Costumes! Must be Halloween…

So of course it’s Halloween, and I like Halloween, and I’m going to wander about a bit tonight and see at what everyone else came up with.

Meanwhile, I came up with a couple of things for us here at my house. First me - I’m not going to bother saying what I am, because if it’s not obvious I really, really failed. Actually, I take that back. I’m specifically a North American seven-spot ladybug. See? I totally lucked out on finding a sparkly red felt remnant for the wings. I like the twisty antennae and stuff too. And I have a veil. ‘Cause ladybugs are ladies :)

My ladybug costume

Also, I have pets. 2 cats and a dog. Pets need costumes too, right? At least I was thinking that they did, but I had nothing. No ideas, and really, no time either, but I still felt like something was missing from Halloween if at least one of my babies didn’t have something to wear.

So when I found this costume at Curbly I thought it was awesome and decided to crochet very, very quickly. That was two days ago. Only one cat and the dog have costumes, because neither of them are possessed of much dignity. The older cat has excessive amounts of dignity and Very Large Claws, and I don’t think he’d like having a costume.

So, I present Audrey Corn (poor little thing just had teeth extracted today - hence the bleary eyes - but she’s still game) and Callie Corn! They managed to keep the costumes on for at least 2 minutes.

Audrey Corn 1

Callie Corn

Audrey Corn 2

Callie gnawing

Playing

 

Happy Halloween y’all! Trick or Treat!

I’m Back + Fall Decor + Cookies! (Big Post)

Housekeeping Issues…

As I mentioned Saturday, I have moved my blog to an independent host. Most everything got moved and my email subscriptions seems fine, but I believe my RSS feed was screwed up and Google’s indexer seems to have lost me temporarily. If you are a subscriber via an RSS feed, please sign up again - I’m sorry for the inconvenience this has caused!

Meanwhile, I’ve been set up with more new tools than I can handle, and the site redesign is proceeding apace. As usual in my life, I expect the new stuff to be gadget heavy (or in this case, widget heavy). I have Google analytics now too. I spent an hour looking around earlier, and I think I’m going to have to absorb that in bits. SO MUCH information!

Back to crafting:

I recently decorated for Halloween and Thanksgiving. I hung up my door sign, bought my little gourds and multi-colored corn and brought out the ribbon. My husband and I baked cookies. I’m waiting to get one of my favorite Thanksgiving decorations from my mom (hi mom!): it’s a cornucopia with fabric vegetables, and I hope to sew/crochet additional vegetables for it.

Meanwhile, this is my dining room here, feeling autumn-y. It’s not a fab picture, but you get the idea. My decorations typically involve a lot of ribbon. I love bows and ribbons. I like organza most of all, and during the holidays I like things that shimmer or sparkle. My living area is a mass of brown and dark red, so it really does well with fall things. I’m still really pleased with the curtains I made.

Dining Room Decor

Want some cookies? Come to my house.

I may have mentioned that Jeff and I made the 3-D Halloween cookies from Williams-Sonoma - at $24 for the set, I think that the cookie cutters are a bit expensive, but I really haven’t seen anything else like them, so I guess they get to charge for being unique. They also have a Christmas-themed set of 3-D cookies now (the link was broken at time of posting, sorry).

The cookie cutters make a Scary House, a Cat, a Witch and a Pumpkin. Icing is separate, but they come with a Fan-Tab-U-Lous cookie recipe. Basically you mix up butter, cream cheese and sugar and add some flour to make dough, and then you bake. These cookies are not health food, but they are terrific to eat. They’re soft and crispy both in exactly the right way, lightly browned lovely sweet treats.

Jeff and I both took them to work (this recipe makes a lot) and they were a big hit. At my workplace people took pictures of them and showed them off to others. Sweet! Want one? Pop on over to my house, I still have some left. Really, how many cookies can one woman eat?? We neglected to take pictures of the final, put-together product, but the ones below should give you a pretty good idea of what they looked like. Enjoy and get hungry!

Makin’ Cookies…

#1 First you find out that you don’t have a flour sifter and have to improvise. Luckily, a strainer is at hand. #2 You have to try to kill your hand-mixer by making it run too hard in a bowl full of cream cheese and butter. Eventually you succeed, but not before your mixer smells like burning. #3 Resolve to buy a real mixer. #4 As you taste the butter/cream cheese mixture, realize just how bad for you these cookies are.

Sifting Flour Butter and Cream Cheese

#5 Reaffirm how bad they are for you by adding sugar. #6 Realize you have no vanilla. Run to store. #7 Then realize that you have no more room in your bowl even though you have yet to add any flour. #8 Realize that you have no larger steep-sided bowl. Hmm. #9 Move batter to a shallow but larger bowl, and deal with splatters. (The dog now has a a sugar high from catching the bits that land on the floor). We now have a coating of batter on our shirts. #7 Belatedly attire ourselves in the aprons that were hanging 2 feet away the whole time.

Sugar Flour

#8 The dough is finally mixed and the mixer again smells slightly like burning. Resolve again to see about that real stand mixer. #9 Chill the dough. Wait.

#10 Come back much later and roll out the dough. Realize you don’t have that rolling pin you thought you had, and try to figure out at what point you threw it away. #11 Give up and go back to Williams-Sonoma for an ultra-swank rolling pin because they also have these neat rubber bands that attach to your pin that allow you to precisely determine how thick your dough is when rolled. #12. Roll. Poorly. #13 Put down more flour and do it again. Better.

Dough Rolling

#14 Cut out cookies. #15 Have a devil of a time figuring out how to get it to the baking pan. #16 Realize you don’t have the parchment paper you need. Run to store. #17 Finish the cookie cutting and reshaping. #18 Repeat from #12 about a dozen times over until your sheets are full. Chill in fridge.

Cut Cat Dough

(Note: Our cookie-making took about 3 days. We only have 2 baking sheets, so we did this again and again. Roll, cut, transfer, chill, bake, repeat.)

#19 Bake the chilled, cut dough. Be thankful you didn’t forget or screw anything else up. Cookies come out browned and delicious. (oh, sorry, did I taste one?)

Dough PiecesBaked Set

#20 Begin to wonder how you’re going to eat all these cookies. But happy that you remembered to put them away before they spoiled.

Browned bags

#21 Decorating time approaches. Out comes the cream cheese icing (yum!) and the black and orange food coloring. Out comes the decorating pens. Out comes the bowl of hot water because the icing in the decoratng pens is rock hard. Out comes the knives, and mixing things, and bowls and … wait a minute, this is a mess!

Deco1Deco2

#22 Get totally sick of frosting. Ugh, just the smell of sugar is awful. #23 Realize you have no way of taking frosted cookies to work, particularly if you take public transportation. Oops. Begin wondering if the icing will harden. #24 Wonder how real cake decorators ever do this stuff with any skill.

Deco4 Deco5

#25 Forget to take picture of cookies put together, however, cookies make it to work thanks to being late to work, ingenious pan rigging and judicious use of foil and plastic wrap.

They are enjoyed.

Buy Handmade

Today it’s come to my attention that I have offended in my blog, and for my sins I apologize. I have good intent, but not always good execution. I make mistakes and I learn from them, and I do my best to fix my mistakes where I can. I have done so here.

Allow me to state for the record that I am a huge supporter of handmade, crafters, independent artists and designers.  I encourage everyone to support these people with their funds and encouragement so they can thrive in their chosen professions, and to encourage everyone else they know to do what they can to support indie as well.  If you need any help with this, I offer my Index of Indie, where I have gathered all sorts of sources, and which I continue to add to.

I do have things to post - my husband and I have made and decorated the very awesome 3-D cookies from Williams-Sonoma, and I did some decorating I was going to share.  However, I believe I’m going to take a hiatus from blogging instead, and come back when I’ve had a chance to think - I’m an introvert, after all.

Meanwhile, I’ll leave you with something I just found at the Craftzine and I strongly encourage you to participate as well. It’s the Buy Handmade Pledge for the Holiday season.

I Took The Handmade Pledge! BuyHandmade.org

Go to BuyHandmade.org and sign the petition. You pledge to buy handmade for the holiday season, and to encourage others to do the same for you. After all there’s nothing as good as handmade, is there!?