Friday, February 7, 2014

Easy DIY toy play structures



I made these a while ago, but they are so easy and turned out so great, that they are worth sharing. As I've mentioned before, my son likes to play with very specific things. He has a bin full of "bad guys", which are actually little models used for those nerdy table top games that I found at a super cheap online store. Well, with all those bad guys and monsters, he "needed" dungeon like rooms and areas.  So I learned a bit about how the people who played such games, made their "scenery".  Turns out it was pretty easy and it cost me less than $15 :)  He's played with them for almost 2 years now (and still is), and it's a unique and cool toy, made especially for him.

Although the things I made are very fantasy/dungeon looking, I can imagine you'd easily be able to adjust the colors/style to fit whatever structures or scenery you want to make.  I am thinking a mansion for Barbie would be fun!





All you need:

Foam insulation board pink or blue kind (cost me $7 for a giant one)
Craft paint
1 or 2 random rocks
Something kind of pointy (I ended up using a black ball point pen, but keep in mind, that leaves black marks)
Dollar store craft paint brushes
Sand paper
Craft knife (the sharp kind - you'll have to cut a lot of small pieces).
Glue (I used hot glue)


First, cut a manageable piece off your insulation board.  For example, if you're making a brick wall, you need to cut your bricks out of the isolation board.  Once you have the desired amount or rocks or bricks for one wall, then start gluing them together. I glued them all on a popsicle stick to make it sturdier.


Let the glue dry.  Now you are ready for the fun part! The decorating!  This is where the rock comes in. You can take your rock, and push it into your wall, while making sure it doesn't come apart (or you could do this to individual bricks before gluing).  This will make some indents and textures - making the bricks look less perfect and more realistic.  I also used a steak-knife to cut some of the bricks, so they'd have a rougher texture.  Play around and try different things - I promise it will turn out great!

Now, the painting is my favorite part, and if you use my "tricks", it will turn out amazingly realistic looking.  First paint the rocks the base color.  For me, that was dark grey.  I basically just used the cheap craft paint from the dollar store.  I got a large white, black and brown, then mixed whatever color I wanted on a paper plate.

After the base coat is all painted and dried, you take a lighter color (light grey or white),  and get it on a cheap kid style paint brush.  Then paint a paper towel or something you don't care about, to dry the paintbrush, so only a little paint remains.  Then "dry brush", the rocks, especially on edges and indents.  It will give a nice rustic, 3 dimensional look.  If you are like me, then you mix another (lighter or darker, or maybe a bit of an earth tone - play around a bit to see) color, and dry brush again, adding another layer of  oomph.

I went through the extra trouble, and got "grass powder" from the craft store, and I put some glue on some of the rocks, and drizzled the grass powder on it, to make it look like moss.

Voila - you now have a tiny, old looking, fabulous stone fence!


 I also discovered an easy way to make great looking floors, for small castle-rooms.

Cut a piece of your insulation board, as big as you want the room to be.  Then use a ruler, or something straight, and your "something pointy" (I used a ball point pen), and draw your tiles into the board.  This will create indents, giving your tiles a 3 dimensional look.  Also feel free to use this time to draw in some cracks in the tiles if you want.  Now you can either do the base coat, then dry brush, OR you can add the accents and walls to your room, and paint it all in the end..  The method for painting the tiles is exactly the same as on the stone fence, and it's fun to play around with the colors a bit.


As you can see, I added half walls, some openings into and out of the room, and a little terrace, stairs and a fountain.  I used blue craft glue to make water, with a swirl of silver paint in it (WARNING: it takes forever to dry).


Here are some more rooms that I made:





As a final addition to Alexander's play set, I got a white poster-board at the dollar store (the kind that is 1/4 thick) to make a molten lava area, and a bigger open, broken castle room.  I made one on each side of the poster board, so he can flip it, depending on what he wants to play with at the time.

First I painted the base color of the castle room, which was black.  While it was drying, I made 3 platforms for the room out of the insulation foam, then base coated and dry brushed as explained above.  Once everything was dry, I glued them to the black side of the board.  I think this board is 2 by 3 feet.


Then I covered the other side of the board with insulation board.  After the glue was set, I started digging out rivers/channels with my knife, to create lava rivers and islands.  I also used my trusty rock from outside to push against the edge of the rivers to make it more ominous looking.  Feel free to also add cracks in the rock-sides of the rivers.  I then painted the whole board black, before dry brushing the edges with white and grey.  You can also use a sponge with charcoal grey paint and dab it all over, to make it look more like basalt rock.   After this was all dry, I used red and yellow craft paint to make rivers of lava.  Start with yellow, then put red on the edges.  Since you're using a thick layer of paint to make the river, it will take overnight to dry properly.



Voila! Lava board!  A perfect place for fighting dragons and bad guys made out of fire!







Friday, January 31, 2014

Tea Towel Time!

I have spent the last 6 weeks (not successfully) recovering from surgery, so last week I decided to that even if I am not able to do much, I could be productive in the sewing department.  So I went to the storage room and dusted off my sewing machine.  It turns out that I had an enormous bag full of fabric, and so my goal became to use them up (at least mostly) before I allowed myself to buy any more.

What is a great use of a variety of random fabric you ask?  Tea towels... lots and lots of tea towels!!  I also added some matching wash cloths and reversible coasters to some of the sets.






To make my tea towels, I cut a rectangle 16.5" x  21.5".



My trick is that I use an erasable fabric marker, so I use it to draw lines where I need to sew, so my towels all turn out as almost perfect rectangles, and they are all the same(ish) size.

If you like it visual like me, then add lines on the BACK of the fabric, showing you where you need to fold it. This line will be inside the hem, so as long as it's not too bright, no one will ever see it.


Sew along the fold, until you have a slightly smaller rectangle.

Now, do the exact same thing again.  This makes you create a double hem on your towel, so the ends  of the fabric is completely hidden, and it just looks best this way.  Here is a tutorial with pictures to better explain how to do a double hem.  It is exactly the same as on a towel, with only a difference in size.







Eco-friendly Snack Bags

As most parents of young children, I often carry various snacks with me when we go places, and I have wasted more money and plastic than I care to think about, when sending snacks and lunches to school with my son.  I decided I should make something more durable, nicer looking and more user friendly, so I got some fabric, velcro and lining and went to work!  I used a thin vinyl lining to be able to use the bags for fruits and veggies too.  I think they would be just fine with cotton lining as well, since they are washable.

I used this wonderful tutorial, and I think they turned out great!!








Baby and Doll Quilt

Back when I found out that one of my best friends was having a little girl, I got to work and made her a quilt for her crib. At the time, I knew a little girl here locally who loved her baby dolls, so I used the leftover fabric to make a tiny doll quilt and matching pillow. The quilt is very basic, as I'm no experienced quilter. I got cute, pre-paneled fabric, learned how to bind it properly, and quilted star shapes into the blanket with my sewing machine. I think it turned out great for my very first quilt!!







And here's the project from the scraps and leftovers.  The can of Diet Coke was used to show the size.  I made a basic tiny pillow, then made a real (just small) pillow case for it that matched the doll quilt.  That way, she could get more pillow cases and "change the bed" of her doll. :)









Om Nom

Sometime last year, when Alexander was in his Cut the Rope (iPad game) stage, I "had" to crochet him a set of Om Nom and his various tools, so he could play and make Cut the Rope levels.

I got the pattern on Etsy as a .pdf download, and it was worth the $5 for sure!

Since the whole game happens inside a cardboard box, we just got a brown shoe-box to keep him in. Inexpensive, but Alexander spent hours playing with it :)








Flat Guys

My son, Alexander has a global developmental delay, which basically means that he is developing a bit slower than his peers, but for Alexander, it also means that his interests are VERY specific. For the last couple of years, all he wants to play with is anything related to Super Mario, World of Warcraft, Star Wars and Donkey Kong. This doesn't mean he spends a lot of time in front of a computer or TV, but rather that he spends a LOT of time playing and recreating things from these games. If I were to purchase the amount of "bad guys" and "good guys" from these games for him to play with, I would be in a huge amount of debt. My answer for this has been that we turn his favorite games into sets of "Flat Guys". I scour the internet for pictures of his favorite video game heroes and villains, gather them in 1 page documents, and print them on iron-on paper transfers.  After they are printed out, I iron the pages on to $0.50 sheets of white felt, then cut them out.  That's it.  It's basically a mix between a boy version of felt paper dolls, and the old felt boards I used to see in Sunday School.  He uses the items and creatures to create levels or areas from his games (he loves this the most), then uses a felt Mario or whatever, and completes the levels.  He even hums the right theme music and makes the sounds as he plays.  It's all pretty fantastic, and because they weigh basically nothing, it is a toy that always comes to the hospital when needed, or when we go anywhere.


If your child isn't as amazed by Mario, Donkey Kong and Warcraft guys, I am sure the same thing could be done with My Little Pony or whatever else he or she might be interested in.

For those of you with special needs kiddos, I've also used these kinds of printed felt cut-outs for social story like activities.  We've had food "flat guys", to learn what a meal vs snack is on a felt plate, and felt weather items (Sun, clouds, numbers, lightning, rain clouds etc) to talk about weather, and appropriate things to wear.


As long as you have about $20 in Canada, or $15 in the US (most of that would be spent on the iron on sheets, because felt is cheap), an iron, a printer, and a pair of scissors, your imagination is the only limit :)

Feel free to download the sets  here (Mario, Angry Birds, Warcraft, Donkey Kong), so your can make your own











Past Projects Gallery

As I don't have any links or tutorials to share, I still want to show pictures of successful projects from the past, that can easily be used as inspiration for your own.




You can download some of the printouts for my various crafts here.