Printable Valentines

make-it-monday-smaller1

lovebirds-card

Attention last-minute crafters:  If you or your kid is just not in the crafty Valentine’s Day spirit, here are some quick printable cards.  Yep, the lovebirds design again.  Just print on card stock, cut and go.  I made a space at the bottom for the kid’s name.

lovebirds-valentine-cards

And if those don’t tickle your fancy, here are some others:

bunny-cakes2 Sweetheart Cards from Bunny Cakes.

bunny-cakes1 Zebra Cards from Bunny Cakes.

living-locurto Owl Cards from Living Locurto.

secret-agent-josephine Animals from Secret Agent Josephine.

zakka-life Snail Lollipop Cards from Zakka Life.

black-apple Je t’aime Cards from inside a black apple.

cottage-industrialist Giddyup from Cottage Industrialist.

skip-to-my-lou Butterfly Lollipop Cards from Skip to My Lou.

valentinecollagesheetsample Vintage Valentine Sheet from Altered Stuff.

maquette Printable Cards from Maquette.

Indie Fixx has a great list of printable valentines that are available for purchase.

Winner of goodEGG Giveaway

random

Congratulations, Elena!  The winning comment for the goodEGG gift certificate is #195, Elena, whose shop I featured in my Etsy Finds Friday yesterday.  Thanks to everyone for playing.  We’ll have a new giveaway next week.

And remember, there’s a special discount for readers of The Long Thread.  Be sure to visit goodEGG’s shop and enter the coupon code thelongthread to receive a 10% discount.  Coupon valid through 2/18/09.

Etsy Finds Friday

2-6-09

Butterfly Lidded Vessel, $56 from Whitney Smith.

ceci n’est pas un valentine” set of four, $8 from Michelle Brusegaard.

Block Printed Coasters, set of 4 for $20, 1girl1boy.

Ruffles Natural Cotton Jersey Pillow Cover, $14 from Hettle.

Hand Printed Cotton Ribbon, $10 for 39″, LeiLiLaLoo.

January No. 10, $40 from Fern Animals. 

Retro Ruler Pear Pincushion, $16 from retro mama.

Meringue Scarf, $69 from Tickled Pink Knits.

Lacey Milk Glass, $9 from The Revolving Door.

Christening Gown

christening-gown

I can remember in my early twenties when I wanted everything to be new. I didn’t appreciate the things that have been passed down in my family and wanted to create my own sense of style.  Now our home is filled with almost everything from our families, right down to my dad’s worn-out easy chair.  I’ve developed a sentimentality about  faded objects from our past and I’m quicker to repair old things rather than toss them out.  The cracks just add memories.  And in these times, it’s good to remember that it might be less expensive and better for the planet to refurbish something from the past rather than buy something new.

And I’m a total sucker for an old baby dress.  When visiting my parents over the holidays, I came across a box of old baby dresses that included my christening gown.  I’ve gently washed and pressed it and now it’s hanging in my younger daughter’s room.  I’m thinking of doing a whole wall of hanging baby dresses.  Much better to look at baby dresses on the wall than for me to have another baby!  I realize that there’s something narcissistic about wanting to hold on to my memories of childhood and imagining myself as an infant small enough to fit into this dress.  But it just makes me feel overwhelmed by the magnitude of our quickly changing lives.

My grandmother bought this gown in Europe, possibly Germany or Switzerland.  It’s a simple cotton with eyelet details and a yellowed ribbon that should probably be replaced.  It is still hanging on the early 1970s pink plastic hanger.  Be sure to check out Courtney’s post over at style court that features my Liberty of London dress from the same box.