies soon!  (...I know the goo mixture is delicious because I got the stickiness on my hands.  Who can resist licking it off?)

Finished jars waiting to seal. Pop!

So, after this lovely experience, I went right back to the daily grind of reading English Literature and doing homework.  Ah, the life of a college student.  It's fabulous, right?

If you have not canned before, this is probably a good place to start, unless you want to do applesauce or something.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Ice Cream?

Part One: Not So Ice Cream

One of our wonderful wedding gifts was a homemade ice cream maker! (Actually, we have two; my mom is currently using one since hers is broken at the moment).  Anyway, in a spur of the moment last night, we decided to try to make ice cream.  We have the family recipe (homemade ice cream is HUGE in my family) [especially peach-pineapple], so we decided to give it a try.  There were a couple of things, though.  We didn't have any evaporated milk, and our recipe was for 1 gallon, and since my directions for the milk were "fill to fill line" we had to adapt for 6 quarts.  So, we went and got four cans of evaporated milk and came back.  We put in two cans and the adapted amount of sugar, a teaspoon of vanilla, and grabbed my 39-cent plus tax milk.  Here's where the new problem was.  I had been drinking it, so we didn't have enough.  So, what did we do?  One can of evaporated milk + one can of water.

We put it in our machine, turned it on, and let it run, and waaaaaay more than 40 minutes later it looked like some kind of weird milkshake.  So we put the motor back on and let it turn some more.



So just a little bit before bed we decided to take what we could get.  It was like a mixture of a really good vanilla drink and generously flavorless ice cream.  The water was what made it turn out this way.  My husband said he had something very similar in Mexico as a missionary. "Heladito" he called it.

See how it has like a little island of ice cream floating in a sea of vanilla drink?

Part Two: [Snow] Cream in August

What is snow cream?  People from snowy regions may never have heard of it, from what I gather talking to people.  Here in the South where we hardly see snow, my family would make ice cream out of snow when we could get enough.  Anyhow, what is snow?  In reality, tiny bits of frozen water.

We divided up our little ice cream (failure?) into cups last night and stuck them in the freezer.  It now has the consistency of snow cream! (except maybe slightly harder before it melts a little)  So, the water content wasn't such a disaster after all, especially since I haven't had snow cream in what seems like years.  I'm not exactly sure when the last time was.

So voila!  Genuinely fake snow cream from a little ice cream mishap!  Why have we never thought of it before?

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Leftover Brown Sugar Chicken and a Milk Story!

Basic Chicken Fried Rice, Anyone?

Sorry, folks. No picture this time, but I'm going to tell you about it anyway.

We had one piece left of the fabulous chicken and about three storage containers of leftover rice on Sunday.  (Late post; both of us started school this week)  So, we decided to chop it up and throw it in with the rice.  Easy recipe time!  Cooked chicken + cooked rice + soy sauce.  A wise lady once told me that it's not necessarily the complicated recipes that are the best, but the easy ones.  (I'm loving the whole easy thing).

The Milk Story


So, if you follow CVS, you know that they have their milk on sale this week for $3.39 for a gallon. Any discount on good milk is great, especially when you love to drink milk like me (especially when I wake up in the middle of the night).  Anyhow, we were planning on going shopping yesterday and I decided that I'd check my e-mail before we left...and whaddya know!  There was a wonderful little email from CVS with a $3 ExtraBucks Coupon!!  Bwahahaha! 

So, after a run to Home Depot and Walmart, we hit the CVS and I literally bought milk with TWO QUARTERS and got change back. (Now, I understand that I could have rolled the ExtraBucks by making use of another ExtraBucks deal, however we were out of milk, and not much this week interests me...plus the coupon expired in two days).

Life is good!

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Maybe I'm Not a Hopeless Chef After All!

Brown Sugar Baked Chicken

I love Pinterest! Pinterest is my friend, especially since I'm new at the whole homemaker thing.  Anyway, I was browsing through the Food and Drink section the other day and ran across this recipe from spoonful.com for Brown Sugar Spiced Baked Chicken.  My husband and I agreed it should be on our must-try short list.  Sure enough, when it came down to Saturday, we still had three pieces of chicken left from our meal planning shopping trip this week (by the way, the meal planning seems to be going well as for getting ingredients, but we seem to end up altering our meals from the original recipes, but, then again, what are recipes for?)



I substituted paprika for chili powder (we didn't have any paprika), and whaddya know, the chicken turned out fantastic! (We think the sugar melted off) And it was so easy!  Just mix up the seasoning, slap the chicken into it, toss it in a baking dish and put it in the oven for twenty minutes! Easy is good for a newbie like unto myself.  One piece each filled us up, too, so we have one lovely spiced leftover to combine with something (probably leftover rice) for dinner tonight.  We make our rice in a rice cooker that we received as a wedding gift, and that thing is awesome.  Haven't really tried much with it, but it can apparently do quite a few things.

Monday, August 19, 2013

Watch Your Bananas!!

Not-So-Despicable Minion Amigurumi!


One of our new favorite movies now-a-days is Despicable Me and its lovely counterpart that we saw in the theater.  Since then, we haven't exactly gone "minion mad," but we do love the little guys, and playing Minion Rush on our iPads is pretty fun.  They're adorable, hilarious, and the Banana language is quite fascinating to one such as myself.  I've been plotting to make a Minion for a couple weeks now, and I finally just broke down and did it.  He came together really quickly, actually.

I found this pattern from Snacksies Handicraft Corner on Pinterest.  I actually just now discovered that there's now an updated pattern that should have been just a little easier to follow, but I didn't have too many problems.  Maybe I'm just used to making mistakes... 

Isn't he adorable!  He's not despicable at all!  He's completely made out of yarn from other projects (except for his brown eyes), and my darling husband actually spent hours untangling the yellow yarn for me (he's really good at untangling)!!  I'm glad he likes him so much (but we haven't named him yet)!

I'm really getting into the amigurumi side of crochet.  It's so much fun, and then you can play with your work...good for the inner-child.




Friday, August 16, 2013

Bread!

The Seemingly Normal Bread of Life

Hello, again!  It has been a while, has it not?  Summer is basically over, and we're now living in our own place.  Of course, there's still boxes all over the place, but if there weren't, it wouldn't be realistic. (I seem to use a lot of contractions! My English teachers would cringe!) I've crocheted some things between my last post and the present, but I've been a little busy to explain.  Perhaps if I can catch my breath again, I could explain a little.  Using cotton yarn is great!



The feature of the day, however, was my climbing over the boxes in the kitchen floor and using my long awaited... wait for it... BREAD MACHINE! Hooray! It's one of the wedding presents that I didn't get to see until after we left the in-laws'. Working at the grocery store, fresh bread would come down the belt for me to bag, and I would almost always think to myself, 'I'm so excited to use my bread machine when we go back South!' Well, after being up for a bit this morning, I decided today was going to be the day!  So I grabbed my favorite scissors and cut my box open.  Ah, power.  (I don't particularly like knives).  I read my instructions, (I was so excited that I didn't even look through the French and Spanish sections like I normally would) and started cleaning the equipment to get it ready to roll [dough].  I went to the Walmart (in my lovely car that I've missed all summer) and grabbed some bread flower and bread machine yeast.  In fact, I even went over and looked at the yarn and did not even get any!  I did gather some ideas, though.  Christmas, anyone?

So I got back home with my lovelies, and I baked an empty bread maker for ten minutes...twice.  I would bet at the moment that you are thinking like my darling husband and ask "why didn't you do that before you went and got the ingredients?"  Well....I guess I was just that excited.  It would have made lots of sense though.  So, after everything was cooled down and cleaned, I meticulously made a small mess in the kitchen (and cleaned it right up, I might add) and threw together the white bread recipe that came with my machine.  Ta dah! Three hours and two job applications later, I had a lovely loaf of home made bread and I didn't even really get my hands dirty!  It went really well with some chilli and cheese, and a gulp or three of some Mexican-style rice pudding!

So, here it is: my little one and a half pound loaf of seemingly normal white bread.  It was quite delicious!  One of these days, we'll have things put away where I can take nice pictures of things, but that day is not today.  If you haven't made bread, I challenge you to.  Yes, you can do it without a machine, but I get to keep my wedding rings on this way...and do other things like fill out job applications.  Have a great day!  (And no, I didn't make that potholder...my aunt did...)

Saturday, August 3, 2013

First Impression On Our Apartment

DIY Yarn Wreath


What says welcome like a wreath on the front door??  Okay, it may not be a welcome mat, but it sure is fun and inviting!  Such a quick little project, too.  I simply bought a 10" styrofoam extruded wreath at Hobby Lobby, and dug into my yarn stash and created this little beauty!  It's all Red Heart Super Saver yarn.  I wrapped the wreath in just plain Blue, and crocheted roses out of Hot Red, White, and Spring Green with a Size K hook and a tapestry needle.  I found the pattern for the roses at Attic24. Just remember, if you'd like to try it, her pattern is in UK terms.  I finished off with a little bit of hot glue to attach the roses.  Ta dah!

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Pins and Needles No. 1

My First All By Myself Skirt

I've grown up with the idea of wanting to sew, and I have somewhat.  I even turned a too-short dress into a skirt a couple of years ago and wear it all the time.  But this is the first time I've done one all by myself.  I cut out the pattern, pinned the pattern to the fabric, cut out the fabric, (crocheted for a little while since my sister-in-law was using the machine for her impressive no-pattern maxi), then I got to work.  How does one learn best?  Doing it themselves!

Do you like my fabric?  It was on sale at Hancock!  That's where the pattern came from, too.


If it went worse, I'd say they just threw me to the wolves, but it wasn't so bad, and didn't take very long either!  The worst part was working with the elastic in the waistband, but that wasn't too incredibly awful.

I hemmed it maybe two or three inches, and in my final product, I have a visible double hem (that's what I'm calling it anyway, and the skirt is totally great!  Quick explanation: I hemmed it the forst inch and a half or so, then turned it up and hemmed it again, just like with any other skirt. However, the stitches seemed a little high for comfort, in my eyes anyway, so I added a second set of stitches down even closer to the bottom to help the hem lay even flatter. 


Do you like it?  I will not wear it with this shirt, of course (at least it is gray!) but there are lots of other things to wear it with! I'm not so into incredibly casual t-shirts with skirts like this. 

It's been a productive day off of work, I'd say.

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Quick Cotton Scarf

So, the other day I was untangling some white yarn, and my mother-in-law mentioned that I crochet well enough now to not have to use the super saver all the time.  At Walmart they have the little Peaches & Cream balls of yarn (much less yarn, but under $2) that are made out of...COTTON!  They don't really like to try to come apart on you, and I find that super nice.  I picked up three balls before work, and after I finished Kate the Hippo, I got to looking for scarf patterns, since I wasn't liking where doing a simple V-stitch was headed with the multi-colored yarns that I got.  I found one called the Draft Dodger Scarf from Cobbler's Cabin, and got right to work.



I used one ball of the Peaches & Cream (give or take a few inches), so that's about 120 yards, and it measures about 36 inches long, and took less than 24 hours to stitch together.  It's super simple, single crochet, double crochet, single crochet, double crochet... and it looks really pretty!  Check out the detail!

I have some more cotton, so I wonder what I'll be up to next in my tiny corner of the universe...

Our Hippo Family

Meet Charlie and Kate  

These two were basically love at first sight, or love at first snack! Aren't they just so incredibly cute together?



I used the Hungry, Hungry Hippo pattern again from Bitter Sweet, this time using the color Turqua from Red Heart Super Saver yarn that I got way back at my hometown Walmart for Kate's body (finally finished of a skien that has been in three different projects!) She has the other set of blue eyes that came in the bag I used on her husband.  The Hot Red yarn color makes an appearance again (from the other hippo) in Kate's super cute and tiny bow.  I found the pattern for the super simple bow at Cut Out + Keep.  I didn't give her any nostrils, but she's so adorable without them!

The turquoise photographs a lot better than the red, it seems.

I've also basically finished a couple of adorable scarves (they do need some blocking and simple finishing touches though) and I've discovered cotton yarn!  Therefore, there is another scarf in progress.  I love crochet! It's so fun!

Monday, July 22, 2013

My First Crochet Toy

The Hippo

Good morning, rest of the universe.  Did you know I (somewhat) crochet?  I decided today that I would finish the hot red hippo that I've been working on. (My husband likes hippos).  It only took a few days to complete.  It's crazy, since everything seems to take me forever...of course, I was doing my stitches incorrectly up until a few days ago.  I found the pattern via. Pinterest here at Bitter Sweet.  It's called Hungry, Hungry, Hippo, and mine looks like it might be starving.  I should have stuffed him more.  Oh well!  I used Red Heart Super Saver yarn in the Hot Red shade that I found on sale at my local Hobby Lobby for $1.79.  He also has blue eyes that I snatched up at Hobby Lobby for $0.99 for two pairs!


With my camera, he looks so incredibly red! At least, if I did my stitches incorrectly or inside-out, it's hard to see.  I guess I can't complain.  I promise he's not quite this bright, however he is a very, very bright red. 

Being a crochet novice, I found a couple of awesome tutorials on Youtube to help me out a bit with fastening off and joining together the pieces.  The first was for fastening off, closing, and weaving ends of amigurumi toys by NattypatCrochet.  Then, I needed help joining the pieces together and found this video by June from planetjune. 

I am so excited to have finished my first crochet toy, and it was actually super easy!  I'm excited to move on to something else!

Isn't he adorable??

Sunday, July 21, 2013

The Ever So Fabulous Root Beer Chicken

Life is fun as a newly wed... especially when living with the in-laws for a little bit.  But that's okay; each of my siblings did it, too.  What's really awesome is having the continuing opportunity to learn some wonderful homemaking skills...(I'd like to call them my "wifey" skills).

As for my "wifey" skills ideas, they probably mostly come from Pinterest, but that's normal, isn't it??

Cooking Experiment: The Chicken

Today (starting with yesterday) I did a little experiment with cooking.  I found a recipe on the fabulous wonderful Pinterest for Marinated Root Beer Grilled Chicken from the Six Sisters' Stuff.  So, I struck a deal with my mother-in-law, and we agreed that I could do my little experiment for dinner. We had actually planned it for a few days before, but we were supposed to get bad weather, which would have (literally) dampened the grill. Whaddya know! It missed us, and we didn't get to have our chicken.

Anyway, back to yesterday.  I went to get started on this wonderfully simple little recipe, and it turned out that we didn't even have any root beer!  That was nothing that a quick run to the gas station for a can can't fix.  Then, nobody could find the apple cider vinegar, so the men went to the grocery store on the hunt.  Of course, I found some in plain sight before they got home, and the marinate was thrown together and in the fridge by the time they returned.  (Meanwhile, I had my first canning lesson with my mother-in-law canning chicken from the local butcher with her beloved Viola [that's her pressure cooker]. Maybe I should name mine once I get to using it.  It's still sealed in the box).

So the chicken should marinate anywhere from three hours to overnight, and we were planning for the minimum time so we could indulge before I had to leave for work.  Then, I got called in early, so it got to hang out in the refrigerator over night until after church today.  Since I had less than two hours before heading to work again, I changed into my work clothes, covered my white shirt, and let my wonderful husband grill the chicken. (He's the best!)

This is the amazing result that we ended up with.  It might be a slight understatement to say that it was a huge hit!! I think even someone who isn't a root beer fan would like it.  (Maybe I should have moved the in-laws' sodas before taking the picture.  Oh well.  It was fabulous!  What else can I say?

I guess this cooking "wifey" skill doesn't have to be so scary after all.  One piece of advice I was given as for cooking was just choosing the simple things.  They taste the greatest.

So that's my adventure in My Tiny Corner of the Universe today.

Blessings

So yesterday toward the end of my shift, I was offered the opportunity to switch my shift time from 3 to 9 to 9 to 3, and I really love going to church and find it very important, so I politely declined the time change.  I believe I was extremely blessed for my decision. I had the opportunity to give the opening prayer, everything touched my Spirit (I shed many happy tears today) and I didn't really realize how wonderful it was today until I was at work thinking to myself about how the day had gone.  I ended up getting off of work early today, too, so I got to come home and spend time with my darling husband.

So basically, today has been a very wonderful day; very peaceful with delicious chicken!