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Project #12: ‘Twas the Night before Christmas . ..

. . . and all through the house, no more projects were waiting, at least not for now!

Handmade Christmas tree ornaments wrap up my list of handmade projects. These are simple, inexpensive wood blocks adorned with scrapbook paper and digital pictures printed from my home printer. We followed the guide for these at How Does She? These will be great fun to hang on our tree year after year!

Of course no Christmas is complete for a sewing mama without handmade Christmas jammies for her little ones. I suppose that means you get 13 projects for the price of 12 . . . a baker’s dozen! (Isn’t this Cowboy Santa fabric perfect for a Texas Christmas?)

Praying that each of you is blessed with a Christmas packed full of joy and overflowing with many wonderful memories! Enjoy this beautiful telling of the Christmas story by Linus as a little Christmas gift from me to you:

Handmade Christmas Projects 2, 3 & 4 are in the bag!

Adding three more handmade Christmas projects on my way to a full dozen. Today’s projects are all handmade bags!

This is my mom’s new Christmas bag. She asked me to make her one like the one that I made for her when she visited a few years ago only in black and red. I used my now out-of-print Sammi Grace Bag pattern and modified it just a little by adding a button closure with a fabric-covered button and piecing the outside in strips. Inside, there’s a divider and several pockets for cell phone, pen or pencil and business cards.

Next up is my sister’s gift. She didn’t offer any suggestions for what she’d like, but she does love green, and everyone can use a nice tote bag, right? I had a picture in my head of how I wanted this bag to look, but I really made the pattern up as I went along. I love that it’s really a simple tote, but it has a much dressier look to it!

Finally, my middle niece, asked me to sew her a messenger bag like the one that I did for her older sister a few years ago. I pulled out my messenger bag tutorial and went to work. I added a machine-applique penguin and a magnetic snap to the flap. About 3/4 of the way through assembly, at the point where I was ready to sew the flap to the outer section of the bag, I realized that I had sewn the body layers together sideways. I sort of liked the longer, narrower look . . . and I really didn’t want to rip the whole thing apart so I trimmed down the sides of the flap to match the new width and went with it.

I have to end with a few fun pictures. (My apologies that they are icky flash pictures. There was an incident this same night involving my 18-55mm camera lens, so I’m currently operating with just the 70-300mm which doesn’t work with my light scoop.) Our oldest son, Sean, and his friend, Josh, spent a few minutes frosting, decorating and eating sugar cookies with us on Sunday night. They were on their way out to an Ugly Christmas Sweater party, so they were dressed in sweaters that they tell me were borrowed from Josh’s grandmother. (Adding a note here that I am not saying these are ugly sweaters at all! Loud and very Christmas-y? Very much! But, ugly? I’ve seen uglier.)



One Week ’til Christmas!


Is it really only a week until Christmas?! I still have a few things left on my to-do list. How is yours coming along? For me, last week is a blur of shipping the last of my Market orders (with the new Everyday Camp Shirt pattern!), sewing the last of the handmade gifts that I have to ship away, two days of a miserable cold virus, one day of homeschool field trip and Christmas party fun and several days of updates to my website and blog! (I was so busy, in fact, that I totally forgot to blog about my giveaway at Create Hope Designs! I hope you all got a chance to enter!) Cynthia of Webwurkz has been working on some pretty major updates to my website, and it’s looking so nice. (She’s amazing, by the way! If you ever need web design work done–I wholeheartedly recommend her!) I spent most of the day yesterday redecorating my little blog home here. What do you think of the new look?

Last night we had a little family Christmas fun. We started with the local Christmas light parade, which conveniently passes right in front of our home. Then after dinner, we had a blast decorating a gingerbread house with our youngest four children. It’s certainly not going to win any grand decorating awards, but I think it turned out quite lovely! Everyone helped, too. Ray assembled the house. Jamie shingled the roof with chocolate chips. Samantha, Allen and I handled the walls, walkway and “lights”. And, Charlie shoved candy into his mouth as fast as he could while he thought no one was watching!


Be sure to check back tomorrow for the first of my 12 Handmade Gifts for Christmas posts! (All relatives are hereby warned that if you peek over the next week, you just might spoil your Christmas surprise.)

National Tie One On Day


The Wednesday before Thanksgiving is celebrated annually as National Tie One On Day . . . tie on an apron, that is! Participants pause in their busy Thanksgiving preparations to make or purchase an apron and gift it to a friend or neighbor along with a freshly baked loaf of bread. National Tie One On Day provides the opportunity to return the “give” to Thanksgiving by simply sharing a kind gesture. You can read more about it here: Apron Memories.

Last Wednesday, I spent the afternoon sewing up this apron for a friend. She was out of town with her family for the holiday and should be home this evening, so I haven’t given it to her yet. This morning, I baked a loaf of cinnamon bread to give with the apron. (Actually, I baked two, so I can tell you for sure that it is very yummy!) I hope she likes the apron and the bread, and I pray that it will bring a smile to her face and joy to her heart. (She has a way of always doing those things to me every time I’m around her!)

It’s all packed up and ready to deliver tomorrow! (Don’t you love my “upcycled” gift bag?)

Thankful


Happy Thanksgiving! Do you have exciting plans today? We’re enjoying Thanksgiving dinner this evening with our whole family and a few dear friends. The morning and afternoon will be spent cooking and preparing and munching! I’m starting the day with my morning coffee and a piece of Chocolate Pecan Pie shared with my sweet almost-2-year-old. The rest of the house is quiet still.

The quilt block above is one that I pieced last week to join others in a quilt for a grieving mother. My online friend, S, lost her unborn baby boy last month just a few weeks before his due date. My 12-year-old, Allen, prayed on Tuesday night, “Lord, help us to all be thankful, especially for those things that we don’t think matter very much.” That was a simple, beautiful reminder to me to be thankful for my husband’s smile in greeting from across a room, my oldest daughter dropping by with her little one just to hang out, my oldest son wrestling in the family room with his little brothers, my youngest daughter cuddling up and reading a story to my youngest son, my middle son pouring out praise in a song sung as loud as he can sing, my preschool son’s cuddles in the mornings and goodnight kisses every night, and my little guy’s “Side? Me? Pease?” when he wants to nurse. It’s the little things that we sometimes miss everyday that I want to be sure to be thankful for today. I should be more careful to be thankful for them everyday.

I pray that each of you has a beautiful Thanksgiving Day today, shared with those you love and filled with the joy of being thankful for the little things that we don’t think matter very much!

30 Days to Market!


Shhhh . . . Don’t tell my kids that I’m showing you this picture! One of our house rules is that the dining room must stay neat and clean at all times. It’s the first room that you see when you walk into my house, and I figure that if your first impression is one of a tidy home, maybe you’ll overlook any mess that you see in the rest of the house! I just had to take this picture, though, because it occurred to me as I walked through the dining room this morning, that this is a picture of my life at the moment. The back half of the table is covered with dress forms waiting to be dressed for Quilt Market (which, if you’re counting down with me, is only a month away!) The front half of the table is covered with 50 pounds of tomatoes waiting to be canned and Allen’s homeschool books. Sewing, cooking and schooling . . . and more sewing! Don’t feel bad for me, though! I love sewing (and cooking and homeschooling), and I’m really excited about Quilt Market (and a little bit terrified, too. Am I allowed to say that?) I could use an extra me, though. If you happen to know where I can get one of those, I’d be thrilled!

I have a few fun things to share with you over the next week or so, including two new patterns and a couple of tutorials! I’m really excited about a tutorial that I put together especially for those of you who are football fans. You’ll be able to see it on Friday on one of my very favorite sewing blogs!

On the homefront, I have a few things to share. First of all, I have to share some great pictures of my oldest son, Sean, from a few weeks ago. He’s a senior in high school this year and was chosen as one of the finalists for homecoming king. Isn’t he adorable? (As a side note, the homecoming parade took place on my birthday, and I was so wrapped up in taking pictures, that I almost didn’t notice when the whole group of homecoming king and queen nominees yelled, “Happy Birthday!” to me from the parade! How sweet is that?)

On a bittersweet note, we took a week off to travel to West Virginia last week when Ray’s Great Aunt Hazel passed away at 94. Aunt Hazel, who you can see in the picture below with Charlie last June, was one of my favorite people. She was a beautiful example of a Godly woman, active and full of life, showing people the Jesus that she loved by just being who she was. Most of all, though, she was always laughing or making someone else laugh. She will be very much missed by all of her family and friends but remembered with great joy.

9/11 My Story


On Tuesday, September 11, 2001, my husband left our home at Bolling Air Force Base in Washington, DC, well before dawn for his Air Force intelligence job at the Pentagon. Still sleeping, I’m not sure I even said, “Good-bye,” much less, “I love you.”

I had a busy day planned. I’d made arrangements to stop by a friend’s home on the base around 8:40 to pick up a few things and chat for a minute or two before running just off the base for a quick follow-up dentist appointment at 9:30. My oldest daughter, Morgan, was 11 and had recently completed the babysitter training which allowed her to care for her siblings in our home for up to two hours. I would be easily be home in two hours. Sean was 8, Samantha 3, Allen had just turned 2. They were supposed to have breakfast and watch cartoons on PBS until I was back to begin our homeschool lessons for the day.

I was ready to walk out the door at 8:30. Did I hug all my kids and tell them how much they meant to me before I left? I really can’t remember.

It was an absolutely beautiful day. Not a single cloud in the sky. Fall was in air.

I arrived at my friends home and visited for about 20 minutes. We never turned on the TV or the radio. We had no idea what was happening outside of our quiet fellowship.

At around 9:05, I drove off the base. I remember noticing that my gas tank was close to empty, and I had forgotten the car charger for the cell phone which was nearly dead.

At about 9:15, I arrived at my dentist’s office. I thought it was odd that the front desk clerk was trying to tune something in on the big TV which usually played kids’ movies on video in the waiting area. I remember her words almost exactly when I asked what she was doing, “A plane crashed into the World Trade Center tower in New York. I heard there might be a terrorist attack on DC later this week.” I remember, too, that I instantly began considering packing up the kids and visiting my in-laws for the weekend in West Virginia.

I was taken back to the dentist’s chair a minute or two later still having no idea of the magnitude of what was taking place. I just thought–small commuter plane side-swiped the Trade Center tower, surely an accident. I was barely seated when I heard screaming from the waiting area and what seemed like a hundred feet running behind my chair towards the window at the end of the hallway. I jumped up to see what was happening. From that sixth story window view I could clearly see smoke pouring into to the sky from the direction of downtown DC.

Things are a bit of a blur from here. A plane has just crashed into the Pentagon! My kids are at home alone! I’ve got to get home! Stop! Wait! Call first and send them to a neighbor’s house. My cell phone is almost dead. Can I use the office phone? Time and time again I hear, “All circuits are busy. Please try your call again.” Finally, the phone rings on the other end, and Morgan answers, and I can barely control my hysteria, “Grab the babies and go Ms. Kim’s house right now! Just go!”

My cell phone rings, and my husband’s number is displayed on the screen. With only a few seconds of of battery life, I hear him say, “I’m fine,” and a female voice booming, “Evacuate the building! Evacuate the building!”

At that point, of course, I just wanted to get home as quickly as possible. As I was heading out the door, I heard someone in the office mention that military installations were on lock-down. My babies are home alone! My panicked call to base security went something like this: “Yes, Ma’am the base is locked down. You can not return here.” “But you don’t understand! My children are home alone!” “I’m sorry Ma’am, but I have way more important things to worry about right now.” Click.

I had no idea then where to go or what to do. The dentist office received a phone call from their building management advising everyone to evacuate the building. Then news came of at least one more highjacked plane. No one knew where it was or where it was heading. I called my friend, Kim, to check on the kids, and she suggested going to her church which was just a few miles from the dentist office.

At the church, they were warm and welcoming, but a huge TV in the office broadcasted the images of the attacks live, and I had to turn away from the horrible images of people jumping from the top floors of the World Trade Center. I asked for a quiet place to make some phone calls, and a Bible. At some point in our conversation Kim had told me to read Psalm 91. (Years later, I heard someone call Psalm 91:1, the 911 verse.)

I knew I had a calling card number, but I had no idea what the number was. I called AT&T and explained everything. The incredibly kind and understanding operator gave me my calling card number so that I could start contacting loved ones. I had no phone numbers with me, so I spent the next hour or so calling information and tracking down my mom, Ray’s mom and old friends whose calm reassurance I really needed.

Then there was just waiting and calling occasionally to the base to ask when I’d be allowed to go home. Finally, at around 2:00, I was told that people who lived on the base would be allowed to return, but that I must be able to not only show proof that I lived there, I would be asked a series of questions before being allowed access. I jumped in the car and set off toward the city. It was one of the eeriest experiences of my life, driving back into Washington, DC that day. I was the only car on my side of the road, but traffic going the opposite direction was bumper to bumper. I remember giggling a little to myself because I felt like the crazy person in a disaster movie driving back into the danger zone.

Finally back at home, it felt like we’d gone to war. There were barricades set up everywhere. Marine helicopters circled close to the ground with sharp-shooters hanging out, guns pointed at the ground. Smoke filled the air. The atmosphere was so completely different than the peaceful morning that I’d awakened to just a few hours before.

Ray arrived home very late that night. He’d never left the Pentagon in spite of the booming “Evacuate” voice. Like so many of our incredible service men and women do everyday, he had an important job to do, regardless of the danger, and he kept doing it until someone arrived to take over.

It seems odd to stop the story here. This is where the day ended, but the story of how my life was affected continued and to some effect still does today. What is your 9/11 story? Someone told me a few years ago that I needed to “get over it”. I disagree. It’s important that we remember.

Swimming!


There’s something pretty amazing about watching any of your children work hard at something and then accomplish it successfully. Our older kids all know how to swim, but they learned over a period of years growing up in Florida where everyone has a pool and the beach is minutes away. Now that we live in Dallas, we just don’t spend much time near water, and with Jamie nearing school age, I really felt that he needed to know how to swim. A swim teacher who teaches in her private pool here in our neighborhood was highly recommended on our homeschool list, so we jumped right in. I’m so glad because Ms. Kathy has been simply amazing!

In the first two weeks of swim lessons, Jamie went from jumping out of the pool to run for a towel every time a drop of water hit his face to spending nearly his whole time in the pool yelling, “Mom, look at me hold my breath!”

And, watching Jamie really swim for the first time might have made me cry as much as watching him take his first step. What a blessing!




From Baby to Boy in a Flash


One more look at the baby curls . . . I waited as long as I could before taking Charlie for his first haircut. I know from experience that the first haircut changes a little guy’s appearance from baby to little boy in a flash. I brought along my camera to record the moment. I figured maybe if I was busy snapping pictures, I’d be too distracted to cry in public.

We went to this great kids’ haircut place called Sharkey’s where Charlie got to sit in a little blue car and watch cartoons. You’d think that would make a little boy really happy, wouldn’t you? Charlie was not impressed. This is what he looked like for most of his clipping session:

The “toons” would hold his interest for a minute or two before he was back to crying and trying to climb out of the chair.

We both survived, though, and I’m happy to say that in spite of Charlie’s tears, mama managed to keep it together. All finished!

Holding on to mama for dear life . . . “Don’t put me back in that thing again!”

We had a “Big Boy Charlie” photo session this morning. I totally think he looks absolutely adorable, but it’s hard to believe that the picture at the top of this post was taken two days before these.




Look! The tongue still works!

Little boys grow up so fast, don’t they? (Oh, and a little aside from the subject of this post: there’s a bit of a sneak peek of a pattern that I’m working on in these pictures. Still a few things to tweak, but I’m planning to have it ready for my testers next week!)

Born on the 4th of July


Happy Independence Day to my fellow Americans! We spent our 4th of July holiday welcoming our first granddaughter, Katherine “Katie” James. Katie arrived about a month early, so she’s tiny, but she’s doing well.

During naptime this afternoon, Gi-Gi, as we’ve decided I’ll be called (I’m way too young to be Grandma, aren’t I?), sewed up this quick lap-tee gown and hat in preemie size so that little bit would have something to wear for 4th of July newborn pictures!

One more picture just to make you say, “awwwww . . . ” Who doesn’t love newborn baby toes?


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