My Star Mouse

February 27th, 2008
My Star Mouse

Here for you today is another craft done by my very talented and dearly missed Grandma Lucy. This is a door stop dressed up to look like a mouse. My grandmother found this craft on a trip she and my mother took one summer. My grandmother copied the craft but improved upon the original design with a few minor modifications.

The original craft she found was about 2 ft tall. The body form and main weight of the object was made with a 2 liter bottle. My grandmother filled it about a little more than half way full with sand and then stuffed the top with plastic bags. She then covered it with a sock. To the bottom she applied a piece of felt. The top head piece is one large styrofoam bottle with a small hole on the bottom where it fits onto the bottle cap. The cheeks are made with smaller size styrofoam balls. My grandmother would then sew the dresses for the mice. She and my mother came up with all different kinds of themes for the mice. Sports teams, birthdays, easter, christmas, halloween theme material lined her closets. My mother enjoyed helping by applying all the facial features and accessories of the different mice. I still remember our trips to the craft store to find the tiny eyeglasses and hunt for more special trinkets for them to each hold. They held such things as footballs, basketballs, baskets, presents, teddy bears, and flowers.

The project I have pictured here was a special theme designed just for me. This version is quite a bit smaller than the original. It measures to just short of 12 inches, was made with a 32 oz plastic bottle and is more suited to being a decoration. My grandmother also made a smaller version using an 8 oz plastic bottle.

Are You a Thread Head?

February 6th, 2008

 

The latest podcast show by the Thread Heads over at ThreadBanger is all about reusable shopping bags, one of my favorite subjects. Just ask anyone who has had to endure my incessant ramblings about using them when I explain the great pleasure I get every time I walk out of a store with my bags in hand. It did take me awhile to learn to bring them with me on shopping trips but now it has become a force of habit. I now remember before I leave the house to bring my bags with me and you must form a habit of bringing them into the store with you as well. One of my local grocery stores used to give me $.05 off my total shopping bill for each cloth bag I would bring to put my groceries in so that was a big help and a great reminder. They have just recently changed to giving me points on my frequent shopper card but it is still an incentive. I do find that if I have my bags with me at all times that I use them everywhere I go. I love telling the cashier at any store I shop at, with a smile of course, that I have brought my own bag. It just makes me feel good and makes me feel like I am making a difference, however small.

 

I have all sorts of different bags. I have several Classic String Bags and also a couple of Produce Bags. I have started a collection of health food store reusable bags which are usually made of canvas. Whenever I go to a new health food store I always pick up a bag with their logo on it. I have one from Greenlife Grocery, Nature’s Food Patch, Earthfare and Whole Foods Market. My Whole Foods bag is so big and durable that I have used it like a back-pack to lug my stuff around. I haven’t picked up any chico bags yet but I do plan to get some of those awesome bags at some point in the future. They are very convenient and compact so you can stuff them in your car so you don’t forget. The other reuasable bags I take with me on shopping trips are just canvas bags I have collected over the years with various organizations logos on them. I have customized some of them by painting or sewing over the logo. A friend of mine made this bag completely from scratch.

 

One of the organizations mentioned in the Thread Head podcast was Morsbags whose goal is social guerilla bagging. They give you a pattern for a really simple to sew bag and give out their labels in printable .pdf form, then you give away the bags you make for free usually on a day set by the head organization. I really like this idea and so much so that I created a pod for my area called BlueRidgeBags so if you want to make some with me contact me through the morsbags site.

 

Other links of interest:

One Bag at a Time

She’s A Betty: Reusable SHopping Bag Guide

Reuasable Grocery and Shopping Bags Blog

Reuse This Bag

Feed Projects link via The Daily Green

Bags On the Run

U-HandBag Blog: Tutorial for making a reuasbable bag with comfy handles