I received the products in this review for free in exchange for writing a review. All opinions are 100% my own. The products were supplied by Hotline to God. I signed up for the review through Buzz Plant's BuzzBlogger program.
When I received the package from Hotline to God we were having a crazy day getting ready for Little Man 2's first birthday party. I didn't have time to deal with it so I put it up on a shelf and forgot about it. I remembered it the other day when it was raining all day and I needed something to occupy the little men so I wouldn't go crazy. When I pulled them out and let the kids play with them I wished I wouldn't have waited so long.
The kids loved them! Little Man 2 was the first one who got to explore them because he woke up from his nap earlier than Little Man 1. He couldn't figure out how to push the buttons so I pushed them for him. You should have seen the huge smile when it was talking to him. Then he put it up to his ear like a phone (he has seen Little Man 1 talk on various objects like a phone). He gestured and smiled just like he was listening to someone on the phone. Whenever it stopped talking to him he handed it back to me and I started it again. I wish I could post the pictures I got of him listening and smiling, they are super cute. But Mr. Random and I agreed when I started this blog that I would not post pictures of any of our faces. You can see a few pictures below of my kids cute arms etc and their new favorite toys.
When Little Man 1 woke up he loved them too. He pushed the buttons over and over. He also loved the Serenity Prayer key chain. He really loves key chains right now. He will loop them around his fingers and carry them around. This key chain recites the serenity prayer when you push a button. SO now I hear the serenity prayer a lot :)
Hotline to God sent us 4 Story Stixs, 1 Key Chain, and 1 Phone to God. I haven't gotten batteries into the phone yet, but I have no doubt the boys will love that too. They both love pretending to talk on the phone. The story sticks are interesting. Each of them tells 1 bible story: Jesus, Noah, David & Goliath, and Adam & Eve. The stories are broken down into 6 parts, each button tells a sentence or two of the story. If you press each of the buttons in order you will hear the entire story. But they also set it up so each button makes sense on its own. They were well designed. The only thing I would change is the option to turn down the volume. The website says they are recommended for ages 3 and over, but my 2 (almost 3) year old and 1 year old love them.
If you are looking for a good toy or present for a children these would be great!
Showing posts with label present. Show all posts
Showing posts with label present. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Thursday, November 14, 2013
The Christmas Owl Book Blast and a $50 gift card giveaway! Sponsored (ish)
I was provided with an entry for the giveaway in return for posting this.
I am joining with several other wonderful bloggers to let you know
about an awesome book and bring you a great giveaway. Enjoy!
About the Book
Title: The Christmas Owl
Author: Angela Muse
Illustrator: Helen H. Wu
Publication Date: November, 2013
Publisher: Independent - 4eyesbooks
Number of pages: 36 Recommended age: 3+
Summary
A Barred owl becomes injured and must ask others for help. He
promises to give back to those who have a generous heart and he is true to his
word. Also check out Lil Glimmer, The Nutt Family: An Acorny Adventure, The Pig
Princess, The Bee Bully, Eager Eaglets: Birds of Play, Cactus Charlie, Suzy
Snowflake and Monsters Have Mommies by this author.
Book Trailer
Purchase
** You can download a copy of "The Christmas Owl" for
only 99 cents from NOW through to November 14, 2013 on Amazon!! **
About the Author: Angela
Muse
I was born in California to a military family. This meant that I
was the "new kid" in school every couple of years. It was hard always
trying to make new friends, but I discovered I had a knack for writing. I began
writing poetry in high school and really enjoyed expressing myself by using pen
and paper. After becoming a Mom in 2003, I continued my storytelling to my own
children. In 2009 I wrote and published my first children's book aimed at
toddlers. In 2012 I am set to release several more children's books. Check out
what I'm working on by visiting my children's book blog. Writing is such a
wonderful creative process and I look forward to sharing more of my stories with
lots of new little readers!
*
$50 Book Blast Giveaway *
Prize: $50 Amazon Gift Card or PayPal cash
(winner's choice)
Contest runs: November 12 to December 11, 11:59 pm,
2013
Open: Internationally
How to enter: Please enter using the Rafflecopter
widget below.
Terms and Conditions: NO PURCHASE NECESSARY TO ENTER OR WIN.
VOID WHERE PROHIBITED BY LAW. A winner will be randomly drawn through the
Rafflecopter widget and will be contacted by email within 48 hours after the
giveaway ends. The winner will then have 72 hours to respond. If the winner
does not respond within 72 hours, a new draw will take place for a new winner.
Odds of winning will vary depending on the number of eligible entries received.
This contest is in no way sponsored, endorsed or administered by, or associated
with Facebook. This giveaway is sponsored by the author, Angela Muse and is
hosted and managed by Renee from Mother Daughter Book Reviews. If you have any
additional questions - feel free to send and email to
Renee(at)MotherDaughterBookReviews(dot)com.
Saturday, February 2, 2013
DIY How to make Dude Family Shirts
I am so excited to be sharing this with you! I made this for Mr. Random for Christmas (I can't share his presents with you until after the holiday because Mr. Random does read my blog, I love you sweetie and I love that you read my blog!). Anyways, I am glad to finally be sharing this with you. When I told Mr. Random that I had to get part of his gift at Michael's and my super crafty, scrap booking, Stampin' Up selling aunt was helping me with it he couldn't imagine that I would be giving him anything he would actually want. But of course he was wrong, he loved these! As did everyone else we showed them too. And who couldn't love them? They are soooo cute! So here are directions to make your very own Dude shirts. Oh, and if you don't want to make your own check out my etsy shop, it is posted there too! Anyways, here they are:
DIY How to make Dude Family Shirts
I was inspired by this etsy item. It looks to me like it is screen printed. I looked into screen printing but it seemed like too much of an investment. So I decided to make it with fabric paint since I had all the needed supplies, I just had to buy the shirts.
Supplies:
Shirts for each person you are making one for
Fabric Paint
Full Sheet stickers
Foam paint brush
Something for cutting out the letters (I used a cricut machine)
Extra shirt/fabric you don't mind ruining
Cardboard (big enough to sit inside the shirt and cover the whole design, I cut up a diaper box)
Directions:
Cut your cardboard to the right size. This is the one I used for the onesie, I had a different size for the adult shirts.
Gather your supplies. I actually did not use the shown shirt from Michael's because I found what I was looking for at a thrift shop. I managed to get Mr. Random's shirt for $.50 at a Good Will 1/2 off sale. I already had the onesie for little man, had gotten it at a garage sale, it probably cost me $.50 or less. My shirt was the most expensive, I got it at another thrift shop for $3.50. I had gotten the above shirt from Michael's for $2.50 but then found the shirt I used (I wanted a fitted shirt but didn't want to pay Michael's price) and decided to go with that. If you take some time and haunt the t-shirt bins at thrift shops sometimes you can find what you need, but this does take some time and changing of standards because it is pretty rare to find a blank white shirt in the t-shirt bin. But check the shirt racks too, sometimes you can hit the jackpot there.
These are the colors of paint I used. All of the dudes were in navy blue. The big was in royal blue. The little was made by mixing royal blue and white. The mrs was made by mixing deep red and white.
This is the t-shirt I didn't mind ruining. It was nice to get an idea of what things would look like on t-shirt material. I wanted to test the stickers to make sure that they would give me the effect I wanted (they did!) and I tested the colors I was mixing to see how they looked with the navy blue. It also helped me realize that I needed the cardboard in the t-shirt because fabric paint does leak through. If you are super confident in your abilities with fabric paint feel free to skip this step.
Cut the words out of sticker paper. Sorry I didn't get a picture of this actual step, I wasn't even thinking about pictures then. I used a cricut machine to cut out the words and it worked awesome for this. I don't own a cricut, but I have an awesome aunt who owns one and let me use hers. If you don't own one or have an awesome crafty aunt/family member/friend who has one then you may be able to use a stencil and scalpel knife thing, but it will be a lot harder to get the words so precise. Maybe you can check at local schools, craft stores and such? They may have one that they'd let you use possibly for a fee. Or see if you can find your local Stampin' Up representative, they may have one or know someone who does who could let you use it. This would be a great way to make some crafty friends :)
Peel off the back of the sticker.
Position the word. This was the hard part. I used a measuring tape because I couldn't find my yard stick and tried to find the center of the word and the shirt and match them up. This is a lot harder than it looks. In the end I measured and then eyeballed it and called it good enough.
Press the sticker firmly against the cloth. This step is very important. make sure you trace all the way around each letter. If you don't get it stuck down well the paint will bleed under the sticker and your lines will be less precise.
Paint over the sticker. Make sure you don't paint over the outer edges of the sticker, it is very easy to get too close to the edge. I did a couple times. You can get most of it out with a baby wipe (keep them handy!) but you will still have a little of that color left.
Let it sit for a minute.
Peel off the sticker. I didn't wait until it was completely dry, I just let it sit for a minute then peeled the sticker up.
For the sticker in between letters I found that a fork worked best.
Doesn't it look great? Although you can see the small blue spot where I accidentally went over the edge. Repeat the above steps for each word for each shirt. If you are doing two words on the same shirt like these you need to wait for around 5-10 minutes before you apply the next sticker. After you peel off the last sticker you need to let it sit for 24 hours to completely set. I had to hide these laying out flat while they were drying so Mr. Random wouldn't see them before Christmas, that was fun :). We have washed these shirts several times and have not really had any problems. Little Man's paint has cracked a little bit along the creases but it still looks fine. The picture below was taken today and you can't see it at all.
What do you think? Are you going to make some? Or would you like to order some?
Linked Up To:
Blissful and Domestic, The Thriftiness Miss, While He Was Napping, The Frugal Girls, Monday Funday,
DIY How to make Dude Family Shirts
I was inspired by this etsy item. It looks to me like it is screen printed. I looked into screen printing but it seemed like too much of an investment. So I decided to make it with fabric paint since I had all the needed supplies, I just had to buy the shirts.
Supplies:
Shirts for each person you are making one for
Fabric Paint
Full Sheet stickers
Foam paint brush
Something for cutting out the letters (I used a cricut machine)
Extra shirt/fabric you don't mind ruining
Cardboard (big enough to sit inside the shirt and cover the whole design, I cut up a diaper box)
Directions:
Cut your cardboard to the right size. This is the one I used for the onesie, I had a different size for the adult shirts.
Gather your supplies. I actually did not use the shown shirt from Michael's because I found what I was looking for at a thrift shop. I managed to get Mr. Random's shirt for $.50 at a Good Will 1/2 off sale. I already had the onesie for little man, had gotten it at a garage sale, it probably cost me $.50 or less. My shirt was the most expensive, I got it at another thrift shop for $3.50. I had gotten the above shirt from Michael's for $2.50 but then found the shirt I used (I wanted a fitted shirt but didn't want to pay Michael's price) and decided to go with that. If you take some time and haunt the t-shirt bins at thrift shops sometimes you can find what you need, but this does take some time and changing of standards because it is pretty rare to find a blank white shirt in the t-shirt bin. But check the shirt racks too, sometimes you can hit the jackpot there.
These are the colors of paint I used. All of the dudes were in navy blue. The big was in royal blue. The little was made by mixing royal blue and white. The mrs was made by mixing deep red and white.
This is the t-shirt I didn't mind ruining. It was nice to get an idea of what things would look like on t-shirt material. I wanted to test the stickers to make sure that they would give me the effect I wanted (they did!) and I tested the colors I was mixing to see how they looked with the navy blue. It also helped me realize that I needed the cardboard in the t-shirt because fabric paint does leak through. If you are super confident in your abilities with fabric paint feel free to skip this step.
Cut the words out of sticker paper. Sorry I didn't get a picture of this actual step, I wasn't even thinking about pictures then. I used a cricut machine to cut out the words and it worked awesome for this. I don't own a cricut, but I have an awesome aunt who owns one and let me use hers. If you don't own one or have an awesome crafty aunt/family member/friend who has one then you may be able to use a stencil and scalpel knife thing, but it will be a lot harder to get the words so precise. Maybe you can check at local schools, craft stores and such? They may have one that they'd let you use possibly for a fee. Or see if you can find your local Stampin' Up representative, they may have one or know someone who does who could let you use it. This would be a great way to make some crafty friends :)
Peel off the back of the sticker.
Position the word. This was the hard part. I used a measuring tape because I couldn't find my yard stick and tried to find the center of the word and the shirt and match them up. This is a lot harder than it looks. In the end I measured and then eyeballed it and called it good enough.
Press the sticker firmly against the cloth. This step is very important. make sure you trace all the way around each letter. If you don't get it stuck down well the paint will bleed under the sticker and your lines will be less precise.
Paint over the sticker. Make sure you don't paint over the outer edges of the sticker, it is very easy to get too close to the edge. I did a couple times. You can get most of it out with a baby wipe (keep them handy!) but you will still have a little of that color left.
Let it sit for a minute.
Peel off the sticker. I didn't wait until it was completely dry, I just let it sit for a minute then peeled the sticker up.
For the sticker in between letters I found that a fork worked best.
Doesn't it look great? Although you can see the small blue spot where I accidentally went over the edge. Repeat the above steps for each word for each shirt. If you are doing two words on the same shirt like these you need to wait for around 5-10 minutes before you apply the next sticker. After you peel off the last sticker you need to let it sit for 24 hours to completely set. I had to hide these laying out flat while they were drying so Mr. Random wouldn't see them before Christmas, that was fun :). We have washed these shirts several times and have not really had any problems. Little Man's paint has cracked a little bit along the creases but it still looks fine. The picture below was taken today and you can't see it at all.
What do you think? Are you going to make some? Or would you like to order some?
Linked Up To:
Blissful and Domestic, The Thriftiness Miss, While He Was Napping, The Frugal Girls, Monday Funday,
Monday, December 10, 2012
A Children's Book Review - Firebird by Brent McCorkle and Amy Parker
I was supplied the book in exchange for reviewing it.
I had the opportunity to review this wonderful book. It is super cute. It is a story about a little bird who loves the sun and doesn't understand why God takes the sun away when it rains. One day his mom has him fly through the storm clouds to find out why. After this rough perilous journey little Firebird sees that the sun is still there and God still loves him even when things look bad. This is a great story that teaches little ones that God is there no matter what the circumstances. The story is well written and touching. The illustrations are beautifully done. I have read this to Little Man several times and he really seems to enjoy it. He loves looking at the bright colors (of course he also tries to eat it, but then again he is only 1 :) This would make a great Christmas present too!
Here is an example of the illustrations.
Here are some pictures of Little Man and I enjoying the book together :)
I was provided the book in exchange for reviewing it
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
DIY Towel Cake Tutorial
I saw this absolutely adorable towel cake on pinterest. Unfortunately the pin was horribly done and the pinner pinned a picture that was not from the original site. The picture was from a round up, which would have been fine but the blogger doing the round up did not properly cite their source and the source just went to a picture. (For those of you on pinterest please please pin properly and pin the original site that the item was posted on, it is rude to the people looking at your pin as well as the original poster who doesn't get their credit) So I did a little more digging (looked really closely at the photo) and noticed that there was a website imprinted on the picture (which is actually a really good idea that I should probably start doing, anyone know how to do that?). So I visited the site and dug around there and finally found her post about her towel cake. Unfortunately the post did not have very many directions for how to do it so I still had to make it up on my own. She also did a diaper cake that did have some better directions, but it wasn't exactly what was needed so I thought I would post a tutorial on how I made this wonderful towel cake.
Towel Cake
Materials:
Get a cardboard square to cut your circle out of. I used a car seat base box because it was wide enough to fit a towel cake in the size I wanted. To make sure that I was cutting a square I cut off the top flap and laid it along the side.
Cut the square into a circle.
Cut the aluminum foil long enough to cover the cardboard.
Use tape to adhere the aluminum foil to the back.
The tape in the middle was not a problem because it was covered by the cake. I wish I would have cut the second sheet of aluminum foil a little longer because I had to put tape on the outer edge and it did show.
Gather your towels. I used towels that I already owned because I had plenty extra and I knew my sister wouldn't mind. Also I considered this more of a decoration than a gift (although she did get to keep all the stuff :). If you are doing this as a present or something I would buy new towels. Last I checked Target had the best price for towels because you could get a group of them for 1 price (I had to look a little to find them, but they were there a couple years ago).
Tape the two containers to the base. I used the containers to give the bottom layer some bulk. It would have taken a lot of towels to fill in that area.
Fold 1 towel in fourths lengthwise and wrap around the containers. I used packing tape to stick the towels to the container and each other.
Fold the towels in half and continue wrapping around each other. I decided that I wanted the base color of the cake to be white so I used white towels on the outside of the roll. The bottom layer was a little wide for 1 towel to cover the whole outside so I made sure the last 2 towels were white and turned the area that looked less good toward the wall.
The second and third layers were all towels. Again tape the towels to each other. For the top layer in thirds to make it shorter.
Stick skewers through the middle to keep the layers together.
Before decorating
Use the ribbons to decorate the layers. I used tissue paper cut into strips, tulle, and brown sheer ribbon. Experiment a little until you find a good combination.
Choose a utensil to be the cake topper. Wrap some of the ribbon around it and tie a bow.
Decorate with utensils
Stuff tulle into the towels between the layers
Stuff in any other fillers you are using
Decorate with fake flowers
Up Close
Linked Up To:
Shaken Together, Serendipity and Spice, My Favorite Finds, Clean and Scentsible, Uncommon, Cornerstone Confessions, A Pinch of Joy, Nap Time Crafters, Frugal Girls, While He Was Napping,
Towel Cake
Materials:
- Cardboard
- Aluminum Foil
- Tape (both scotch and packing)
- 2 plastic containers (dollar tree, $1 for both)
- Towels (I think I used 13, depending on how thick your towels are you may need more or less)
- Utensils (I used several kitchen utensils, if you wanted to do a bath themed towel cake you could do things like a loofah and such. You can get utensils at dollar tree for $1 each)
- Ribbons (I used a cute colorful tissue paper (dollar tree), tulle (dollar tree), and a cute ribbon I found in the dollar bin at Michael's)
- Filler decorations (I used tulle and raffia string from dollar tree)
- Flower decorations (I used soap flowers I found at dollar tree)
Get a cardboard square to cut your circle out of. I used a car seat base box because it was wide enough to fit a towel cake in the size I wanted. To make sure that I was cutting a square I cut off the top flap and laid it along the side.
Cut the square into a circle.
Cut the aluminum foil long enough to cover the cardboard.
Use tape to adhere the aluminum foil to the back.
The tape in the middle was not a problem because it was covered by the cake. I wish I would have cut the second sheet of aluminum foil a little longer because I had to put tape on the outer edge and it did show.
Gather your towels. I used towels that I already owned because I had plenty extra and I knew my sister wouldn't mind. Also I considered this more of a decoration than a gift (although she did get to keep all the stuff :). If you are doing this as a present or something I would buy new towels. Last I checked Target had the best price for towels because you could get a group of them for 1 price (I had to look a little to find them, but they were there a couple years ago).
Tape the two containers to the base. I used the containers to give the bottom layer some bulk. It would have taken a lot of towels to fill in that area.
Fold the towels in half and continue wrapping around each other. I decided that I wanted the base color of the cake to be white so I used white towels on the outside of the roll. The bottom layer was a little wide for 1 towel to cover the whole outside so I made sure the last 2 towels were white and turned the area that looked less good toward the wall.
The second and third layers were all towels. Again tape the towels to each other. For the top layer in thirds to make it shorter.
Stick skewers through the middle to keep the layers together.
Before decorating
Use the ribbons to decorate the layers. I used tissue paper cut into strips, tulle, and brown sheer ribbon. Experiment a little until you find a good combination.
Choose a utensil to be the cake topper. Wrap some of the ribbon around it and tie a bow.
Decorate with utensils
Stuff tulle into the towels between the layers
Stuff in any other fillers you are using
Decorate with fake flowers
Up Close
Doesn't This look Great? I love how it turned out! It was the perfect decoration for the gift table!
Linked Up To:
Shaken Together, Serendipity and Spice, My Favorite Finds, Clean and Scentsible, Uncommon, Cornerstone Confessions, A Pinch of Joy, Nap Time Crafters, Frugal Girls, While He Was Napping,
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