Amy Butler Stash & Dash Bags

Stash & Dash Bags for Mandy

Sometime last March, I picked up the pattern for Amy Butler’s Stash & Dash bags. Super cute! I’d never sewn much more than simple lines before, but I knew it would come in handy sometime. Skills? Totally unnecessary, right? Hee!

Then back in November, I had the pleasure of going to Seattle with Megan for a Creating Keepsakes Convention. While we were in town, we stopped at Pacific Fabrics, a fabric and yarn shop in Bellevue packed with all kinds of textile-y goodness. Now, my mom is currently teaching me to sew, so I was a little out of my league surrounded by all those gorgeous bolts of fabric. But then, behind the counter, I saw the new Lotta Jansdotter fabrics. I’ve been coveting them since I saw sneak peeks on the Purl Soho blog. Kill me now! So pretty! And . . . perfect for my friends! I picked out four prints and happily hauled home about a half a yard each in my tiny overnight bag.

Stash & Dash Bags for Cyn

The combo resulted in a fantastic holiday gift for my good friends, Cyn and Mandy, and some fun time spent with my mom while making them. And bonus? New skill! What new hobbies, skills, and challenges have you guys been tackling?

A Very Merry Christmas

From our house to yours, have a joyful holiday season.

December 25 card recipe: Cardstock, ink, and stamp: Stampin' Up!; Patterned paper: October Afternoon and Pink Paislee; Flashcard: Elle's Studio; Brad: Crate Paper; Baker's twine: Whisker Graphics; Lace: Girls' Paperie; Punches: Fiskars Americas and We R Memory Keepers.

Scrapbooking Holidays & Celebrations: Giveaway!

Two giveaways in a row?! What?! You guys are going to love the latest special issue from Creating Keepsakes, dedicated to showing you great ideas for scrapbooking all your celebrations.

Scrapbooking Holidays & Celebrations

Not only is Scrapbooking Holidays & Celebrations packed with ideas for the holidays, it features plenty of inspiration for scrapbooking birthdays, weddings, and new babies too! All those great moments in life that you want to celebrate.

Here is one of the fun layouts I had the pleasure of creating for this issue–it documents the moments right before my youngest sister’s wedding. I was in back with my sisters and the photographer, and Chris snapped these pics of my nieces and the setting sun with his iPhone. Totally scrapworthy!

Want to see a bit more of all the fantastic ideas in this issue? Take a peek:

CK is letting me have a copy of this issue to give away on my blog. Hooray! Just leave a comment here by Wednesday, November 23, and I’ll randomly select a winner.

Cheers!

Winner, Winner! Fabric & Notions Giveaway

With the exclusion of sweet Kim Watson’s comment, I had four peeps enter the Scrapbooking with Fabric & Notions giveaway–pretty good odds for you guys! So, without further ado, the winner is . . .

Random Number_Fabric & Notions Giveaway

Ashley! Thanks for reading and commenting, everyone!

Scrapbooking with Fabric & Notions: Giveaway!

Over the last six months or so, I’ve had the extreme pleasure of working on a “sew” special issue of Creating Keepsakes magazine. Scrapbooking with Fabric & Notions is packed with so many cool ideas for “using buttons, fabric, thread, and other materials from the sewing world” on layouts, I want to try them all!

Below is the cover, featuring a stunning layout by the talented Piradee Talvanna!

Scrapbooking with Fabric & Notions

To give you a taste, here’s a sneak peek of a layout I created for the issue, featuring just one of the fun ways to use zippers on your layouts:

Like Mother, Like Daughter

Want to see a little bit more? Check out CK’s sneak peek!

Creating Keepsakes has generously offered to give away one copy of Scrapbooking with Fabric & Notions to my blog readers. Just leave a comment here, along with your e-mail address so I can contact you. On or around Monday, November 14, 2011, I’ll randomly select a winner and post their name here by Wednesday, November 16. One entry per person, please!

For another chance to win, check out the Creating Keepsakes blog.

Good luck, and happy scrapping!
Kim

World Cardmaking Day 2011

Happy World Card Making Day everyone! Here are three cards and one bitty notecard set that I created using bits from my scrap stash. Yeah, I’m making cards Susan Style! Okay, not entirely; I have a hard time duplicating a design on multiple cards. Gotta change it up, you know. I also reached into my stash and pulled out stamps from Lawn Fawn, Papertrey Ink, and Paper Smooches for these happy projects.

You are the Best Card

You Are the Best Card recipe: Cardstock: American Crafts; Patterned paper: Lily Bee Design, My Mind's Eye, and Sassafras; Stamps: Paper Smooches and Papertrey Ink; Ink: Stampin' Up!; Paint: Clearsnap; Brads: Crate Paper; Sticker: Studio Calico; Punch: EK Success; Other: Patterned paper.

Look to Budget-Friendly Scrapbooking from Creating Keepsakes, for scrapbooking ideas for using the border punch I used on these cards. You’ll love the scrapbook pages Kelly Purkey and Shelley Aldrich created!

Hello Typewriter Card


Hello Typewriter Card recipe: Cardstock: American Crafts; Patterned paper: American Crafts and Sassafras; Stamps: Lawn Fawn; Clip and ink: Stampin' Up!; Punches: EK Success and Stampin' Up!; Other: Patterned paper.

Butterfly Card


Butterfly Card recipe: Cardstock: Bazzill Basics Paper; Patterned paper: BasicGrey and My Mind's Eye; Baker's twine: My Mind's Eye; Punches: EK Success and Martha Stewart Crafts.

The base for this card is left over from a card of mine that’s featured in Paper Crafts’ Holiday Cards & More Vol. 6 special issue! I’m proud to be sharing page 47 with the uber-talented Maile Belles!

Veggie Notes


Veggie Notes recipe: Cardstock: American Crafts; Patterned paper: Crate Paper, Sassafras, and Studio Calico; Stamps: Paper Smooches; Ink, pins, and punch: Stampin' Up!

I hope you’re having lots of fun making cards today!

Pickles!

A couple of weekends ago, I had my first experience making pickles; it was a total success! We had quite a few cucumbers on hand from our CSA. First, I have to say that getting involved with community supported agriculture (CSA) is one of the best things Chris and I have done regarding trying to establish ongoing healthy eating habits (french fry-eating binges not withstanding . . . it happens). Most nights we enjoy farm-to-table dinners, which has completely altered our relationship with food, the weather, and our community. If you don’t have the space, time, or energy to devote to your own garden, I encourage you to look into finding a CSA in your area.

Okay, getting off the soapbox now, and back to pickles! In the August issue of Bon Appetit, there was an article about canning, complete with some delish looking recipes, like the one I used here for Bread and Butter Pickles.

While we don’t generally love sweet pickles, these particular ones promised to be both sweet, sour, and spicy, but not too sweet. I figured, well, we’d only have three quarts, so if we didn’t really care for them, we could easily give away three quarts and never use the recipe again.

You start by chopping up a ton of cucumbers and onions and covering the whole thing with salt and ice. Then you walk away for two hours.

Then it’s all about getting the vinegar, spices, and sugar boiling, then adding the cold veggies. Cook them for a bit, and then bottle them up. Place the bottles in a big stock pot filled with boiling water.

Make sure the water fully covers your bottles, but make sure you don’t have too much water either. Once the bottles were in, I had to scoop out a bunch of the water because I knew that when it got boiling again, I’d have water everywhere. Yikes! So out came about two cups of hot, hot water. I’m so glad Chris didn’t see me doing this. (Shhhhh!!)

Okay! Crisis averted. And now to bring the water to a rolling boil. Remember: do not start your timer until the water is rapidly boiling again. And if you’re in Utah, you have to adjust your time for altitude (i.e., add 5 minutes). Then you wait, and nervously hope that your bottles don’t crash into each other and shatter.

Pro tip: Next time, add a clean dish cloth to the bottom of the pot to help keep everything stable. Yup.

Ding! Pickles are done! I turned off the burner and waited another five minutes for all the boiling to stop and for the contents of the jars to chill out. Lifting them out was a bit of a challenge because I didn’t have cool jar-lifting tongs. Again, I’m glad Chris didn’t see me screwing around with dish towels and regular tongs. But not burning myself for the win, right?

Pro tip: Get jar-lifting tongs.

And there you have it. Pickles! For the record: They’re spectacular. Bon Appetit comes through for us again! We’ve almost polished off a full quart of these babies.

Last weekend, I made dill pickles from our mountain of CSA zucchini. These dill pickles had to sit a week before you can taste them, to give them time to pickle and soak up the dilly goodness. They should be ready for a taste test tonight! Hooray!

Branching Out Scarf

Back in May, I promised my mom a knitted project for her birthday/Mother’s Day. Three months later, I finished this scarf based on the Branching Out pattern from Susan Lawrence, the same local designer who wrote the pattern for my Ragtop Gloves. It’s my first lace knitting project, and it took me some time to get going on it, but I’m happy with the result. I love the leaf-inspired pattern, and I think that it will block quite nicely. The pattern will become more defined. The scarf itself will be a little bit wider and longer. And the wool-silk yarn blend will become slightly less nubby. My mom loves lavender, so the color is just right. Hooray!

Branching Out Scarf
Needle size: 6
Yarn: Elsbeth Lavold Silky Wool in Antique Rose
Pattern: Susan Lawrence

In progress:
Strafford Tee by Amy Christoffers
Sackets Harbor Pullover by Hannah Fettig

In which I confess my love of coleslaw

I can’t help it. There’s just something about the combination of crisp veggies and vinegar-based sauce that does it for my tastebuds every time. Yesterday, I had the day off, so I went to town and made Bon Appetit’s delicious Yogurt-marinated Grilled Chicken and classic coleslaw from their grilling issue (July 2011).

The Yogurt-marinated Grilled Chicken was featured in Bon Appetit’s The Providers column and comes from the ultra-cool Jenny Rosentrach and Andy Ward of Dinner: A Love Story. I prepped the chicken during the day, and it marinated for five hours until Chris got home and we tossed it on the grill. It was, as promised, juicy and full of flavor. The garam masala and cilantro added just a little bite of Indian spice. Wonderful.

One of the fab things in the July issue is this article on different slaws. Yum! We’ve made the beet and carrot slaw in addition to last night’s traditional cabbage slaw, and they were both fantastic.

Side note: Adam Rapoport is doing a brilliant job as Bon Appetit’s Editor-in-Chief. The articles are engaging, and the recipes are down-to-earth and consistently delicious. If you haven’t picked up a copy of this magazine lately, do it. Bringing Adam over from GQ was an inspired move.

Cyn & Wren

My friends Cyn and Rob recently got a new dog: the rascal you see on this layout. His name is Wren, and he’s an English Pointer/Australian Shepherd/Border Collie. Not that you can see any Aussie or Collie in him. Doesn’t he look just like a Pointer? Anyway, he’s hilarious! I’ve never met a dog with this much personality.

So here’s my first layout about Wren and his girl, Cyn. I wanted to create a playful, colorful feel for the layout without going themed, and the funky, vintage style of October Afternoon’s 5 & Dime collection worked perfectly for the bulk of the layout. Notice: I didn’t add any journaling to the labels. That’s because this is a gift layout, and I want Cyn to be able to write whatever she wants on it.

Also, you can tell from my photo–I’ve been messing around with Instagram. Yay! I’ve been following a few blogs that always post photos with a distinctive style, and I wanted to give it a try to see how it looks…. The filter I picked does add a vintage color cast to the full photo, which I like, but doesn’t tell you exactly how this layout looks. Close, but the colors are muted. Tell me what you think. (I can take it….)

Cyn & Wren recipe: Patterned paper: Lily Bee Design and October Afternoon; Stickers: Crate Paper and October Afternoon; Brad: The Girl's Paperie; Embroidery floss: DMC; Adhesive: American Crafts and Tombow; Photo action: Maggie Holmes Photography.