Check out this easy way to transform your screened-in porch!
http://flirtingwithdisasteranddesign.blogspot.com/p/blog-page_28.html
From This Side of Disaster,
Rhonda
We are two friends living real and sometimes complicated lives raising kids, working, and managing households. Over a glass of wine we decided that we needed write a blog to share our adventures in child rearing, eating, drinking, designing, decorating, and organizing. In the process we will celebrate our flaws, laugh at ourselves (and probably cry too), drink lots of wine and invite you into the insanity of our daily lives. Hopefully we will all make it out alive!
Sunday, March 10, 2013
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
FOR MY FELLOW NON-SCRAPBOOKERS
This is probably one of the only posts you will see from me on creative ideas. I am sure you are all thankful for that! I do not scrapbook. I wouldn't even know where to begin. I am also not very creative when it comes to organizing my pictures. My kids will probably be disappointed that they don't have picture documentation of their lives all wrapped up in beautiful handmade scrapbooks. Oh well. I guess they will just have to deal with that.
Along with pictures comes artwork & school work. When my kids started school the collection of every single picture they ever drew and every school worksheet they ever completed started to pile up. I couldn't bear to throw any of their work away nor did I know how to organize it. Then an idea came to me - pseudo scrapbook! Not cute and homemade, but functional enough. It has helped me weed through all their papers to find the ones that were special and also document activities we do as a family. They each get one pseudo scrapbook a year (since they started school) and once the year is completed and the binders are finished they keep them in their closets. I often find them sitting in their rooms looking back at their old stuff in those books. They love it! They don't care that the pseudo scrapbooks are not cutesy.
I bought four plastic drawers that I keep on a shelf in my pantry. Everyday when the kids get home from school and we go through their folders I pull out all of their worksheets and artwork. I tuck it into their assigned drawer in the pantry. My intention is to go through it every couple of weeks and choose only the best stuff for the binder, but that doesn't always happen. Sometimes it is only two or three times a year that I get to it. The best thing about it is that all the paperwork is basically in date order so it is easy to organize.
Above the drawers I keep a 3 inch binder for each child with the appropriate school year listed on the spine of the binder. Inside the binder I have empty sheet protectors.
I put their school picture in the front cover of the binder.
Inside the binder I usually make some sort of sign with their current grade. Then I begin inserting their artwork and school papers in some semblance of date order in the clear plastic sheet protectors that are in the binder.
If they played a sport that year, I will usually put the team photo in as well. If we did an activity as a family (like the Cards game in the below example) I will put a the ticket stub or a picture of the activity.
I put their best school work and art pictures in too.
My kids all love to draw so some of my most favorite inserts are pictures they drew about things they are interested in. My son is fascinated with the Titanic, and he loves to draw pictures of it. I love, love, love this picture!
There you have it - simple and functional. I am sure you could make yours much more visually appealing on the outside than mine. The point is that the important stuff is saved on the inside and the kids love them. The best part is that all their school papers are not sitting in piles all around my house! Of course my OCD likes that!
From This Side of Disaster,
Cyndi
Along with pictures comes artwork & school work. When my kids started school the collection of every single picture they ever drew and every school worksheet they ever completed started to pile up. I couldn't bear to throw any of their work away nor did I know how to organize it. Then an idea came to me - pseudo scrapbook! Not cute and homemade, but functional enough. It has helped me weed through all their papers to find the ones that were special and also document activities we do as a family. They each get one pseudo scrapbook a year (since they started school) and once the year is completed and the binders are finished they keep them in their closets. I often find them sitting in their rooms looking back at their old stuff in those books. They love it! They don't care that the pseudo scrapbooks are not cutesy.
I bought four plastic drawers that I keep on a shelf in my pantry. Everyday when the kids get home from school and we go through their folders I pull out all of their worksheets and artwork. I tuck it into their assigned drawer in the pantry. My intention is to go through it every couple of weeks and choose only the best stuff for the binder, but that doesn't always happen. Sometimes it is only two or three times a year that I get to it. The best thing about it is that all the paperwork is basically in date order so it is easy to organize.
Above the drawers I keep a 3 inch binder for each child with the appropriate school year listed on the spine of the binder. Inside the binder I have empty sheet protectors.
I put their school picture in the front cover of the binder.
Inside the binder I usually make some sort of sign with their current grade. Then I begin inserting their artwork and school papers in some semblance of date order in the clear plastic sheet protectors that are in the binder.
If they played a sport that year, I will usually put the team photo in as well. If we did an activity as a family (like the Cards game in the below example) I will put a the ticket stub or a picture of the activity.
I put their best school work and art pictures in too.
If there is a big event or news story that happened, like when the Cards won the World Series, I will put a newspaper clipping in the binder.
There you have it - simple and functional. I am sure you could make yours much more visually appealing on the outside than mine. The point is that the important stuff is saved on the inside and the kids love them. The best part is that all their school papers are not sitting in piles all around my house! Of course my OCD likes that!
From This Side of Disaster,
Cyndi
Monday, March 4, 2013
BEST GIFT EVER
I am pretty freaking brilliant sometimes. Seriously. As a present for my daughter I went to the dollar store and bought a container and all kinds of "spa stuff" to put inside. There is pedicure stuff, manicure stuff, cleansers, lotions, and potions of all kinds. I spent less than $20. She was so excited! The best part about it is that I get to be her guinea pig and I don't have to pay a red cent! See, my friends, I do not always lead a life full of disaster. I actually do have a few moments of sheer brilliance where things do work out to my advantage! I will take those moments whenever I can get them!! #bestgiftever
From This Side of Disaster,
Cyndi
From This Side of Disaster,
Cyndi
Sunday, March 3, 2013
TREASURE OUT OF TRASH
Ever wonder what to do with the collection of trash that your kids collect? I have a great idea...turn that trash into a masterpiece! Here is my creation, candy wrapper art!
Check out our Design Projects tab to see how it is done.
http://flirtingwithdisasteranddesign.blogspot.com/p/blog-page_28.html
From This Side of Design,
Rhonda
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