Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts

1.04.2012

"Silverized" Christmas



So, I HAD to make a post solely about my amazing friends Susan, Sally, & Emily, especially after seeing their Christmas decor from my friend Lindsey's blog!  Here is their awesome family:


Since Susan is in the process of remodeling her home, she didn't hesitate one bit on spray painting things silver for Christmas!  These photos, taken by Lindsey, should seriously be published in a magazine.



Check out more photos and details of Susan Ebright's home decorated for Christmas on Lindsey's blog!



she even hand-made and screen-printed pillows!
[Papa is modeling the pillows and chicken footstool for the camera]


Susan & Sally are the creators and force behind The City Girl Farm which has made it's name known from the amazing handmade chicken footstools they sell!


They've made some big waves at art fairs across the country - being featured on the local news stations as well.  Here are some photos of their last booth in St. Louis:




They hand-dye, hand-spin, and hand-weave wool, sew, and screen print items among other things they find inspiring and want to challenge themselves to learn.  With backgrounds in Interior Design & Architecture - their capabilities are limitless!



For our church Farm Party this past fall, they were gracious enough to let us borrow two chickens for a day [for cute photo-ops] and donated screen-printed aprons, t-shirts, & onesies as raffle give-aways!



My husband, Matt, and I showing off [or riding] the chickens!



Kids LOVE them!

... and the winners are ...



see, real men wear chickens!



I wonder what they'll do next???

The City Girl Farm:




1.03.2012

Gingerbread Architecture



This year with the Kersten family, in New Jersey, we had a Gingerbread House Competition!

With two Architecture graduates, one Interior Architecture graduate, an Interior Designer, and a historian- things are bound to get interesting!!!


To make the gingerbread house pieces:

1 C Crisco Melted
1 1/2 C Molasses (Grandma's brand)
1 C Sugar
5 C Flour
1 Tbs Ginger
1 Tbs Allspice
1 tsp salt
1 tsp Baking Soda
1 egg

Melt Crisco- mix in a bowl with Molasses and sugar.  Add all dry ingredients wile mixing then add egg.  Dough will be smooth, soft and elastic.  Cover with damp cloth to keep soft while working.  [We found it was easier to work with after it had cooled down a minute or two]  Put wet paper towel on table cover with parchment or brown paper.  Roll dough to desired thickness [about 1/8" thick], cut and remove outsides.  [My sister-in-law, Liz, had cookie cutters for the house shapes] Place paper and dough on cookie sheet.  Bake until outside edges are lightly brown at 350 degrees.  Remove from pan to cool.


Then let the pieces cool for a day before assembling them with icing.

Royal Icing:

1/4 C Meringue Powder (Wilton brand)
1 Lb powered sugar (2 1/2 - 3 cups)
6-7 Tbs Hot water

Beat 10 min on high-make sure the bowl and the beaters have nothing greasy on them.

[scoop some icing into small baggies and cut the corner to use as a piping bag]

We cut a circle out of cardboard and covered it with foil for the base of each gingerbread house.

Working hard on our little homes!

It's definitely helpful to have a couple of exact o knives for carving shapes and cutting details!



 The finished products:

 Liz & Tom created a nature-themed cottage in the woods complete with a campfire, dried fruit garland, almond pine trees, granola ground cover, chex-tiled roof, and dusted powdered sugar for snow!

 Nancy & Jerry made a southwestern-themed home with a licorice tile roof, pretzel cactus, rosemary bushes, graham cracker sand, dried cranberry hanging "peppers", and an inflatable snowman on the porch!

Jim & Betsy used the same gingerbread pieces to cut out their own shapes for St. Basil's Cathedral in Russia!  They used large hershey kisses, tootsie roll, and caramel squares to mold their onion domes.  It was pretty funny a couple of days later the large caramel dome became too heavy and began to tilt causing the middle tower to lean and sink into the base!

Matt & my Deutsches Fachwerk cottage in der Schwartzwald
[German cottage in the Black Forrest]
We used icing for stucco, pretzels for fachwerk, licorice rope for bricks, nerds for flowers, coconut for snow, roasted peanuts for rocks, gumballs & Wasabi-flavored covered nuts for bushes, and black licorice shapes for stepping stones!  Complete with a snowman out front, a wilkommen sign over the door, and a caramel-molded dachshund in the front yard!  

The next day our caramel wiener dog had sunk down to the ground and looked like a dead dog in the yard!  Lesson Learned: caramel is not as good as tootsie roll for molding shapes! 


Which one is your favorite?
[honestly, no feelings hurt!]

12.20.2011

Knit Together

I recently painted a series of 9 12"X12" textured canvases for my dear friends Lindsey & Ryan.



Titled: "Psalm 139:13"

I was inspired by the word "knit" in the verse, and wanted an abstract representation of fabric being knit together with a crosshatch pattern.




I wanted it to be more neutral in grey, grey-blues, silvers, and charcoal in the background with punches of purple, black, & blue.  They wanted more color in their house but weren't sure what.  So I decided to  choose for them!  Since they both went to K-State- purple would be a a color both could agree on!


I'll post photos of it in their living room once they're hung after the holidays!




12.14.2011

Framed Wall Vignette



 My latest project has been putting together all of the frames I'd collected over the past couple of years into a central vignette above the sofa.



It all started with this cardboard deer head we bought on sale through Joss & Main.



[Jager ponders the deer's head looming above him]

First I started with a rough sketch of what I pictured
[in order to explain the thoughts floating in my head to my husband!]

Then I laid my collected items on the floor in different arrangements
until I was completely satisfied with the composition
[confession: These all laid on my studio floor for about two weeks while I mulled over it all] 

My biggest tip for hanging a collection of things on the wall is to:
cut newspaper clippings the size of each item!  I learned this from Young House Love.
I labeled them so I would know which piece went with what frame and taped them to the wall the way I had laid it all out on the floor.

Tools Needed:
hammer, small level, tape measure, scotch or blue tape, pencil, and various-sized nails

By taping newspaper pieces to the wall, you can then draw with a pencil where the nail should go by measuring how far down the hook is on the back of each frame.  Then just nail right through the newspaper and then peel it off the wall!



My plan is to change out the graphics for each season.  Right now I have Christmas-related prints in all of the frames.  I think it would be cool one season to have just bright blocks of solid color in each frame.



 The Close-up Details:


A shadowbox [from Target] I lined with craft paper, and hung an ornament in:





My favorite by far is the kid on the right:
It just cracks me up that as your eye moves across all of the items, you will randomly stop at the strange kid holding presents! ha!

I love finding & creating humor in design!


 And to leave you on a final note: