Dirt Cake!


My son loves dirt cake, so he requests it for his birthday cake every year. There are many themes to the dirt cake; you can put it in a pail with gummy worms or in flower pots with plastic flowers. You can come up with many creative ideas! Here is how we make his "birthday" dirt cake.

Ingredients:
1/2 stick margarine or butter
1 8oz. cream cheese, softened
1 cup powdered sugar
31/2 cups milk
2 pkg (3.5 oz) vanilla instant pudding
12 oz. whipped topping
20 oz pkg Oreo cookies, crushed


Step 1

Cream butter, cream cheese, and powdered sugar.


Step 2

In another bowl, mix the milk, instant vanilla pudding, and whipped topping.


Step 3

Combine the mixtures. (I use a blender for this, on low)

Step 4

The fun part! Put the cookies in a bag and make sure it is sealed : ) You may even want to double-bag. Then crush the cookies; we use a rolling pin.


Step 5

You are ready to assemble! Put 1/3 of the crushed cookies in the container. Add 1/2 the filling. Top with 1/3 of the crushed cookies. Add the rest of the filling. and top with the rest of the cookies. Put in the gummy worms. Refrigerate.



Eat and enjoy!

Easy Fabric Covered Bulletin Boards - Tutorial

I know this idea has been around the crafting world for quite some time, including a tutorial from Martha herself, but I am posting a tutorial as well because, quite frankly, Martha's way didn't work for me (and ditto for the other tutorials I found on the web). So, here's one more way (and a very easy way) to make fabric covered bulletin boards.I started with a package of four cork boards from Target. They cost about $5 for the package of four. I had my daughter pick out the fabric from JoAnn's, we ended up with quilt fabric that was on sale for $1.99/yard. I bought a yard and a half (which was way too much fabric, but I wanted leftovers for other projects - and I had no idea how much I would need). You could probably get away with 3/4 of a yard, or maybe even less if you don't make any mistakes. I also bought coordinating ribbon from JoAnn's for $1.99. I can't remember how many yards of ribbon were on the spool that I bought, but it was barely enough for three. Two spools would be a better bet. I also bought a package of brads from Michaels for about $1.99 and some picture hangers for about $4.

First I cut the fabric a few inches larger than the cork board.

Then, following the instructions from other tutorials, used a staple gun to staple the fabric to the cork and stapled the whole thing right into my dining room table! Yes, the cork is really, really thin. Luckily, I have an old, pine, country-style dining room table with lots of other nicks and character, so I wasn't too freaked out. Next, I tried a regular stapler, but the edges of the staples stuck out like little razor blades. So, I finally gave in. I went and got it. Yes, the duct tape. And it worked like a charm.

Fold up opposite ends of the fabric and tape down. Fold corners as you would gift wrap and tape into place.


When placing the ribbon, the tape is really handy because you can fold the ribbon any which way you need to in back and easily tape into place in order to get a nice, taut look in front.


Tack ribbon intersections with brads, I found a huge selection of brads in the scrapbooking section of Michaels. Pierce the brads through each layer of ribbon and fabric separately before pushing it through the cork to avoid bending them.


For hangers, I used the adhesive hangers pictured below, but only the bottom, round parts.

Yes, I duct taped them to the back of the cork boards. Other tutorials say to use D-rings, but I couldn't find them in the picture hanging section of Michaels and these are working well.

One of the bulletin boards I made into a fabric pocket for my daughter to put a book or notebook in (only one, these things are very light!) I folded the fabric around the board and cut to size. I folded down the top and *sigh* duct taped the seam. This was so I could attach brads across the front of the seam as a border.

School year memories

A new school year is starting soon and, if you are like me, you may be still trying to sort through your kids papers from last year : ) Each year I purchase a basic scrapbook with clear pages that I can simply insert papers. The front varies by year; depending on what is available at the store. The top photos show this years style with a spot for the child's photo. In past years I have used semi-see through covers and filled the first page with colorful papers and nametags from the school year. I sort through their papers and pick out examples of work they completed that year from each subject. They can then look back when they are older and see what they were studying each year. I also include report cards, certificates, drawings, and, my favorite, stories they have written.
R




Coming soon!

Welcome to our new blog! This is a shared blog created by two sisters (M and R) to share our crafts, projects, ideas, organization tips and anything else we come up with! We are two sisters out of four sisters and we hope the other two sisters (L & N) will occasionally add posts as well. (They are also very creative but also very busy : ) Watch for new posts soon with our latest projects.

R