Coloring Eggs with Nature

I love color, don’t you?

Maybe my love for it came from growing up in a house with walls painted entirely in one color…”Navajo White”.  Maybe it’s just because color brings joy and peace to an otherwise loud and crazy household, which includes a fighter pilot, Peter Pan, and Fancy Nancy running around fighting pirates.  Whatever the reason, color can make a huge difference in my day.  Yes, this is totally why my entryway buffet table is painted a very cheery yellow.  I see it, smile, and thank God he gave us eyes to see the lovely things around us.

I must confess I am one of THOSE people who is trying to eliminate food dyes wherever possible.  So, we are left to play around with the colors God gives us in nature.  Some we can find in our yard, some are in our spice cabinet, while some are even in our morning cuppa’ joe.  Besides being better for our bodies, natural dyes are a really fun way of explaining how people colored their clothing and draperies long ago, before true chemistry arrived on the scene to create red dye #40.  I love being able to describe things to my kids, like the curtains and veil in Solomon’s temple, and talk with them about how God’s people could have attained “blue and purple and scarlet yarns” (Exodus 26) using plants.  Pomegranates, grapes, beets, carrots…oh…wait…we can use the same things they did to make dyes?  The kids thought that was pretty awesome.

Enter: Easter eggs

We boiled several different things in water.  The cabbage (1/2 head), red onion skins (3 onions), spinach (1 bag), and turmeric root (several tablespoons) all boiled individually, while the carrots and paprika (lb of carrots and a few tablespoons of paprika) were in the same pot.  You should know, boiled cabbage is one of the worst smells.  Ack.  It’s pretty bad.  For the coffee I use 2 Starbucks VIA packets so the color would be dark.  I’m sure you could use a few shots of espresso as well.  The pomegranate juice was straight from the bottle.  The beets I chopped and let soak in water.  Those guys live for staining things so it won’t take long for the water to turn blood-red.

Fill jars with enough of each liquid to cover the egg (s), but not too much that it overflows.  Add vinegar to the liquids to encourage the color to bind to the shell.  I tried the cabbage and pomegranate juice with and without vinegar.  The pom worked fine without vinegar.  With vinegar, it ended up bubbling around the egg and turning a brownish color.  It does look kind-of cool, especially for my littlest who loves brown.

I labeled them with washi tape (why not?) so I could keep track of how long each had been in the dye.  I left mine in for about 18 hours.  It definitely requires more patience from the kids, but it’s worth it.  My times are very spread out on my markings because I was working with children :)  My fridge pretty much looked like a big science experiment, which is fabulous considering we do have a school here.

Here’s what we tried and the results:

If you want to take the process a step further with designs, try this option.   They look pretty cool.  I think I’ll do that next year or even these with vintage graphics.

Overall, I’m super excited about what we learned during the process.  God makes some really amazing and vivid colors for us to work with.   He certainly knows how to capture our attention and remind us how awesome He is!

Which colors do you respond to?

Stick around and find us on:

F a c e b o o k  //  T w i t t e r  //  P i n t e r e s t  //  I n s t a g r a m  //  E m a i l

Pattern Review: a dress for the Mama, too

Make a dress for a night out?  Yes!  I finally did!

I love to make little girl’s dresses.  It’s very satisfying work.  It helps that my sweet girl seems to appreciate it immensely, but I would still do it anyway.  I have cut out soooo many patterns for dresses for myself, but I have a hard time making up my mind since it’s such a larger scale that a little girl’s dress (1 yard vs. 3 yards).  I’ve made clothes for myself…a few skirts here and there and a few lame shirts.  I’ve worn them around the house but I’m such a perfectionist, I was always afraid of the dreaded, “Did you make that yourself?” question.  The question swirls around in my head and comes out more like, “Did you attempt to patch some fabric together and wrap it around your body in order to form a piece of clothing?”  I’m sure people mean well, but I would prefer my clothes to NOT look homemade.

Is that so very wrong?

So, I found this sweet and super-easy way of making a dress from the always lovely and always inspiring Anna Maria.  I saw it like a year and a half ago and knew it was going to be perfect and it only took me that long to actually make it.  At least I finally did, right?  You can find the sewing instructions on her blog here and be sure to poke around a bit because there is a lot for a creative sponge to soak up.

The pattern was easy to so because it was made from 4 panels of fabric which are the same size.  Craziness!  It has such a pretty drape considering that.  The waist is sewn with elastic thread which is covered by my belt in these pictures.  I HIGHLY recommend this pattern.  You will not be disappointed.

I found this fabric from Hart’s fabric ( my favorite fabric website).  I knew I loved it right away and I didn’t care if anyone else did.  I love that feeling.  This fabric was waiting for this dress pattern.  I know that now.

My husband loves a good side-ways picture. A weirdo, but I love him so.

Dress: made it! / shoes: Nordstrom (matching with my friend :)) / belt: Anthro / necklace: Banana Republic outlet (’09)

Anyone else want to make one?

It’s perfect for a night out…

Linking with Mandy at Harper’s Happenings

and with Emily

Big Love

“You know you’re in love when you can’t fall asleep because reality is finally better than your dreams.”

Dr. Seuss

Linking with: Project Alicia and The Paper Mama

If I were at Downton Abbey…

A few things I love, to enjoy with your afternoon tea and maybe even your sweetie on Valentine’s Day:

1. Every cup o’ tea is better with a little of nature’s best sweetener.  I get this every time I’m in Napa…so good.  Branches range wildflower honey $11, Katzandco.com

2. We love this full leaf tea press from Bodum $129, bodum.com

3. Such lovely flavors in this tea from Extraordinary desserts.  Buddha’s Garden $28, extraordinarydesserts.com

4. Brush up on your Shakespeare’s Sonnets $18.95, shopterrain.com

5. Change up your napkin selection. Dinner Setting Paper Napkins $16, anthropologie.com

6. One of my favorite bakeries, Whimsy and Spice.  This Brooklyn bakery makes a yummy yet unique selection of cookies, including  honey lavender cookies for $8.50/doz., whimsyandspice.com

I want to be at Downton Abbey.  I really do.  I love so many things about that post WWI era, it’s ridiculous.  The clothing, music, and good manners (at least in public) are all enviable.  I would love to live in a time when people were expected to be polite and even chivalrous, were hospitable to their friends and family on a regular basis, and the women were in charge of the household (you know like the part where it was actually an important and respected occupation before everyone felt the need to work after the second world war and not stay at home and raise children).  I just love the way it was.  It would be a wonderful change from the apparently normal belching/farting in public, profanity heard down every sidewalk , and a world where Facebook is a person’s entire community and where they spend their time with friends.  I can’t deny that marriages in England were still arranged for a person’s better good in society and there was an intense war going on…just small details really.

If you don’t know what Downton Abbey is, check it out.  It’s a period drama from 1916 through the early to mid 1920’s. You can find it on your local PBS channel (Sunday nights, check your local times) or Netflix for season 1 and  iTV for what you may have missed in this 2nd season.  If you love period dramas, you will adore this series.  It is very well made and the costumes are just beautiful.  It tells the story of both the downstairs (serving staff and there interactions/love affairs/relationship with the family they serve) and upstairs (family drama and the running of the household).

A few weeks ago (while sick and watching Downton Abbey…naturally), I made this little teapot.  I hope to put it on a tea towel soon.  Someday.  Feel free to use it and PLEASE let me know what you put it on!

If my Downton Abbey obsession bores you, enjoy some tea and biscuits anyway.

You’ll love it.

True meaning + a LOVE printable

(chevron heart garland printable below)

I probably shouldn’t start of this post by saying, I don’t really like Valentine’s Day.  But, it’s true.  I don’t like the commercials advertising the most ginormous teddy bear you will ever see that comes with enough red roses to fill your living room.  I don’t like the boxes and boxes of candy lining 4 aisles at target, giving off the impression that candy is just as important as shoes.  I don’t like the fact that many people who rarely go out to dinner, somehow decide that for this one day in the year, they will suck it up and eat with only their spouse and nobody else.

That being said, I do like the idea of Valentine’s Day, as it was intended in some early pieces of literature.  I love the idea of Valentine’s Day being a continuation of a tradition started as long ago as 1477 (the first recorded valentine is still around and can be found in the British Library).  It wasn’t a letter from a man to a woman where he proclaimed his desire to buy her as much candy as he can or the same roses that everyone else is getting on that same day.  It wasn’t even to say “I love you”.  It was true sentiment and affection, brimming with respect and admiration.  There would have been a lot of love and appreciation there too.

All of this to say that I appreciate meaning. I like the little things we do, even around Valentine’s Day, that have meaning behind them.

I do, however, love a good sappy movie.  How’s that for confusing?


Last week I got a really great old dictionary for $1 and I was anxious to use it.  No, I don’t mean to look a word up.  Naturally, I wanted to cut it up and make it into something.  That’s what everyone does, right?  So, I ripped out the page with the definition of love.  I guess I really did look a word up…technically.

Right now at Target, they have these cute little metal mailboxes on the dollar rack.  Score for the Mama.  Now the littles have a cute place to put their cards and sentiments.

Every year at Christmastime, I put all of my red books together on a shelf.  I kinda like them.  I leave some of them around for V-day, too.


This year I decided to design my own garland.  I’m loving chevrons right now so I combined them and hearts to make this garland.  It’s an easy way for you to make a V-day decoration without leaving home to buy supplies. The printable is also easy for kids to cut out.

Print on a letter size piece of white/cream cardstock.

Before you cut, see instructions below.

Download here:

pink chevron heart garland

After you have the garland printed out and before you cut it out, place a blank piece of cardstock underneath the printable.

Cut the 2 pieces of cardstock together.

This will give you the chevron hearts from the printable as well as some blank white hearts to space the chevrons with.

After that, I fed a string through one side, passing behind, and coming back through on the other side.  You could use a giant needle or a big plastic one if you have kids helping.

Send me some pictures when you get yours hung!

For more Valentine’s Day ideas, check out my Pinterest board of “L.O.V.E“.

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