Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Help! I run out of thrifty T-shirts...

Today it happened. The boy (22 months old now) asked to take off the diaper in the park to pee in the  bushes. And he stayed out of diapers all day long actually wearing pants. He was running butt naked around the house for several weeks now doing his business on the pot all by himself. But as soon as he'd wear undies he just would not go to the toilet or ask for help. So I left him in diapers when out of the house. Now I bought him some undies already, but heck, a single size 2T boxer brief costs more than a pack of seven girl briefs the same size. That is if you even can find them in that size. Seems like boys around here are not expected to be out of diapers until they wear a size 4. What is wrong with this world?

Anyways, I considered today a major breakthrough in the potty training department around here so I used the almost last thrifty t-shirt left in my recycle drawer to make some boy boxers to add to his cute big boy manly underwear collection. You can never have enough undies at this stage!



I used this tutorial from Max California. The boxers come together quickly, the only change I made is that I cut the cod piece in one piece (minus some seam allowance) instead of sewing two pieces together. And I cheated and left the T-shirt hem on so I didn't need to sew the hem on the legs (one of the reasons I love repurposing old clothes... you can always re-use some of the features and safe some time and hassle). They look really great I think and the size seems right when compared with the store bought versions... I can't tell yet about the fit since the boy hasn't agreed on wearing them yet. They only been around for about 7 hours as I post this... so no need to stress about that yet. I felt inspired to blog so I had to use the momentum and blog it anyways. This place here is neglected way to much. Not that there is nothing to share, it just never makes it on the blog. Blah.

Well, on a side note: The reason my thrifty repurpose T-shirt stash is running low is very simple... I am working on a rag rug, snapping pictures on the way to finally get that tutorial for baskets/rugs together... and it actually feels pretty great to use up a bunch of T-shirts that were waiting to get a new life for way too long.


Thursday, April 3, 2014

The fun is in the making


While turning these wonderful fabric yarn balls above into a small basket I discovered something about myself. For me the greatest fun is in the making. It doesn't matter if it's crafts or cooking or even office work or breastfeeding. The greatest satisfaction for me is the process of figuring things out, how they work, why they work and how to improve them. You see when I wrote breastfeeding up there, I didn't mean it to sound like producing milk is super fun to me, but when I got hooked on the awesomeness of breastfeeding I wanted to know the hows and whys and I learned every bit I could find about it. If you are a new mom interested in breastfeeding and you ask me, you'll get a bio-chemistry lesson on the amazing world of lactoferrin and friends. I love to discover and learn and figure out how stuff works. That's true for sewing projects as well as science. But back to yarn balls from recycled t-shirts. I came across a bunch of shirts in my stash that had some prints and stains on them and I almost threw them out in a moment of spring cleaning, because I had forgotten why in the world I kept those. But thank goodness I didn't throw them in the trash right away because that is what some of them have become...




A scrappy fabric basket. And let me just tell you, it didn't involve any sewing or crochet... I pinned some rag rugs and baskets a while back, but I really didn't like the idea of monotonous hand sewing of long braided chains, and actually I preferred the look of crochet baskets anyways, but me and the hook never became friends. So I had some fun figuring out a way to make a basket that doesn't need any sewing or crocheting or complicated weaving... and no tools either other than a pair of scissors and a totally optional safety pin.



So watch out guys, I had some fun figuring this project out and I got some more ideas and variations in the works... tutorial coming soon.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

What it really takes to establish order

Spring is in the air, the almond tree is blossoming in the back yard and spring cleaning advise is all over the Internet. Now my scientific brain had me think about chaos theory last night when I couldn't fall asleep after the baby woke me up twice. Ever heard of chaos theory? Well basically it started with an observation that even natural laws (like Newton's) sometime behave unpredictable, but in turn also what seems completely random and chaotic in nature or society actually does operate according to certain patterns. Because of the complexity of the systems, mostly these things are unpredictable for us, because we do not have enough understanding of all the details involved. It means that randomness is not truly random because it operates according to a law which we simply don't fully understand, therefore we perceive it as random. It's like clutter. Random clutter accumulates in almost every home and often you don't even know where that giant pile of stuff came from and when exactly it happened. All of a sudden it's there. Noticeable chaos. But believe me the clutter is actually just obeying nature's laws. For example, most likely it's a pile on the floor or another horizontal surface, and this is due the law of gravity. If there was no gravity some of the clutter.might be floating in the air or under your ceiling or fly out the window itself. Another law could be called magnetism. Objects attract other objects. If the table is empty you are less likely to dump stuff on it. But you just leave a newspaper and a coffee cup there and within hours you'll have a pile of stuff there. It's freakin' magic mathematics. Anyways, what came to my mind last night was the question 'what does it take to establish order when naturally everything tends toward chaos ?'(even though scientifically it is very complex organized pattern, still it's chaos, it's just not as random as it appears)

And here is the answer my tired brain came up with. It only takes 3 things: purpose, law and energy.

First of all you need to define a specific purpose for the space you're tackling. That could be your home as a whole, one specific room, or even just one drawer in your kitchen cabinet. Without a specific purpose random stuff will sooner or later just fill up that space.

After you know what is the purpose for the space, you have to come up with a law - rules or guidelines that will give you the direction you need in order to get the space to fulfill its purpose.

The third thing is energy, it's the strength or force you have to put in in order to put the laws into practise. But heck, you knew already how much work it takes to keep a home!

Now I know this is all very theoretical. I call it Order Theory :-) . I will get to the practical in just a minute, let me first prove to you, that indeed you need all the 3 to establish and maintain order. As we said, chaos is a natural occurrence, no mother will argue with that. But suppose you look at your messy living room, with all good ideas as how it should look like and what a pleasure it would be to use it to relax and you even know what things you should remove, which ones to move to a specific spot and whatnot (like you know the purpose and you even have some law) but if you do not actually put your energy into it and start moving and removing those items you know you should no order will be established. You'll have a good idea, but no orderly living room.

Now lets turn this around. You have lots of energy, you are motivated, you know you want a neat relaxing livable space (you have energy and purpose). So you start to clean and move stuff around and are busy all morning. But after a couple hours you look around and what you see is a pile bigger than the mess before of stuff you don't know what to do with, because you have not established rules on how to accomplish the purpose. You don't have a rule by which to judge what stuff needs to go or where stuff needs to go.

And just for the fun, the last case. You are motivated and you set yourself some rules. Let's say 'äeverything has to have a home'. You go to work, you walk around and put everything on shelves. You are operating according to your law, but beware, no specific purpose defined the law. You end up with a very stuffed shelving unit, but not with a true orderly living room.

Let's make it practical! Use those 3 -purpose, law, energy- to analyze and improve your problem areas. One of my constant battle fields at home is the kitchen. But I have a specific purpose thought out for my kitchen. It's for preparing meals and cup'o'joe's for my family and guests. It's the heart of the home. For some time now I even have a law for my kitchen. It includes simple rules like washing dishes every night, putting things away after shopping, cleaning up while cooking, having a home for each item, only items used in the kitchen are stored there, and I'm not buying any new kitchen items unless it's to replace a broken but necessary one or i keep on thinking about how helpful it would be to have a certain gadget for a certain purpose at least 3 times within 3 months while working on that specific task. This is to restrict random kitchen stuff that looks so tempting in the shop but is basically not necessary. These rules really helped me to get my kitchen under control, even though often i fall behind and i don't wake up to an empty sink. That's because I'm lazy sometimes when it comes to putting in the energy it takes to maintain order. So all i need here is discipline in overcoming the lazy butt. But once i get to clean up my kitchen it's quite easy, because i have a specific purpose with a set of rules that work for me.

Not so in other areas in my home. Let's take the guest room for example. It sort of has a purpose (to host guests) but that purpose it not specific enough, plus there is a giant storage closet in there which has no defined purpose at all. At this very moment, you cannot open the doors to the closet because piles of boxes and leftovers from random decluttering projects are in front of it. The room is a dump ground. In order to claim it back as livable space, I'll have to sit down and think about the purpose for that closet and than come up with rules that will tell me what should or shouldn't go into that closet. Only then will it make sense to put in my energy to organize that room. And heck, we have guest coming soon!

After thinking up this theory all night long, I really come to appreciate Nony from
cause she has giving me and many others great inspiration and some very useful set of rules (her decluttering questions or her dishwasher routine are great examples of purpose driven laws) to claim our homes for livable spaces and overcome the overwhelmingly great chaos.
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