Showing posts with label kids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kids. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 03, 2016

Every Day in May: 3





Ramona Quimby

(from eight books by the wonderful Beverly Cleary)

..........

“She was not a slowpoke grownup. She was a girl who could not wait. Life was so interesting she had to find out what happened next.”

“Didn't the people who made those license plates care about little girls named Ramona?” 

"Oh say can you see/ By the dawnzer lee light"

..........

I loved Ramona when I was a kid, but found a renewed appreciation for her when my Sophia was in Kindergarten with a 5th grade reading level and nothing appropriate to read. Ramona to the rescue!

She is the kind of kid I wanted to be friends with. She makes her Qs into cats, she is fierce and proud and tries her hardest. She is convinced that a lamp is a "dawnzer" and it gives a "lee light". She is not above boinging a classmate's perfect, perfect curls. And, like I was, she is not squeamish about worms, and declares one is an engagement ring from her sister Beezus's classmate, Henry Huggins.

A word about the hairstyle choice: I desperately wanted to give her the "pixie cut" she gets at the teaching salon. Her sister Beezus saves up money to get what she thinks will be a glamorous and sophisticated cut and instead gets "40-year-old hair" (ouch) while a student asks to try out a new style on Ramona who walks away with a pixie cut that suits her perfectly. In my mind, this was actually a wedge cut like Dorothy Hamill had in the olympics, not a pixie cut. But either way.... my Ramona with short hair looked like an old man. (Ask my kids, they all laughed at me. Seriously, they did.) I went back to the traditional Louis Darling illustrations of Ramona, with her short bob, which to me are the definitive Ramona anyway. My justification for this too is that if she's holding the earthworm, that's more Ramona the Pest territory and not Ramona and Her Mother.

I want to note also that Beverly Cleary just turned 100 and we spent the day appropriately reading her work. Long may she live.

Saturday, February 13, 2016

Happy Valentine's Day!



This year's Valentine would be entitled, Boy, Those Kids Got Big.

What have I been doing since I last posted? A lot of designing, creating, crocheting, Girl-Scout leading, teaching, and oh yeah, raising these guys. I am trying to make more of an effort to get back to the blog and post more. But before the artwork and news, no Valentine's Day can go by without the traditional Nazzaro Family Valentine! (What you can't see behind Sophia's tight-lipped smile is her new braces. She is fabulous, natch.)


And now my favorite part... scroll down and turn back the hands of time!

















(2015)



(2014)



(2013)



(2012)


(2011)


(2010)


(2009)


(2008) - the first year I didn't have to photoshop together three separate images



(2007)



(2006)



(2005)

Tuesday, September 08, 2015

In which I make a drumstick bag

Just in time for back to school! In the random I Made Something Department, I give you.... Peter's drumstick bag. No pattern, a lot of eyeballing, and some felt and elastic.


Did you know soap is great for marking black fabric? 


Opened...


Tied shut. Currently in his backpack on the way to band practice today.



Thursday, February 26, 2015

Happy sloth-y birthday to Sophie



The t-shirt we made her for today, which matches the cardboard doodles we still have hanging in the kitchen. The Sophster is a sloth fan from waaaay back (remember the sloth Christmas painting?) so we knew she'd love it. Happy birthday, you awesome kid.

Friday, January 09, 2015

Illustrative Portraits: Cole

Last but most certainly not least: the super-talented Cole! I was a little worried when I was sketching him out that he was going to be too Bieber-y, but in the end, it all worked out. Props to Angela for being my fake drummer model so I could get the hands. 

I have to say the most rewarding thing about this whole process has been the reception. They were totally fun to paint, but to hear a kid say "I love it!" and actually mean it is a reward in itself. 

There are going to be more illustrative portraits in the future..... 



Friday, January 02, 2015

Nailed it! (or, Elena screws up)

The plan.

The reality.

You know those funny pictures where someone posts a photo of some amazing craft from Pinterest, and then posts their not-so-perfect attempt underneath it, and then writes, "Nailed it!"

I used to laugh at those, because my efforts pretty much always looked like the before pictures. One, because I'm a perfectionist, and two, because I am a darn perfectionist, didn't you hear me the first time?

So I had this absolutely brilliant idea for Christmas that we were going to make a pretzel log cabin as a family. It was going to be freaking adorable and way better than gingerbread, which none of us likes very much anyway, but we do all like pretzels. And chocolate. And pretzels with chocolate attached.

I found perfectly adorable houses on Pinterest. Namely, this one: incredibly squee-worthy and something I thought would be both charming and tasty. So what if the person who made it used hot glue to hold all of the pieces together? I could use chocolate and we could eat it afterwards. Martha Stewart even had one (for Lincoln's birthday) that was much smaller and was glued by frosting to cardboard to hold it together. But clearly, I knew more than Martha, because I decided we didn't need to do any of those silly things. I was going to use chocolate!

Can you see where this is going yet?

I drew plans.
I photocopied the plans.
I did math.
I put the plans under waxed paper on cookie sheets.
I melted chocolate.
I spent tons of time sawing away at pretzel logs to get them all the perfect sizes for windows, doors, and the right pitch of the roof.
I made the cutest four walls of a log cabin you ever did see, while my kids went through leftover Halloween candy (yes, Virginia, there is such a thing) to decorate it with.
I put all of our work into the freezer so that we could easily frost all of it together with some vanilla frosting, which would not only harden but would look like snow too.

The next day, I gathered the family together, and we set out to raise us a barn! Or a log cabin. In the first two minutes, I managed to completely break the first wall in two. After Paul put down the camera, he tried to come up with a better way to remove the waxed paper from the walls instead of the walls from the paper.... which worked until I tried to get three walls together. I actually was so frustrated I got teary and suggested we just quit. Angela looked up from the wall she was holding up for me, and said, "Mom! Remember our family motto! Nazzaros never give up."

What can you say to that? There's only one thing to do! Fail. Fail miserably, and eat the results, because they taste great no matter whether it worked or not.

So we revised our grandiose plans. Paul took a photo for the one minute our broken down shack lasted in an upright position. And then we took the whole thing apart, and dipped most salvageable parts into frosting and crushed candy canes, and saved those for later. There was tacit approval never to repeat this whole thing again and just go straight to the chocolate and pretzels instead.

Lessons learned? Failure can be tasty. Someday when you need it, your words will come back to you. And never, never think you know more than Martha Stewart.

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

21 days: faces


I know it said #draw21days, but nobody said they had to be 21 consecutive days, did they? I had a lot of fun with this one, as faces are one of my all-time favorite things to draw. 

Getting back into the swing of things. At last. 







Tuesday, September 09, 2014

21 days: Cardboard doodles

My family and I have found an incredibly fun hobby thanks to this day's assignment: cardboard doodles! The process goes something like this: get thin cardboard (we used cereal boxes). Draw on it in pencil. Cut it out. Get the markers and pens out and go crazy.




My original sloths...and then they take to the trees. Because of course they do!





This dude takes requests.



My girls are so into this - so far we've had the cast of several Disney movies, flowers, and a certain girl has been making tons of germs to decorate a reminder for Paul's students to wash their hands before their lessons. And her sister's created an adorable sink for them to go with!



Thursday, August 28, 2014

21 days: monster-making!

I loved this assignment so much that I actually took time and scanned this one in. 


For some more monstrous goodness, check out some of my favorite monsters:


Sunday, August 24, 2014

21 days: a girl and her dragon



A certain someone was very upset with me for drawing this, and will be even madder when she knows I've posted it. But this assignment is about drawing something you're passionate about. I'm passionate about storytelling, about fantasy, and about letting your imagination run wild so that you can pretend to inhabit that story. The inspiration for this drawing is from something else I'm passionate about: my daughter. 

While all my kids say it doesn't look like her (and they're correct, though they do share some awesome hair), I told them that it's inspired by her, her love of dragons, and the fact that she does in fact have a staff she likes to walk with that looks just like this one. 

You know that Shakespeare quote, "Though she be but little, she is fierce!" - that's my Angela.





Thursday, July 17, 2014

This way to the Ministry of Magic!

We're continuing our tradition of reading a Harry Potter book each summer, out loud, as a family. You can guess which book we're on now! I made this sign after the kids went to bed and taped it up in the appropriate spot....

 


Only to find an addition when I got up early the next morning (Angela's handiwork).

The text reads: CAUTION! Moaning Myrtle may appear while using the shower, bath, toilet or sink. Do not mind the constant crying if she enters your home. Sincerely - Ministry of Magic.


I love my children and their amazing creativity SO MUCH. Wonder where they got it from?

Monday, March 17, 2014

Dress up French Toast Girl!




















Ancient history, people…. who remembers this?

http://frenchtoastgirl.com/flash/index.htm

And it still works!

Wednesday, March 05, 2014

Sacrifice and creativity


It's the first day of Lent today, Ash Wednesday. So to prepare, we made some Sacrifice Beads (also called Good Deed Beads) to help act as reminders to help others. Because this was sort of spur of the moment, we used what beads we had on hand - in a few cases, a fish or a heart stood in for the cross. Either way, when you do a good deed as an offering, you move a bead towards one end as an act of love. 

Directions to make your own: http://thelittleways.com/how-to-make-sacrifice-beads. I promise it's not hard at all, and children can make them with just a little help and supervision. 

Friday, February 14, 2014

happy happy valentine's day!

Another year, another valentine. Are they getting big or what?!






And now let's have a trip in the wayback machine!



(2013)






(2012)






(2011)






(2010)






(2009)






(2008)






(2007)






(2006)






(2005)