We Made it to the End of March!

It only occurred to me yesterday that this will be the last weekend of March. It’s so crazy how quickly this insanely long month flies by! We did it! Whew! I look back on all the concerts and music festivals, coupled with the gardening and the sewing—it’s such a BIG MONTH EVERY SINGLE YEAR.

  1. Prom Dresses!
  2. Garden
  3. Easter
  4. Girls’ driving practicing

I’m still ironing out the wrinkles in Renaissance’s muslin for her prom dress. I look forward to the day when I’m good at making muslins. I’m on Attempt #3 and I’ve finally managed to get the worst problems solved. Now I just need to make sure the sleeve will work, which I’ve been procrastinating because sleeves and I do not get along. Fingers and toes crossed!

No work done. I am falling behind on this. BUT it was raining all week, so…meh.

I’ve made no plans. Nobody’s terribly excited about any part of it this year, and we’ve all got other stuff going on, so I guess it’ll be a quiet celebration, which is fine to happen every few years.

  • Girls’ Driving Practice: Happened more than usual. Rachel drove Michael’s truck twice and she loves it.
  • Parent Teacher Conferences: I didn’t go because I am incapable of being in two places at once. I feel like I am always finding out about Parent Teacher Conferences only a week or two before they happen—I should make a note to figure this out earlier in the year so I don’t have previous engagements at the same time.
  • Lunch with a Friend: Happened! Oh, it’s such a nice thing to do! And, weirdly enough, a friend from Utah randomly phoned me about forty-five minutes before the lunch date and I got to talk to her, too! Connecting with friends is one of the best feelings. I’m so glad these ladies reached out.

Have a lovely Easter weekend!

A Pair of Pretty Purple Prom Dresses

Renaissance and Rachel are both going to our church’s Spring Formal with their friends, and I decided to just throw sanity to the wind and make their dresses. I have been looking forward to making dance dresses ever since I found out Emily was a girl, but I’ve never been called upon to make dance dresses because right after Emily was asked to Spring Formal, the COVID shutdown went into place and everything was cancelled. She lost interest in school activities like that, even after things opened back up, and so she never went to any of the dances.

Ren and Rachel, however, are down with the whole formal dance thing and it’s been a lot of fun. I haven’t made any of their dresses yet because I was doing school and had no time for crafty pursuits, so I’m really grateful that I will get a chance to do these two dresses.

I am wary of the pattern that she’s picked out because it’s got multiple princess seams all over the place, but if I can figure it out, it’s going to be gorgeous. I’ve already spent way too much time on her pattern because it was only available via PDF download and I had to print it out onto one hundred and twenty seven pieces of paper and then tape them together. It took four hours. I complained, bitterly, on Facebook and I was amazed at how many ride-or-die friends I have who joined me in my fury over the frustration of printing out this pattern.

A day or two later I was reading through Gertie’s newest book announcement on Instagram, and the inevitable comment kerfuffle over her decision to not include paper patterns with the book, when I noticed a comment about how you can send the A0 pattern files to a print center and have them printed out all nice and intact onto one huge sheet of paper like patterns normally come in when they’re sold in an envelope. I felt my heart slow and hiccup as I “remembered” that one of the options for printing out Ren’s dress pattern was A0, not A4 like I thought. And then I told all my friends at church about what an idiot I was.

But then I started writing this blog post and thought I should double-check that remembrance and NO, it was offered as an A4 size, not A0. I’m not an idiot!!! So…prior annoyance still stands. And yes, I do realize that the pattern is out of print and that’s why it’s only available as a PDF file…but really, I’d much rather it not have shown up in Renaissance’s internet searching for dress patterns if my only option was PDF. Something to remember for the future. Printed or A0 ONLY. None of this taping together of letter-sized papers for hours. Aaaand I need to go back to my church friends and recant my idiocy confession.

Ren’s dress is a contemporary pattern and will be sewn up in two different colors of silk—a color shifting indigo/purple dupioni called “Comet Tail,” and a solid orchid purple shantung called “Nolana,” both of which I purchased from Silk Baron. Oh my gosh, aren’t they the prettiest pieces of fabric?!?! I love to just hold them in my hands. And the lining is a gray silk/cotton batiste that I need to buy more of and turn into something I can use everyday because it is wonderful to touch and I need it in my life.

We have also purchased two rhinestone appliques to possibly attach to the dress, just in case the top of the bodice ends up looking too plain. AND I ordered silk thread to sew it all up, which is, weirdly, a really exciting thing for me because I’ve never ordered silk thread before. Whatever makes you happy, right?

She’s chosen a vintage pattern that just makes me shake my head because it’s so weird when you think about the dates of its publication and all sorts of other historical things that I’ll share with you later when it’s done. As with most republished vintage patterns, the actual sewing instructions are almost non-existent, so I’m guessing how some elements of this dress are going to go together and just hoping that my instincts are good. ‘Cuz that’s always an excellent recipe for success. (Some finger-crossing and optimistic-vibe-sending would be appreciated here…)

She’s picked out a lavender satin taffeta and a lilac organza from JoAnn Fabric that we picked up last weekend, and she’s hoping to add some sort of trim or applique to it. I think this particular dress will need the addition of some petticoats/crinolines to bring it to its full potential, so I’ve already ordered two to be safe. I was thinking I’d make them myself, but my timetable is super tight and I’d rather not stress about something like that.

And that’s where we are. Materials acquired and starting to add coal to the steam engine. Pretty soon we’ll be chugging along and I’ll have more to share with you

I Dream of Muslin

It really is unfortunate that prom dress sewing lines up with getting the garden started. I’m still trying to figure out how to make both of them work together, with preference leaning towards the dresses because I can always come in a little late on the garden. This week will see that preference leaning towards creating the muslin for Ren’s dress, and hopefully more than that.

This week’s meal plan:

  • Saturday: Beef Stew
  • Sunday: Cheeseburgers & Fries
  • Monday: Spaghetti
  • Tuesday: TBD
  • Wednesday: TBD
  • Thursday: TBD
  • Friday: TBD

Stay on top of the laundry. I was looking at Nathaniel during church yesterday and I think he needs a new wardrobe because he grew again. I had to buy him a new pair of running shoes, two sizes larger than the last pair I bought him in JANUARY. I don’t know how he is not in constant pain with the rate at which he is growing right now. Also, he’s now wearing the same size shoes as Michael does. Maybe one of my children will actually end up taller than me.

Basic upkeep because of the prom dresses.

  • I need to buy a wedding gift and a bridal shower gift for one of Emily’s friends who is getting married in the next few weeks. It’s incredibly weird that my kids’ friends are starting to get married. Wasn’t ready for that.
  • Need to figure out what Emily’s plans for the next school year are so she can apply for things at the right times.
  • Driving practice for all three girls so maybe they can take their driver’s license tests over spring break.
  • Might meet a friend for lunch.
  • Parent Teacher Conferences this week. I don’t know if I should even bother going, especially after hearing what quite a few teachers had to say about parent teacher conferences while I was doing my student teaching—the parents whose kids are doing fine are the ones who show up and there’s little to say to them, and the parents whose kid are not doing well and who really need to talk to the teachers don’t show up at all. Conflicted.
  • At Home:
    • Renaissance’s Prom Dress: As I write this, I have just finished altering the pattern and cutting the first (and hopefully, only) muslin for Renaissance’s dress. That is the hardest part of the entire process, so I’m feeling good about things today. I taskified the dresses last week and, according to the schedule I have planned out, I’ll be on-track to finish on-time if I’m able to finish sewing up the bodice completely this week, which is totally doable if things go as they should. I didn’t know what to do about preparing the silks for sewing, and the internet had very conflicting information on that subject, so I just gave Silk Baron a phone call and had a lovely, candid chat with whomever answered the phone that just made my day. They convinced me to not prewash and just stick with dry cleaning the silk, and to also really consider using dress shields, so I think I’ll follow their advice on that.
    • Rachel’s Prom Dress: I think we have everything we need, materials-wise, for the dress. We picked up the oh-so-pretty fabric on Saturday and had a lovely girls’ morning together. I love that bonus of sewing for the girls—we have to hang out together to do it right, and it inevitably leads to more hanging out. I have also preemptively ordered some crinolines for her so I can see ahead of time if they’ll be complimentary to the gown as I’m making it up.
  • Van Crafting Sessions™: Not really feeling the wedding shawls at this time. I have more time this week for van crafting, so we’ll see how I feel about stuff at the end of the week. I did feel a pull to start working on the Smitten EPP quilt in the past few days, though—I might head that direction.
  • I do not have time for this! Usually I can pop in and out of the house and plant this and weed that, but with most of my time being spent on the prom dresses I’m worried about getting dirt on my hands that could potentially transfer to the dress materials. Maybe I can work to get ahead on the dresses this week and use any free time to go get stuff done in the garden.
  • Renaissance received her acceptance letters from both Pacific University and Linfield College! Now to wait for scholarship decisions. The late FAFSA has been such a headache.
  • Easter’s this Sunday, and I have no plans whatsoever. I don’t even know if I’ll get to the point of making plans. We have a ham and we’ll cook it. Maybe I’ll put Easter treats on the girls’ radars and they’ll take care of it.
  • Band Festival
  • Choir Contest
  • Engagement Party for a lady at church that conflicts with something else that I hope ends up being cancelled so I can go to the party instead. Why is there always something responsible that you’re signed up to do when a party comes along? However, having been on the receiving end of RSVP back-outs because something better came along for the invited guest, I stand firmly on the hill—nay, am willing to die upon said hill—of honoring your previous appointment commitments despite how enticing a later invitation may be because it’s really rude not to.
  • Church Easter Brunch: I’ve signed up to bring fruit. Michael wants to sign up to bring biscuits and gravy, but I am going to leave that entire project to him, rather than commit in my name and have it potentially fall through and embarrass me.
  1. Prom Dresses!
  2. Garden
  3. Easter
  4. Girls’ driving practicing

I Forgot that I Finished the Quilt Top

Another week of March complete!  There were a few reminders and calendar dates that came out this week that really drove the point home that we’re heading into the last bit of this school year.  Renaissance received her cap and gown on Monday, so that big reminder that graduation is approaching is now sitting on my dining room table and I get a little hit to the emotions every time I walk by and see it.  Bittersweet.

  1. Finish the Latte Layer Cake quilt, photograph it, and write up the various posts
  2. PROM DRESSES
  3. Rachel choir stuff
  4. Garden
  5. Office/Ward Music/Band Parents
  • Layer Cake Latte Quilt: The top, as needed for the pattern debut, is complete!  I still need to photograph it and write up its various social media posts for the release date.
  • Prom Dresses: Worthy of their own blog post because we are not off to a great start.
  • Renaissance and I helped Rachel out this week with her rehearsing and she says it helped.  The choir concert went really well, you could hear the improvements from the last time her group performed these pieces.  They’ll be leaving in a few weeks for an out-of-state competition, so it is crunch time for these kids.  A little stressful for everyone right now.
  • Band Parents: We have a board meeting set up for tonight to deal with some overdue stuff.
  • Ward Music: My predecessor has it set up pretty well and pretty far out.  This should be easy to jump into.
  • I don’t think I got out there this week.  Blame the prom dresses.

The Two Mindset Shifts that Helped Me to Raise Creative Kids

When I was starting out on my parenting journey, it was always a goal to raise children who enjoyed being creative. I invested a lot of our resources into encouraging their creative talents, but there were two separate moments during their childhoods that really influenced how our family operates and allows creativity to flourish.

#1: Art supplies are meant to be consumed, not conserved.

The toddler years are rough, man.  You’re dealing with developing minds and motor skills, and it takes a lot of patience.  If you’re adding in creative endeavors, it takes a lot of “wasted” resources when you think of those little minds trying to figure out how things work, and those little hands trying to learn how to operate scissors and paintbrushes and glitter containers.  I cannot remember where I heard the phrase, “Art supplies are meant to be consumed, not conserved,” but it stopped me in my tracks.

As luck would have it, we had a “Fun Friday” the next day as part of our homeschool schedule, and I’d scheduled some sort of cookie making and decorating for one of the activities that day.  One of the girls was obsessed with the sprinkles that day, and I would have normally discouraged her exploration and experimentation with the vast amounts of sprinkles it felt like she was “wasting,” but that phrase popped into my head, and it made me hesitate to intervene.  She wasn’t trying to waste sprinkles; she was trying to figure out how many sprinkles you could put on a cookie without them all sliding off when you moved the cookie.  I taught her how to tilt the sprinkle-laden cookies to empty the extra sprinkles onto a paper towel, and how to then turn the paper towel into a funnel and return the extra sprinkles to the jar.  All three of the girls were then obsessed with this party trick and spent the rest of cookie decorating time practicing the skill with varying degrees of success.  They were enjoying the activity!  I sat on my hands and let them.  It was challenging for me!

We had another cookie decorating activity a few weeks later, and the urge to over sprinkle was gone.  They did the sprinkle funneling on their own (with varying success yet again…I think they were 2, 4, and 6 years old) and worked on different, more artistic-leaning skills. The urge to glut cookies with sprinkles had been satisfied. They knew what would happen if they did that. They learned how to clean up a mess/mistake. By letting them spend time doing those things, they were able to move onto more advanced concepts. So much of being little is experimenting with the world around you. If it’s safe and not purposely wasteful, then it’s OK to let them use the art supplies. I never would have let them throw sprinkles in the air or dump them down the drain because that’s just being wasteful. But figuring out how many sprinkles were too many on a cookie? That was an important learning activity. And I never would have realized the importance of it without hearing the phrase, “Art supplies are meant to be consumed, not conserved.”

#2: Your home is a workshop, not a temple.

There’s a quote that goes around in Mormon/LDS culture, from the Bible Dictionary, which says “[o]nly the home can compare with the temple in sacredness.”  Families interpret this in a myriad of ways, but a popular one to default to is to try and replicate the tidiness of the temple in one’s home. I think some of the welcoming aspects of visiting the temple is the fact that they’re so clean, they’re decorated nicely, and they’re quiet—three things that I could not usually say were true about my home during the Young Children Years. But then I heard the phrase, “Your home is a workshop, not a temple,” and I really liked it. Yes, we strive for sacredness in our homes, but sacred isn’t synonymous with tidy and tastefully decorated. Sacred, to me, encompasses nurturing, growth, patience, love, and beauty. These attributes don’t require sterility and silence in order to happen. Part of the beauty of nurturing children is that it’s not silent at all. It’s joyous and exuberant and punctuated with laughter. Most of the behaviors that go along with properly nurturing children would NOT be allowed in the temple. Homes and temples have the same goals, but they are vastly different kinds of workspaces.

Workshops still need tidiness to be functional, but it’s a different kind of tidiness than that of a temple. Workshops need manageable levels of noise, and they also need safety and rules. They’re different types of noise, safety, and rules than you’d have in a temple. I adjusted my expectations to line up with this new mindset.

Another important aspect of workshop spaces is that you need your own workspace that you can come back to as you have time, without worry that someone else is going to come along and disturb your project and supplies. I have my craft room and I expect my projects to be undisturbed until I return to them. Michael has the garage and it’s important we don’t mess with his stuff out there. I decided that it was important for each of our children to have their own creative spaces as well that would be respected and left alone. Whether it’s a folding table in their bedrooms, a portion of the dining room table for a larger project, a storage bin with their materials, or marking off time for them to have unrestricted access to the kitchen for hours-long baking sessions, I’ve tried to make sure our home functioned as an orderly workshop that allowed each of them the time, materials, and space to create.  So much of being creative rests upon having enough undisturbed time to create and the space to create in.

And if you’re trying to raise four creative kids and allow both yourself and your spouse to pursue creative interests as well—your home is not going to be temple-tidy all the time, and there is no embarrassment in that! If someone stops by and there’s a huge mess on the front room floor from the kids planning their next Dungeons & Dragons campaign, I refuse, on principle, to apologize for that mess’s existence. That mess is beautiful—it symbolizes hours of my children working together, because they want to, on an activity for our entire family to enjoy. That’s amazing.

Every Saturday since the start of the COVID shutdowns our kitchen has been roped off for Renaissance’s particular use until 3:00pm. She destroys that room; it’s covered in buttery fingerprints, a fine dusting of powdered sugar, and little flecks of batter everywhere as she’s experimented with making cakes, cookies, and pastries—and she is darn good at it now.

If you walk into our kitchen on a Saturday around 1:00pm, I’m not apologizing for that mess. If you walk into our kitchen on a Tuesday and it still bears the marks of Ren’s weekend baking adventures, I will be embarrassed because by that point it’s no longer a workshop mess, it’s just a mess. There’s a difference between the two. If the Dungeons & Dragons paraphernalia is still on the floor the next day and/or we haven’t played a game of it in a week, then it’s just a mess. Active creativity usually requires active messiness. If there’s no active creativity, there should no longer be a mess.

Creativity is not an excuse for filth.  There shouldn’t be messiness just because you can be messy. Just like we don’t waste art supplies, we don’t leave messes on purpose. Clean up when you’re done! Messiness while creating can’t be avoided, but you can tidy up in between your creative sessions so things look as tidy as they can given the circumstances.

Renaissance is expected to clean up her baking adventures in the kitchen so we can continue to use the kitchen throughout the week. D&D dice can’t be left on the front room carpet to trip people and clog up the vacuum. Rachel must empty her paint water when she’s not painting so we don’t run the risk of it tipping and getting all over her worktable and/or the carpet. Michael vacuums up the sawdust when he’s done working in the garage for the day so it doesn’t get tracked into the house. I tidy up the craft room so bits of string and fabric trimmings don’t migrate down the hall. A tidied workspace is a welcoming workspace for the next time you’re able to work in that space. I’ve avoided working on creative projects because my workspace has been cluttered, which is especially sad because it’s so preventable.

Creative Time, at any age, is a wise investment—it builds skills, it promotes wellbeing, and it just makes life more enjoyable—but it takes the investment of resources (materials, time, and energy) to really make it beneficial. We need to relax a bit about being overly efficient with those resources and allow our children to grow at their own pace and bloom in their own way on their creative journeys. The creative paths I’ve invested in over the years have led to much different results than I ever imagined.

My kids are not pursuing all the creative paths I thought they would, but they are pursuing creativity that their hearts love. I know they wouldn’t have discovered those creative paths without some trial and error. They’ve used a ton of art supplies that ended in abandoned paths, but those little journeys were necessary, if only for them to learn they didn’t want to pursue those paths. None of those resources were wasted because they switched to a different interest.

There’s no failure there. We consumed art supplies and it led to a different interest. That’s success! There’s no embarrassment (on my part) for the times people judged active messes in my home. That’s those people’s crosses to bear. I am proud of those messes; proud that I gave my children the space and time to experiment, learn, and flourish. It’s one of the parenting decisions I’m most proud of. Their childhoods have been full of color, textures, discovery, smells, lessons learned from safe mistakes, and the satisfaction of completing a project on their own. I am immensely proud of all of that.

Consume the paint, the sprinkles, and the fabric.

Make space and time for undisturbed creativity.

Allow the messes to happen.

Cheerfully help them to clean up.

These steps allow children to feel comfortable with being creative and teaches them how to be responsible adults, which is one of the biggest goals of raising humans. The entire creative process is a beautiful metaphor of what it means to live a fulfilled life.

I’m so glad for the shared creativity I’ve experienced with my children. It’s been one of my favorite parts of motherhood.

March(ing) Along

Halfway through this banger of a month! This week technically has quite a few things going on, but as I look at the calendar I don’t feel overwhelmed by any of them.

This week’s meal plan:

  • Saturday: Potstickers, stir fry veggies, rice
  • Sunday: Corned Beef, potatoes, cabbage
  • Monday: Tacos, taco veggies, rice, tortillas
  • Tuesday: Honey Garlic Chicken Sheet Pan Dinner, carrots & broccoli, rice
  • Wednesday: Taco Pasta, creamy green salad
  • Thursday: Thai Chicken Stiry Fry, stir fry veggies, rice
  • Friday: Irish Beef & Root Vegetable Stew, rolls
  • It’s all about the prom dresses, baby
  • I repeat: It’s all about the prom dresses, baby
  • Rachel needs help with rehearsing for her choir concert this week. She’s singing the mezzo line in a very difficult song and it’s hard to sing the middle part on anything, let alone this whopper. Time has been scheduled to work with her.
  • I feel like I need to find some time to spend with Nathaniel. But Cross Country starts up next week and I’ll be spending a lot of time at his meets for the next many weeks, so maybe I can just allow it to happen then?
  • A lot of office stuff needs to happen. We’ve just been really busy and it’s been hard to find the time to do that.
  • At Home:
    • Fat Quarter Shop upcoming quilt: It’s called the “Layer Cake Latte” quilt, and it’s coming along. All the blocks are completed and I am in the midst of joining them. All that’s left is adding the skinny border around it and then the top will be done. I had hoped to get it completely quilted before the due date, but that’s not going to happen because I FORGOT ABOUT THE PROM DRESSES and need to sew like the wind on those.
    • Prom Dresses: Yeah, they’re all I can think about at the moment. Ren’s fabric is here and it’s gorgeous. The pattern for her dress was only available as a PDF (boo!) and it’s printed but not yet taped together. Not looking forward to the taping. Once the Layer Cake Latte quilt is assembled I’ll hop right on over to sewing up Ren’s muslin. Rachel has picked out a dress pattern that I crazy, crazy love and cannot wait to tell you about because it’s so cool—it almost shouldn’t even exist—but I have to focus on Ren’s dress first because she’s a senior and that’s how that works.
  • Van Crafting Sessions™: I’ll keep chipping away at designing wedding shawls for my girls. A lot of the kids’ music lessons are cancelled this week, so I might not have a whole lot of van crafting time.
  • Set up trellises for peas, reattach trellis netting on France for eventual sweet pea climbers
  • Something with the Delphiniums
  • Sow pansies, violas
  • Put plant markers in by sown seeds
  • Start marigold seeds
  • Easter’s on the horizon, but I don’t think we’re doing anything in particular for it.
  • Nathaniel’s birthday is next month, so I’ll start slowly getting organized for that. Time to pull up the “gift ideas” note to myself that I add to throughout the year and start watching for sales.
  • Choir concert
  • Need to do things for Ward Music
  • Help Ren with her intention to volunteer for the craft show
  • Band is doing their monthly performance at the local assisted living home
  1. Finish the Latte Layer Cake quilt, photograph it, and write up the various posts
  2. PROM DRESSES
  3. Rachel choir stuff
  4. Garden
  5. Office/Ward Music/Band Parents

Cake, Silks & Pi(es)

I feel like it was a really productive week, which is always nice. My little routine of writing these goals vs. outcomes weekly posts is helping me stay on-track with what I want to accomplish each week. I’m really glad I’ve reinstituted these. Not only are they keeping me focused, but I really enjoy writing them and re-reading them, like a journal. I rarely re-read my handwritten journals, so I don’t learn as much from my writing in those. Blog posts can actually be searched by keyword, for cryin’ out loud. Wonderful.

  1. Michael’s birthday
  2. Garden
  3. WREF Scholarship application
  4. Prom dresses
  5. Resurrecting music practice time
  • Michael’s birthday went well, there was an adorable “Among Us wedding cake” made by Renaissance, and each of the kids remembered to get him a gift this year. We did not have steak and potatoes for dinner, as I predicted; he requested fajitas.
  • The potentially brewing project died a sure death this past week. I’m bummed because it would have been a cool thing to do, but I’m also relieved because it was going to take a lot of time and effort to pull off. Many lessons were learned from this experience that I can apply in the future when such a situation inevitably pops up again.
  • Trellises are in my house, as are some other gardening items.
  • All seeds needed through the month of April have been secured.
  • Rhubarb is still small.
  • I did sow the cabbages, some alyssum, but nothing else.
  • My sweet peas are just barely starting to sprout! You really have to look for them, but tiny little tendrils are pushing out of the soil!
  • Renaissance did indeed submit her application for the WREF scholarship! Oh gosh, the arrhythmias…she submitted it yesterday at 2:15pm or so, and the pop-up that came up to confirm submission stated that it was due by 4pm that day. We had planned to work on it that evening, but something came up and we moved the time to earlier, THANK GOODNESS.
  • Band Parent meeting went well and many things have been scheduled for this last push of the school year. I still have a few office-y things to do for that.
  • At Home:
    • Fat Quarter Shop upcoming quilt: Sneak peek video was posted on Friday on Instagram and I’m aware that my videography skills/software need an upgrade. I had planned to finish piecing the top on Saturday and even cleared my whole schedule for it, but some of my children decided to mutiny against their Saturday chores and much time was lost on this quilt because it went towards dialoguing and disciplining. I’m still confused as to why that day went so sideways. As it stands, I’m about 2/3 of the way done with assembling the blocks.
    • Prom Dresses: The fabric for Ren’s dress has arrived and I am so in love with it. It’s GORGEOUS. The contrast fabric isn’t as flowy as I would have liked, but we’ll just have to make do because it was the only kind of silk they had that came in the color we wanted. FYI, Shantung silk is not flowy. Tell your friends.
  • Van Crafting Sessions™: Designing wedding shawls: Newsflash: I’ve not done this before and I’m not good at it. Yet. (#growthmindset) Time was spent wrapping my head around how to actually do this.
  • Resurrecting music practice sessions: Did not happen because I’ve had them scheduled for the evenings, but now that it’s light outside again we’re actually outside during that time as a family. I’ll need to figure out a different time of day for this.

It was a really, really busy week with a concert on Thursday, which was also Pi Day, so Emily made three pies and because we had three pies chilling at our house I invited Ren’s band friends over after the concert and we all ate pie until 11:15pm. Ha ha. I’m generally an introvert who really appreciates a solid sleep schedule and bedtime, but sometimes you just gotta spend some time with friends. It was a good choice, despite how tired it made me the next day.

I Forgot about the Prom Dresses

I was so proud of myself last week for how well I had cleared my schedule so things could be manageable, and then over the course of one day so many projects came to rest on my plate. At least they’re all projects I’m excited about!

Happy Daylight Savings Time to those of you who are mandated to go through it. I’m feeling it! Hopefully the sluggishness wears off quickly.

This week’s meal plan:

  • Monday: Orange Chicken, Stir Fry veggies, Rice
  • Tuesday: CP Soup
  • Wednesday: Taco Pasta
  • Thursday: CP something, pie for Pi Day
  • Friday: Michael’s birthday dinner, which he has not decided upon yet. I’m going to guess it’ll be steak, baked potatoes, Caesar salad and herbed rye rolls.
  • Saturday: Pasta/Emily’s choice
  • Sunday: CP Corned Beef, boiled potatoes, cabbage, maybe some Irish soda bread
  • Maybe this will be the week that I finally conquer the folding pile.
  • Keep thinking about and making plans for Easter, spring and Rachel’s travel outfits.
  • Materials and supplies are going to begin arriving for making prom dresses for Renaissance and Rachel.
  • I don’t have a definitive plan set, which I would like to create. Basic upkeep for the next few weeks.
  • I’m really struggling to remember what I’d like to do here. I blame the sleep deprivation from Daylight Savings Time. Um, I need to care for my poor sleep-deprived brain by adjusting my sleeping ASAP. I’ve learned over the decades that sleep is #1. You mess with the sleep, you mess with everything.
  • At Home:
    • Prom dress prep—Dates were announced last week and I realized I had no plan whatsoever for making their dresses. We strategized over the weekend, and I think it’s doable. Ohhhh, the girls have picked some lovely designs and fabric. I’m really excited about these dresses!! Hopefully my “adventurous beginner/beginning intermediate” garment construction skills are up for the task…eek!
    • Sewing on the Fat Quarter Shop upcoming quilt—Sneak peek this Friday!
  • Van Crafting Sessions™: Planning out personalized wedding shawls because I’m a person who gets things done years ahead of time
  • Peas, trellises, etc.
  • Seed check
  • Rhubarb watching
  • Plant delphinium
  • Use up the herb jungle
  • Direct sow alyssum, cabbage, pansies, poppies, viola
  • Michael’s birthday is this week! I hounded the kids to get him gifts, so that’s an improvement over last year. Problem is, I gave them all my ideas for gifts and now I don’t have any other ideas and no gift to him from myself. Sigh.
  • After a quick text conversation with my people last week, I don’t think we’re going to be doing anything for Easter, but I’ll follow-up this week just to make sure.
  • The potentially brewing project I mentioned at the end of last week is dying a slow death. I thought it was dead for sure, but a spark of life was breathed into at the last second. I will follow-up today to find out what is going on.
  • I am nagging Renaissance about the WREF scholarship that’s due on March 17th. I do not get the feeling that it’s accomplishing anything.
  • Band Parent meeting this week—Many of my concerns from last week are resolving.
  • I was sustained in a new calling for church on Sunday: Ward Music Coordinator. It basically just means I make sure we have music during sacrament meeting. I pick the hymns, make sure the music makers know what the hymns are, and I set up and support the special musical numbers. We have Stake Conference this week, so no pressure for me this week. If I went ahead and taskified this calling, it would make my life a whole lot easier over the next few months as I settle into it. I should also resurrect my own music practice times since I know that I will inevitably have to pinch hit some musical numbers on the fly when scheduled performers cancel at the last minute.
  1. Michael’s birthday
  2. Garden
  3. WREF Scholarship application
  4. Prom dresses
  5. Resurrecting music practice time

Much Music and Considerable Clothing Commissions

It was a week of excess; a week that seemed overwhelming in the beginning and then ended with a smorgasbord of new opportunities on top of an overfilled plate.

All the music went well. The All-District Choir Concert was really, really good; it was the first time they’ve done that concert since 2016 and it really is a special event to see every single choir student in the district performing together in one space.

Wind Ensemble (High School Band) performed at the PLU Invitational on Friday and I went along as a chaperone. They did so good! It was a really enjoyable day hanging out with some of my favorite people.

Jazz Bands (both middle and high school) performed at a swing dance last night. I wasn’t feeling well, so I didn’t go. Michael took good videos and everyone sounded really good.

There was a lot of laundry folding, but I’m still not caught up.

I thought a lot about spring, Easter and choir trip wardrobes.

But then Prom was announced and I remembered that it really is a big deal to me to make the girls’ dresses for the high school dances, so everything else has kind of gone out of the window. I almost get my wish of making 1950s spring formal dresses—Rachel is eyeing a vintage Vogue pattern from the 1940s, so close enough. Renaissance’s pattern choice is a gamble that I think is going to work out. I am really excited about both dresses. Since it’s Ren’s senior year, I’ll be making hers from really nice fabrics, and Rachel will have to make do with Casa Collection satin from JoAnn Fabric. I cannot wait for the patterns to arrive in the mail so I can start cranking out the muslins.

The Baking Doodle Cowl pattern was finally released on Friday, and there were many nice comments about my particular test knit. Always feels good to receive a compliment.

My knitting queue has been a whirlwind of indecision this week! I spent a lot of time narrowing down a new project and decided to go with finally using a gorgeous skein of spring green laceweight yarn to make a pretty spring shawl. Then I decided it’d look great if I carried a strand of self-striping green mohair with it. I was so excited, and then, after knitting the set-up chart, decided it did not look great.

Which is fine because then I realized that we are in the years where my girls can start getting married, which was brought on by receiving an invitation to the wedding of one of Emily’s friends, which led to some deep discussions about weddings, heirlooms, and traditions, and now I feel like I need to get working on wedding shawls so I can have them already made because LDS engagements are really, really short and I know that I will not have enough time to make their wedding shawls when the time comes.

So I sat down to figure out what patterns I want to use for their shawls and inevitably came to the conclusion that I really just want to design an individual shawl for each girl that weaves together meaningful stitch patterns and symbolism that will carry special meaning for them. SO…I’m going to spend the next few Van Crafting Sessions™ researching and drafting shawl patterns. Which is pretty cool.

I accomplished nothing, NOTHING in the garden this last week. Michael and I have started watching the series “Homegrown,” which is about transforming people’s backyards into sustainable gardening spaces, so I’m technically doing research. I learned about mushroom logs! I could grow something in the shady parts of the yard! Except that my family despises mushrooms!

There’s potentially a new project brewing. I won’t say more because I honestly do not know if it’s going to materialize. It would be amazing if it does, but also a ton of work. So I won’t be heartbroken if it doesn’t happen. I would regret the missed opportunity, though. More on that if it gets the green light.

After months of discussing the possibility, we finally have officially started playing a weekly campaign of Dungeons & Dragons on Monday nights. Michael and I are NOT D&Ders, but somehow all four of our kids love the game. We’ve been struggling to have Family Home Evenings for years, but suddenly it’s not difficult to gather everyone. Hopefully the trend continues.

I was subbing one day last week and one of the teachers actually asked me how our family’s new game night was going. Apparently my kids are really talking about it to anyone who will listen. Whatever works, right? Turns out it’s figuring out how to battle fantasy monsters in Steampunk Victorian England. Feel free to tell your friends.

Finished: Baking Doodle Cowl

Pattern: Baking Doodle Cowl, by Jamie Lomax of Pacific Knit Co., the pattern is being released TODAY!

YarnKnit Picks’ “Wool of the Andes Sport”* in colorways Baltic Heather, Blossom Heather, Camel Heather, Chestnut, Papaya Heather, Turmeric, White & Wonderland Heather

Needles: US 4 & 5 16-inch circulars

Modifications: I knit my cowl a little taller than suggested by the pattern, simply because Ren and I couldn’t cut any of the five charts because we loved them so much. I don’t recommend doing this as it makes it hard to see the charts when you’re actually wearing the cowl. I also used duplicate stitch for the dark pink stitches on rows 18 and 19 of the stand mixer chart.

When the email showed up in my inbox letting me know that I’d been chosen to be a test knitter for this pattern, I was so thrilled! I’ve been watching Jamie create her whimsical designs for a couple of years now, and promised myself that I’d allow myself to sign up to test knit once grad school was over. When the baking-themed pattern was announced, I was so happy because it’s absolutely perfect for my dear Renaissance, who loves all things baking.

I really enjoyed creating this project because it was a combined effort with Renaissance. At first I thought I’d keep it secret, but then I was having a really hard time choosing a color palette because I didn’t want to end up picking colors she wouldn’t actually like, so I brought her into the fold and she gladly went about picking colors and charts.

A heads-up to anyone considering making one of these: There’s more than two colors per row in many of the charts. I can rip along with traditional fair isle/stranded knitting because it doesn’t have more than two colors per row, but throw that third color in and BAM, slows me down to a crawl. Something to consider if that sort of thing matters to you.

Another note: The stand mixer chart, due to the almost-intarsia color blocking, ends up really tight, so you’ll want to knit that one with extra loose floats.

Oh my goodness, this cowl makes me so happy. It’s adorable! Ren loves it too, and I’m definitely going to purchase some of Jamie’s other doodle collections to make up some of her other themed cowls in the future! (I’m especially eyeing the winter/Christmas one, and the arctic one.)

Thank you again, Jamie, for selecting me to test knit this for you, I had a great time with it!

Click here to see this project’s Ravelry page

*Affiliate link