(2 cup each flour and water, 1 cup salt, 2 tablespoons oil, 3 tsp cream of tartar. Cook over low heat until it forms a ball. Knead food coloring in.)
Big hit with the 'everything must be tested for ability to be airborne' set.
And with the bigger kids, too, who had it be everything from snakes to cake to lollipops.Then movies in a tent.

Collages. I use suitcases from the thrift stores to help in organizing my craft room.
One of these two suitcases holds old magazines - some given to me by my sister, some saved by me for years - and the other holds miscellaneous print materials. Old coloring books, books from thrift stores/library sales with gorgeous pictures but not so good story lines, old, fun playing cards, book slip covers (I don't keep slip covers on any kids books), calenders ... anything with interesting pictures but of no other use goes in there.
I tried to explain the finished product and then told them to cut out pictures that made them happy. Next time we do this, we'll use another theme - animals, colors, jobs, moods - so many possibilities, but for their first time doing this project, I wanted a no-pressure approach.Hannah got right to work, even coloring some pictures from coloring books to include.
Ainsley had me read most of the books in the suitcase to her before she'd pick any pictures out.
Grayson played beside us.
When the girls had the pictures they wanted, we went upstairs to paste them on. Hannah learned how to plan a collage while Ains tried to eat paste. I told her that she shouldn't eat paste, even if it was homemade. We had had this discussion with the play dough too.
Then the girls worked at pasting their pictures on.
Today we tried out a homemade paste and it was perfect for a project like this. Equal amounts flour and water. A few teaspoons of alum for every 1/2 cup of flour that you use. Add a bit more flour if you need it stiffer, a bit more water if you need it runnier. We applied it with a paintbrush - my hands-on girls loved that.Gray played beside us.
The finished artwork on our art clips in the dining room.
Then yoga.
Dinner.Diego Jungle Rescue on the computer.
Hello Kitty on the tv.
And bed.

And these pictures of our favorite Halloween crafts.
And this - the most important thing. Do you remember my sister? She used to look like this.
Now she looks like this.
And there was much rejoicing. (And no small amount of baby lust.)





It's the highlight of my husband's day, watching these shows - and with good reason. They're hilarious.
and very expressive.
I think in that picture Hannah was singing about planting, watering, and harvesting plants but not letting Colorado Potato beetles get them, after which she launched into a medley of ABBA songs. Her shows are usually about seven minutes (of non-stop flow-of-conciousness singing).
She just likes having a captive audience.
On the night I took these pictures, I started timing her performance when I realized it had been going on awhile. Seventeen minutes later, she was still going.
Talk about flow-of-consciousness singing. We got to hear about her kitties, her dog, her brother, her baby dolls ... and fudge chocolate chip cookies. No idea where that came from which is probably why it made her dad laugh so hard when she threw it into her routine. And that made her giggle.
And after that, anytime she needed to liven things up, she'd randomly throw out 'fudge chockut chip cookie' and promptly dissolve into giggles.
She chose the rainbow flowers.
And really still while the ladies pierced them.
And immediately after they were pierced, she covered both her ears with her chubby little hands and yelled "OWWWW!!!" I could see her fighting back tears, so I said "Do you have a mirror? Quick!" They had a mirror handy.
Then she went back to this.
Then the mirror, then the hands again.
At least to me.
My grandma is 92 years old and her mother got this piano, used, right before my grandma was born.
Yeah. That.
To get it out to the truch, the garage door had to be held open by someone standing in the bathroom - which was me.
"Don't worry," my dad said. "You have running water and a toilet." Har de har har.
My dad supervised.
That was a heavy piano.
I'm so happy to finally have a piano in my home.
I'll never play Flight of the Bumblebee as well as my mom, but I hope my kids will associate music with their childhood nonetheless.


My girls will miss those cousins.
which was exciting.
She explained acidity to them.
She sent Hannah on a scavenger hunt around the kitchen to find liquids to test for acidity or baseness.
I'm hoping Hannah doesn't drive her crazy here at her house with requests for more experiments. So far she's settled for telling her lots of stories. (She told her tonight that in her dreams she's a Professional. "Of what?" A Professional Thinker of Words.)
In the first week of October, in case you needed to be reminded.
And
Who has declared that he shall go by 'Andrew' on this blog. So meet Andrew.



Then a