Watercolor paper lantern tutorial
This is an easy tutorial for paper lanterns from a watercolor painting. You can of course make a painting just for a lantern, or use any other kind of paper.
gather materials: Watercolor painting, scrap cardboard such as from a cereal box, scissors, glue stick, tape, x-acto knife, tissue paper, clothespin, wire for handle
make a line 1 1/2 inches up from bottom, cut paper below line as shown
cut shapes from paper with x-acto knife
1 comment November 5, 2009
Craft worry dolls to help Amnesty International fight for womens rights
While searching the web for a worry doll tutorial I came across Amnesty International’s website. I had never heard of CEDAW, nor did I know the US was one of the only countries not to have yet ratified CEDAW. Instead of making worry dolls for ourselves we will make them, and send them to Amnesty International before december 10th, and take part in helping other women, and mothers around the world who are not as lucky as we are. Below is excerpted from Amnesty Internationals website. Please go there for more details, how to make the worry dolls, and to learn more about CEDAW.
Amnesty International USA activists around the country are crafting worry dolls to send a symbolic message to the Senate. We’re urging them to help protect women’s human rights by ratifying the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW).
Throughout the world, discrimination against women and girls is pervasive, and its impact is devastating. Of the world’s 1.3 billion poorest people, 70 percent are female. Violence against women is prevalent: one in three women worldwide will experience assault, rape or other abuse during her lifetime. Two-thirds of the world’s 771 million illiterate adults are women. Due to lack of adequate health care, more than 530,000 women die each year from pregnancy-related complications – one every minute.
CEDAW establishes international protections against these abuses: it offers women redress against violence, guarantees equal access to education, and commits nations to fighting maternal mortality. Yes the United States remains one of the only countries that has not ratified CEDAW.
One woman lost to pregnancy-related complications every minute means more than 10,000 maternal deaths every week — and those statistics are cause for urgent concern and attention. In Mayan tradition (and in some other indigenous communities around the world) one way to deal with worry is to make a “worry doll” — a simple doll made with a few popsicle sticks or a clothes-pin and some yarn or thread.
AIUSA members around the country are crafting these worry dolls. Join us in crafting 10,000 worry dolls to symbolize the 10,000 mothers we lose every week! Next year, we’ll deliver them to the Senate to push them to finally ratify CEDAW and protect women’s human rights.
Amnesty International USA activists around the country are crafting worry dolls to send a symbolic message to the Senate. We’re urging them to help protect women’s human rights by ratifying the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW).
Throughout the world, discrimination against women and girls is pervasive, and its impact is devastating. Of the world’s 1.3 billion poorest people, 70 percent are female. Violence against women is prevalent: one in three women worldwide will experience assault, rape or other abuse during her lifetime. Two-thirds of the world’s 771 million illiterate adults are women. Due to lack of adequate health care, more than 530,000 women die each year from pregnancy-related complications – one every minute.
CEDAW establishes international protections against these abuses: it offers women redress against violence, guarantees equal access to education, and commits nations to fighting maternal mortality. Yes the United States remains one of the only countries that has not ratified CEDAW.
One woman lost to pregnancy-related complications every minute means more than 10,000 maternal deaths every week — and those statistics are cause for urgent concern and attention. In Mayan tradition (and in some other indigenous communities around the world) one way to deal with worry is to make a “worry doll” — a simple doll made with a few popsicle sticks or a clothes-pin and some yarn or thread.
AIUSA members around the country are crafting these worry dolls. Join us in crafting 10,000 worry dolls to symbolize the 10,000 mothers we lose every week! Next year, we’ll deliver them to the Senate to push them to finally ratify CEDAW and protect women’s human rights.
Add comment November 3, 2009
easy paper folded doves, for Noah story or not
You need a square of paper. Any size or kind will do. You may not want to get above 9 or 10 inches as it would start to get too floppy.
1 comment October 27, 2009
Day of the Dead necklace tutorial
Super cute day of the dead necklace tutorial. The skulls are from salt dough, and the flowers are tissue paper. Most of us have all the stuff already on hand. What a sweet job Alpha Mom. This would make an awsome garland as well.
Add comment October 25, 2009
Awsome, printable, customized chore chart
ModEco Kids has a really nice printable chore chart that you can customize with your child’s name, and specific chores.
I love this!! Thanks ModEco.

1 comment October 23, 2009
Weekly math game: Bean Dip
We are trying to make & play a different math game every week. This is this week’s. It’s called Bean Dip. It is simple, inexpensive, and most importantly, very fun. We had more fun than I thought we would with this one. It was a huge success.

Materials needed:
- a bowl
- a scooper (we used one that came with a can of coffee)
- biggest dried beans you can find ( we used large limas $1.29)
- sharpie fine tip pen
How to make it & play it:
- Take your dried beans & write a number on each side at random. You will have to repeat each numerous times to get enough for your bowl. We added “wild beans” too. They can be used as any number you choose. Go light on the zeros. They do nothing for the game, but a few are nice.
- When you have enough beans in the bowl to get a good scoop, take turns scooping out beans
- each player has to add up the beans they scooped onto the table. You can make it a competition if you like, but we just take turns and do not keep score.
My daughter wanted to take a turn again & again, with each turn trying to scoop up more beans than the previous time. At first she took very light scoops only scooping up 5 or six beans to add together, but after a few goes she was scooping as much as the scoop could hold.
This game was great at allowing her to see the relationship between numbers. She could sort them out into groups that equaled 10, then easily add the remaining beans, or she could group by number, and use her growing multiplication skills to add alot of numbers quickly. We made this game strictly for mental math. No gems or counters allowed, and no paper either. 
Littler children can “play along” by taking scoops and just sorting into groups

You can even have then work out multiplication problems with the beans

5 comments October 21, 2009




























We moved further into our housebuilding block with shelters from the old testament stories. We learned about Jabal, Jubal, and Tubal-Cain, descendants of Cain who made the first dwelling on Earth. This was a nice story, and a very good one that represented the archetypal first house. We used the story from Jakob Streit’s “And There Was Light” which I purchased through Bob & Nancy’s bookstore. 








