Countdown Calendar

We’re counting down the days until Santa arrives. A day late, but we’ve got candy! Last year we had a store-bought calendar with chocolates and one that we made with activities for each day. This year I thought I’d make a reusable fabric version that we can fill with candy, activity cards, or tiny little toys. The girls have voted for candy this year.

I wanted something simple that we wouldn’t get tired of year after year. The fact that it’s washable is a bonus too. I drew the snowflake design in Illustrator and digitized it for machine embroidery with the numbers added. And this is going to be a pom-pom holiday season for us. I was so excited that my 7-year-old has ended her crafting boycott to make these. Easy and fun for kids to make — I’m planning a post on kid’s pom-pom projects for later this month. I think maybe in a real advent calendar you wouldn’t include Christmas day, but I like the symmetry of five days per row.

DIY Holiday Gifts

You have plenty of time to make gifts for the holidays. Here are a few ideas:

For Little Kids:

Elf Skittles from The Long Thread.

Art Supplies like the Kids’ Drawing Case, Craft Can and Sketch Box.

Matchbox Car Cozy from My Little Gems.

Felt Food Round-Up from Penny Carnival.

Felt Letters from Made by Rae.

From the Kitchen:

Peppermint Bark with Printable Labels from The Long Thread.*

Peppermint Whoopie Pies from Better Homes and Gardens.

Chocolate-Dipped Peppermint Sticks from Country Living.

Chocolate Peppermint Cookies from Martha Stewart.

Almond Sour Cream Pound Cake from Paula Deen (skip the frosting).

Salted Caramels from Ina Garten.

For Hostess/Teacher Gifts:

Japanese Coin Purse from The Purl Bee.

Anthropologie Tea Towels from Lavender Kitty.*

Zippered Pouch from The Crimson Owl.

Painted Coasters from Design Sponge.*

Bordered Tea Towels from Sew4Home.

Glass Etched Vase (with flowers) from How About Orange.

Sugar Scrub from Skip to My Lou.

Crocheted Dishcloths from Creative Jewish Mom.

1,2,3 Sew

This post took about 18 months to write. Although you still won’t be able to get the book in your hands until the spring, you can now pre-order my book 1,2,3 Sew from Chronicle Books. I’m pretty excited, but it certainly won’t feel real until I walk into a bookstore and see the thing sitting there on a shelf. So I thought I’d share it with you today in case you want to order something for yourself today, forget all about it, then have a surprise come in the mail sometime in April. You certainly don’t have time to learn to sew now so give yourself a few months to mentally prepare.

The book is designed for beginning and intermediate sewers, with 33 useful projects that will help you build on your skills. Projects are organized in groups of three, each building on the techniques from the previous project so that you can learn as you go. For example, in one chapter you’ll make pouches; first a simple fold-over felt pouch, then a zippered coin bag, then finally a lined cosmetic case with a few added features. The book follows the theme that practice makes perfect, which I have certainly found to be true for both sewing and life in general. And of course, you don’t need to sew the projects in order. I assume that those of you with more experience will just want to skip right to your favorite projects. That works too.

I wanted the book to be user-friendly in both content and design. And believe me, I drove the talented folks at Chronicle nuts about the design and layout of the book. My editor deserves a medal for her patience. But I’m so happy with the way it turned out and I hope that you’ll like it too. The photos for the book were taken by my wonderful friend and photographer Laura Malek.

Anyway, I’m sure you’ll be hearing lots more about this in the coming months.

Spend more, buy less.

I finally got around to taking some photos of the things we made for the Indie Craft Experience. And yes, we have plenty of things left to give out as holiday gifts. We made alien drawing cases, elephant onesies, dragon tote bags, quirky dolls, jellyfish pouches and cat pillows — all based on my children’s drawings.

My former intern, Erin McCamant of Gigi and Lucy helped me over the weekend and sold a few of her things (pictured above). She’s promised to write a tutorial for the fabric ornaments, and her adorable pompom purses were caressed by every single person who walked by. The cute monsters were designed by her artist boyfriend Sean Abrahams and will be hanging on our tree this year. Erin’s paintings will be featured in an upcoming show at Youngblood Gallery.

We had some great booth neighbors including Three Bad Seeds, The Small Object and Tot Toppers. I also met many wonderful blog readers, tasted the best chocolate bar ever and got a nice warm fuzzy feeling from the local craft community.

All in all, I’d say this was a fun experience, but definitely not lucrative. I didn’t expect much, but I was hoping to actually break even. Since I don’t track expenses very well, I’m not even sure how close we came. My accounting system consists of a folder of receipts that I compile at tax season and say “Oh, s*#t, I spent too much last year”. I think it’s interesting that there are books, online seminars, Etsy features, and entire blogs dedicated to making a living crafting, but I suspect very few people are really doing it — and paying for health insurance, a mortgage, car payment, student loans, etc. I’ve been fortunate in that I started off staying home with the kids, so writing and crafting has been a good way for me to get back into working slowly. Making money crafting is just not easy for anyone.

I think there are a couple of factors that play into this. Obviously, it’s tough for crafters to compete with mass-produced goods. There has to be demand for items that are made by hand whether for environmental or aesthetic reasons. I also think too many crafters are underpricing their work, devaluing everyone in the process. I don’t fault people for wanting to sell their goods competitively, but I think we need to carefully consider the true cost of our goods: time, supplies, fuel costs, office supplies — all of it needs to be included. And then what? Maybe you see that  it’s not a profitable business model, but rather a hobby. So move on, diversify your income stream. That’s my advice for crafters, and of course there is plenty of advice out there. Disclaimer: I’m clearly not an expert on making money crafting, but a lack of expertise almost never stops me from giving advice!

As we approach the shopping season, I have some advice for buyers too. Spend more, buy less. By buying handmade, you will support an individual directly, feel better about your purchase and have a one-of-a-kind item. Why do we need all this stuff anyway? Buy fewer gifts, but with more meaning. Really, I hate to be a grinch, but all this consumerism dampens my holiday spirits. And I’ll try to remember this little pep talk when I look over my kids’ Santa list this year. It’s tough to achieve that balance between buying handmade gifts and making sure that your children don’t end up in therapy pining over the plastic Barbie head they wanted as a kid. But I’ll try this year if you will too, okay?

Happy Thanksgiving and Happy Shopping!