Friday, July 22, 2011

WINNER: 250 Facebook Fan Giveaway

And the winners are:

Item 1: Dawn Smisek and Sarah Haggard 
(Dawn was picked first, but then I realized there were two invalid entries which changed the number in the drawing pool.  So I knocked out the invalid entries and re-entered the correct max number in random.org which picked Sarah.  So to be fair, both will receive a headband)! 

Item 2: Deborah Wuest

Ladies, you should receive an email from me soon!  Thank you again, everyone, for being fans/friends.  And thank you to everyone who participated in my little giveaway!


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Sunday, July 17, 2011

250 Facebook Fan GIVEAWAY

Well, dear fans, new and old, I would like to take a moment to say, "Thanks!"  Thank you to my personal family and friends for all your support and encouragement.  LolaLand Creations would not exist without you!  Thank you to all you wonderful fans with whom I've never had and may never have the opportunity to sit down and chat with over ice cream (I don't like coffee, hehe) in person.  Your kind words and interest in my creations have meant so much to me!  Thank you all for being fans!

For those of you who are less of words of affirmation people and more of gifts people, I would like to express my gratitude for you in the form of a small giveaway!  I will be giving away two different items.  You may enter to win one or the other but not both, please.

Item #1:
A sweet and soft crocheted flower baby/toddler headband, ornamented with a simple pearl bead.  These will be offered in the shop soon.  The winner may pick yarn color and headband size.  They are so light weight and gentle that even my daughter who loves to rip off headbands and play with them will leave them on!  :)


Item #2:
An adult three-strand headband with a large flower accent.  This headband pattern came from a young woman in Rome who blogs her work at CreativeYarn: Zen and The Art of Handicraft.  I made this for fun, but am still undecided whether or not I will offer it in my shop (the pattern creator has issued a generous commercial license to use her pattern).  If you would like to see it in my shop, please let me know.  I will warn you however if you don't normally have any luck wearing any sort of elastic headbands like me (my head is shaped funny and my hair is slide-y), your results with this headband may be fairly similar.

Have fun choosing which item you would like to try to win!  To enter the giveaway, please fill out the form below:
***Giveaway closed.  Form has been removed.  See winner announcement here.



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Thursday, July 7, 2011

Misadventures of a Work At Home Mom

A week ago, I promised my Facebook fans a tale of my misadventures of the week.  So without further ado, here is my little account of some of my ordinary every day life misadventures:

Mondays are my grocery shopping days.  I spent time in the morning meal planning for the week, writing out my grocery list, and browsing the local ads for good deals.  As I'm sure you readers know, this type of plan-ahead shopping can be quite a bit of work!  Sweet baby girl and I get ourselves loaded into the car and head out to the store.  I'm a bit of a germ-a-phobe (ask my friends about my disgust at the thought of sharing a can of soda - I swear the purpose of the indent ring is solely to collect spit and germs) and 'green' where I can be, so I get out of the car and grab baby girl, my shopping cart cover for baby girl, and my two reusable grocery bags.

After lugging my haul into the store and getting everything settled in my cart, I reach in my pocket to pull out my carefully created list...  It's. not. there!  Ugh!  Rather than going back out to search the car or track it down, I opted to do the best I could by memory.  One of the items on my list was a plastic storage container for my inventory.  My husband really is incredibly gracious to put up with my crafts multiplying all about the house.  I thought it might be nice to try to wrangle some of my crafts and supplies into their own little storage bin homes.  Plus, I wanted something I could carry inventory in when I go to craft fairs.

If you are a horrible decision maker like I am, then you understand that having multiple choices of brands, colors, sizes, and styles of storage bins was completely overwhelming to me.  After not very little time was spent making a decision, I decided upon a green what I thought was a medium sized storage bin.  Of course, they stack them all together and cram them into the shelves so you can't just take the one off the top.  So I struggled to pull the whole stack out far enough to get the top bin out but not too far where it fell off the bottom lip of the shelf which would require me to heave the whole stack back onto the shelf.  The bin took up all the space in the body of my cart.  I figured I would put the groceries in the bin, so I wouldn't use so many plastic bags.

Groceries were acquired, and we proceeded to check out.  The cashier ended up putting the groceries in plastic bags before placing them in the bin and put only about three items per plastic bag.  My attempt at being green?  Fail.  It turns out that was a pretty good thing though as you will soon read.

I placed the lid halfway on the tub so the lady at the exit could see the bags and know that I wasn't a rebellious mom headed out of the store with stolen goods.  Apparently, it was pretty windy that day.  As soon as I stepped outside the door, a huge gust of wind blew the lid right off the top and sent it flying down the main street at the front of the parking lot.  So there I went pushing my cart after it down parking lot, praying it wouldn't keep moving just out of reach and that a car wouldn't reach it before I did.  Baby girl had herself a grand old time laughing at mama's expense.  :)

The lid was obtained and latched onto the bin.  We headed to the car.  It was then that I realized how massive this bin truly was!  It looked medium sized in the store, but it wasn't about to fit in the trunk of my car (not with the stroller back there and whatnot anyway).  So after opening the trunk and discovering that it's not going to fit, I opened the back side door to put it in there.  That's when I figured out I couldn't lift the thing with all the groceries in it - too heavy!

So what did I do?  I unlatched the lid of course.  My jokester friend, the wind, gusted again just in time to throw the lid up to smack me square in the face.  But the wind was blowing so hard I had a hard time getting it off my face!  So I'm wrestling with the stupid thing that I already chased down in the parking lot.  Fun times, right?  It's at moments like that that you really hope nobody is watching.  But low and behold, I saw a lady in the driver's seat in the car parked right in front of mine.  Wonderful...  I managed to wedge the lid in the cart, opened the trunk again, and removed most of the contents from the bin to trunk.  I went back to the side door to put the bin and lid in there and almost got whapped in the face by the lid again!

The groceries were in my car, the bin was in my car, baby girl was in the car, and I got in the car.  I took a deep breath and removed the sunshade from my windshield just on time to see that not only was there one woman in the vehicle in front of me...  She was driving a minivan with a whole family of like seven people.  They all witnessed the whole thing.  Fun times!

I got home, put baby girl down for a nap, unloaded the groceries, and showed the bin to my husband.  I shared my tale of misadventure with him, and we laughed heartily.  The funniest part...  we decided the bin was too big and that I needed to return it AND discovered I forgot some important groceries on my lost list.  Sigh.  Oh well!  Grateful to have bin drama behind me, I prepared to get back to a normal day.  Unfortunately for me, more misadventure was to be had!

Our family has chosen to cloth diaper.  If you cloth diaper, then you know you remove the solid waste before it hits your washing machine.  Yeah...  So somehow a diaper must have skipped this step in the process.  I went to move the diapers from the washer to the dryer and discovered post-processed mixed veggies and raisins all. over. my. washer.  ICK!!!  I had to pick them all out with a paper towel and kept finding them in the next few washes.

So lest anyone think I have a normal every day life or think I don't have a normal every day life, I have shared my daily life misadventures that you may judge for yourself.  All I could do at the end of the day was laugh (and treat myself to some ice cream).



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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Ladies and Gentlemen, Lend Me Your Heads!

Presenting a new hat coming soon to LolaLand Creations:


I am in love with this chunky aviator style earflap beanie!  My husband thinks it's hilarious.  Additional color options will be posted on Facebook and the website in the near future.  This hat can also be made with buttons instead of yarn stitches holding up the front flap and/or ties hanging down from the ear flaps.

The problem I seem to be running across often these days is my lack of heads at my immediate disposal, hehe.  I actually called a friend the other day, who graciously acquiesced to measuring her daughter's head for me for a different hat.  If you would be willing to help me out, I'd love comments on this post with your child's age, head circumference (measured as if it were the hat brim around their head), distance from the front of one ear to the front of the other ear in the same spot the circumference is measured, and the distance from the back of one ear to the back of the other ear in the same spot the circumference is measured.  At present, I don't have much incentive to your helping me except that my hats will be more likely to fit your child.  *smile*

Another small problem I have run across at present is that taking pictures gets a little tricky without a variety of little kiddlet heads around.  So sometimes, you've just got to improvise and have a little fun!

My first model found it difficult to 'bear' {<- haha, see what I did there} the weight of her job.  But watch out hubs, I think I'm in love with my next little model!



He wears it so well, doncha think?
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Monday, June 6, 2011

WINNER: Fabric Business Card Holder Giveaway


And the winner of the Fabric Business Card Holder is:


Lisa Honey!


Lisa, I will email you soon!  Thank you, everyone, who participated in LolaLand Creations's first blog giveaway!  If you didn't win, you can make your own using the free pattern, or you can email me at lola [at] lolalandcreations [dot] com to order one.



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Friday, May 27, 2011

Tutorial & GIVEAWAY: Fabric Business Card Holder


I started a business.  I got the business cards.  I got the t-shirt (not really on the t-shirt - although Vistaprint likes to send me three emails a week offering me things like t-shirts since I'm a VIP now that I've made ONE purchase there - le sigh)...  After working really hard to design my own business cards and ordering a ton of them, I forget to carry them with me anywhere.  Anyone else do this?  I decided the best way to remedy this problem is to make a business card holder to attach to my keys.

My mother-in-law and sister-in-law both recently graduated (my mother-in-law received her masters degree), and I wanted to make them business card holders, too, to encourage them in their new careers.  So I made them these fun little wallets (adding a ribbon loop for a keyring):


and some bookmarks (which I forgot to take pictures of) from 7 Layer Studio (I must warn those of you clicking in public or at the office that there is music on her blog).  Shelley Dutton, the artist behind 7 Layer Studio, has some really cute free tutorials, and I love that she also crafts with a purpose.  She supports One Heart Bulgaria, "a non-profit humanitarian organization dedicated to improving the quality of life for Bulgarian orphans."

The mini-wallets turned out cute, but I was really looking for something a little smaller and simpler solely for the purpose of holding business cards.  I found lots of free patterns including the 7 Layer Studio one on Tipnut, but I couldn't find any that were exactly what I was looking for:

  • As small and trim as possible while still able to hold a lot of cards.
  • Two pockets that open in the same direction.  I dislike how ones with two pockets facing the inside crease from different directions can lead to things falling out from the top pocket when open for this klutz. 
  • Loop for my key ring
  • No elastic closure - I tend to break them, and no velcro closure - I catch them on everything and get them smothered in lint.
  • No hand-sewing required.  :)
So I decided to create my own pattern which I am now going to share with you! Please give me grace as this is the first sewing pattern and tutorial I have ever created (feedback would be appreciated, and I'd love to see your finished creations). Also, please remember that this tutorial is for personal use only (you may not sell the pattern or finished goods using the pattern).  If you would like your own business card holder but don't want to make it yourself, please let me know as I'm planning on listing a few in the shop in the near future.  Thanks!

Materials:

  • 5"x6 7/8" piece of fabric for the outer body
  • 5"x6 7/8" piece of fabric for the inner body
  • One 5"x4 1/4" piece of fabric for the top pocket
  • One 4.5"x6 3/8" piece of heavy weight fusible interfacing
  • Ribbon for key ring loop
  • Snaps to secure (I'm not a fan of hand-sewing & used the ones that require a hammer)
  • Sewing machine & thread
  • Iron & ironing board
  • Scissors, rotary cutter, & cutting mat (rotary cutter & mat aren't necessary)
  • Water soluble pen, tailors chalk, or something that can write lightly on the wrong side of fabric without showing through.
  • Ruler
  • Medium/Large curved & traceable thing (I used a bowl) or compass
  • Chocolate <- Not exactly a material, but it sure makes crafting more enjoyable!


Instructions:

1. Cut your fabric and interfacing as listed above using scissors or a rotary cutter.

2. Use your curved object or compass and writing utensil to draw a curve that is wide enough for it to hit the sides of your card holder no more than 1" from a short edge of the wrong side of a body fabric piece (click on the picture for a closer view).  Place the right sides of both body pieces together and carefully cut both pieces along the curve you drew on the body piece.

3. Use the same curved object or compass to draw a curve on the short side of the wrong side (non-bumpy) side of interfacing and cut.  Attach the interfacing with the bumpy side against the wrong side of the outer body fabric per the interfacing manufacturer's instructions.

4. Fold the upper pocket fabric piece in half hotdog style (so it's 5"x2 1/8") with the right side facing out, press with the iron, then sew a straight line 1/8" from the folded edge.

5. Lay the upper pocket folded side up (toward the curve) on the right/correct side of the inner body fabric with the raw edges of the flap 2 1/8" from the bottom of the inner body fabric and pin in place.  Sew it on with a 3/8" seam allowance from the pocket's raw edge.

6. Lay the two body pieces right sides together and sew together with a 1/4" seam allowance from the edges, pivoting at the corners, sewing carefully around the curve, and leaving a 2" opening on one edge for turning inside out later.

7. Trim the corners, being careful not to cut into the actual stitching.  Cut small slits in toward the curve, again being careful not to cut into the actual stitching.

8. Gently turn the card holder inside out and poke out the corners (a mechanical pencil with the lead poked up inside the pencil rather than sticking out works great if you're really gentle).  Tuck in the unsewn edge to line up with the rest of the card holder and press with the iron.

9. Sew a straight line 1/8" from the bottom of the card holder (bottom of picture above).  I flipped the wallet over so the outside fabric was facing up when I sewed just because the bottom side of my fabric sometimes ends up a bit messy near the ends where I backstitch.

10. Knowing that the bottom of the card holder is going to fold up to be a pocket and the top curve will fold down (with allowance for the actual business cards and crease room) to be a flap, decide where you want your snap closure to be.  We are going to attach the bottom snap first that will be on the lower pocket.  Place the prong side of your snap ring prong down where you want it on the inside of the card holder.

11. Gently but firmly poke the prongs through the fabric.  Fold the bottom upward and make sure the prongs are all through.  You can use a pencil eraser to help.  Then lay the snap socket (the piece with the hole the the stud will snap into) on top of the prongs.  I got confused trying to follow the manufacturer's instructions about which side of the socket went up and which side went down but discovered there's only one side of the snap socket that will fit on top of the prongs.  :) Then, I used a little handy dandy "Easy Attacher" to help me accurately hammer the snap socket onto the snap ring prong.  The bottom part of the top of the Easy Attacher in this picture actually folds down so you can set the socket right in the hole and then you close the top to hammer, but I took a picture this way so you could see what's going on easier.  I did the hammering on top of a pile of fabric to muffle the sound a bit since I had a sleeping baby in the other room.

12. Cut a little piece of ribbon (I cut mine 2" long) for the key ring loop.  You can trim with pinking shears, fray check, or heat seal the ends of the ribbon if you wish.  Nobody will see the ends, but I heat sealed mine since I like fire and just feel better knowing the ends aren't fraying inside.  :)  Fold the bottom of the card holder up toward the inside like in the picture above so the crease is right where the bottom of the upper flap meets the body and the bottom of the card holder (which now becomes the top of the lower pocket) is 1/4" below the top of the upper pocket, and press with the iron to form a nice crease.  Fold your ribbon in half and pin it between the flap and the body on one of the sides with the folded edge sticking out enough to hold a key ring and the raw edges tucked in enough to get sewn in by a 1/8" seam allowance in the next step.

13. Carefully sew around the whole card holder with 1/8" seam allowance.  You may have to lift your presser foot up a bit to get the pocket edges under it.  Go slowly, especially as you sew over the opening that you used to turn the card holder inside out, the pockets, the ribbon, and the curve.

14. Now fold the top flap of the card holder down (with allowance for the actual business cards and crease room).  Place your finger on top of where you can feel the snap through the fabric.  Lay a snap ring prong with the prongs downward right on this spot and gently but firmly push through this top flap.

15. Lay your snap stud on top of the prongs and attach.  Again, I used my nifty little Easy Attacher.

16. Fold the top flap down, snap the card holder closed, and press the fold to make a nice crease.  Time to eat chocolate and celebrate! You now have a nice, simple business card holder!

The card holder has two pockets for organizing cards how you like them.  It can hold over 20 cards, yet remains super trim!

After I completed the card holder, I realized I should have put one of my new snazzy labels on the back. So I've decided to give this card holder away and make another one for myself.  I think I will also add another layer of interfacing for greater stiffness.

This card holder can be used for more than just business cards. You can put money (no coins), reward cards, credit cards, or ID cards in it, or you can gift it to someone as a reusable/multi-purposed gift card cozy of sorts.  Want to win it?  Fill out the form below:

***Giveaway closed.  Form has been removed.  See winner announcement here.

Monday, May 23, 2011

The Pixies Are Coming!

Maybe it's because my husband and I are reading Lord of The Rings together {That's right, we read out loud to each other.  :)  Judge us all you want; we readily confess our nerdiness.}, and I have elves on the mind.  Maybe it's because I adore tiny little persons and think anything that enhances tiny little cuteness is irresistible.  Or maybe it's because I never fully grew up and still require a bit of whimsy in my life.  But. I. can. not. stop. making. these. hats!



{Squeeeee!}  These little pixie hats make fabulous photography props, especially for newborns.  The long tail enhances the cuteness of baby's teeny tiny body without covering it up.  And what a fun hat for slightly older babies!  They are whimsical, unique, and imaginative.  Be forewarned, they may even elicit a smile from that grumpy person in the grocery store and beckon to baby-crazed grandmas everywhere.

This pixie goodness is coming soon to the LolaLand Creations Shop in three different stripe pattern choices and in two different yarn choices.  These fun pixie hats can be made from 100% acrylic yarn for more vibrant colors and a fuzzier look or in a 50% acrylic/50% cotton yarn for a more muted color palette and a cleaner look.  Both yarn options are super soft.  Here are a few more pictures.  I told you I couldn't stop!

Chunky Stripes in 100% acrylic yarn

Mixed Stripes in 100% acrylic yarn

Skinny Stripes in 50% acrylic/50% cotton yarn

Suggestions of descriptive names for the three different stripe patterns are welcome!  Wouldn't you love to see the name you came up with on this eye candy? Until then, you're stuck with the literal descriptions above.


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