Easter 2022 upcycled men’s shirt to toddler dress refashion

I love the idea of making matching Easter dresses for my daughters. Of course, I had to wait until I had multiple daughters until I could try this out. Lo and behold, my second daughter’s first Easter was, unfortunately, during 2020 aka the year Easter was cancelled. I made two absolutely gorgeous Easter dresses anyway. Easter 2020: our first year with handmade dresses And yes, they wore them all day as we puttered around the house together. The next year, we had a brand new baby. He was born on Palm Sunday, so the Lenten period leading up to Easter wasn’t a prime project planning and sewing time for me. This year, I again had the idea to make Easter dresses... Usually, I like to begin pattern and fabric selection sometime in January. However, some unforeseen family events delayed the project too much and I decided to scrap it. A few weeks before Easter, I went shopping for my eldest daughter and found a super cute lavender gingham dress at the consignment shop. When we got home, I realized that the pattern was really similar to an old shirt of my husband’s that I had in the to-donate bin in our garage. I have fond memories of him wearing that shirt on some of our first Easters together. Perhaps that’s why the dress for our older daughter stood out for me in the first place? Nearly a perfect match Easter 2015. Same shirt! Right away, I knew that with fabric choice removed from the equation and having to fabricate only one dress, coordinating Easter dresses could actually be a reality for us this year. Yay! Here’s how I did it:…

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Reflection on 12.5.2021: Brioche baking on a winter day

Brioche in the oven on a rainy winter day. Children play contentedly with Legos at the table: robots, space adventures, princesses, prisons… Their imagination knows no bounds. I breakfasted on a leftover cabbage streusel, handmade on Thursday night when there were no groceries in the house. Just some cabbage, flour, and love. I marvel at the little infusions of creativity that turn humble ingredients into a feast. This is the definition of home-making: making a home of the simple daily things. Simplicity and complexity. Making a home. Making a *home*. A massive endeavor. And the oldest art known to womankind. It’s a loaf of bread in the oven. Cookies in the pantry. A good book and a porch to read it on. Even if that porch is furnished with secondhand wicker. Better, perhaps, that way than with something new-smelling. Laughter in bedrooms after the lights turn out. Rustling under blankets on a chilly winter evening. Christmas decorations made of string and paper. Cranberries. Pumpkins. The blur of harvest fading into the rich pantry stores. Golden leaves yielding their autumn coats. Forests giving way to the reign of royal emerald pines. Today, I began to read The Iliad. Always, I am searching for deeper beauty. Longing for a connection to ages past. Antiquity scares the uninitiated. Old souls rove for ancient roots. Our faith. Our literary past. Dead languages. These anchors moor us to a humanity beyond our limited scope. Without them, we’re dandelion seeds, blown to the wind with no definite place to land. My quest for beauty combines, inexplicably, with a greater creative awakening. Curiosity and creativity. Somehow, the two are united. Somehow, they draw me deeper into myself…

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