Playing around

One of the things Huxley is passionate about is his animals. This boy loves playing with them, imagining stories about them, talking about them, you name it. A couple of years ago, I saw the Schleich S Animals and they are absolutely gorgeous replicas. I started buying them for Huxley, a few at the time. Now we must have about 40% of their offering. In an ideal world, I would have loved to collect Ostenheimer wooden carved animals, or a similar type of less detailed, but wooden sort, alas, with only having one child and not unlimited funds, I decided that Schleich was the alternative. 

Now these animals go and have all kinds of adventures. Last night, a large portion of them had to go on a trip on our thrifted fire engine (a lucky $3 find from Goodwill, missing the basket, but refurnished with a fruit tray)…

_Animals-firetruck

It is notable, that our knight with lance is leading the way, and because Huxley also has a half wood, half plastic fire truck, some animals had to ride on that one. 

During my time cooking dinner, I heard Huxley talking to his friends (that's what he calls all his animals), that they had to come for dinner and eat. So just because there where about five minutes that dinner was happily cooking itself (we had oven-roasted greek-inspired vegetables, couscous and tempeh with collard greens, an escarole salad with tamari roasted nuts and for desert home-canned pear half's with raw chocolate sauce) I made a mad dash into the basement and back room and built Huxley a table and "chairs" for his dinner party. I was so pleased with myself, as he had been asking for a table for weeks, and I never before took the time to do it. Always wanted to plan it, do it right, do it properly. 

Animal-table

I find there are so many things that if we wait until we have time and energy to do it properly, they have outgrown their need, moved on to something else.

Talking about waiting for use though… When I was in grade 9 (at the age of fourteen and a half), our public high school in Rüti, Switzerland offered for us to choose all manner of classes to supplement our core curriculum. I took english, french, sewing fur animals (yes, bunny fur, and sheepskin, including a fully articulated teddy-bear), and making a rocking/pulling horse. When my father passed away in Switzerland, I got my girlfriend to keep the horse in her mother's attic for many years, until I finally brought it here in 2004 when Huxley was just a baby. I don't remember much of the horses'  construction, except that we where given a frame of wood for the body, had to wrap it with wooden shavings (long stringy bits, also used to make teddy bears), then sew a white under body before making him a proper wool fabric skin. 

When Huxley was little, he didn't show much interest in the horse, he would sit on it once in a while, but eventually, we took it from our play area and put it into the basement. I was disappointed, but thought that this way, it would at least keep for the grand children (grin…). So I was just ticked silly,  when last week, Huxley ask DH to take the horsey out for him. DH does not know where to find things in our house, so when I came home, I did a mad dash into the basement and now Horsey is being ridden on every day. Huxley even tried to sleep with it, but I said that it needed a lot of space, so it got its own spot on the floor. 

Horsey-old

Its fur mane will need to be replaced, as well I need to make a new tail, also, since it is now 26 years old, it does need to have a couple of patches where some hungry moths made a hole. Overall, I think the old beastie is in wonderful shape and oh, it makes me so happy that it is being played with. 

You might wonder what possessed a 14 year old to make things for her way in the future children? I was one of many female cousins on my mothers side, and it was still customary that we would fashion items for our trousseau. Plus, I thought the horsey was so handsome that even just displayed in a child-less home he would look splendid. 

He does…. especially with Huxley on ridding him.

Samichlaus and Spiderman

Both names start with the letter "S", but that is probably where it stops. 

Grittibänz

On December 7th, Huxley helped me bake a Grittibänz to honour Saint Nikolaus (Samichlaus in Swiss German), which we should have done on the 6th, but because I felt very un-saint like, I did it on the 7th. Even though in Europe/Switzerland, Saint Nikolaus is also a commercial venture, I still think it is much less so than the Santa Claus we have here in Canada. 

I find one of the most disappointing things about Santa Claus is his excessive appearances–the mall, almost any event that is Christmas related, parades, etc. How can a child still have reverence for the man being seen everywhere? And how, can he be away from his place of work (i.e. the North Pole and his toy shop) so much at this busiest time of the year? Okay, he has elves that know what they are doing… But I wonder… doesn't it seem that it must be Mrs. Claus that is the real force behind the business, the one keeping the elves in check, ensuring everything is running on schedule, in other words, getting everything all done, with the man always absent on publicity tours…

Overall, we try to keep Huxley away from all the Santa events, except going to the Mall to have his picture taken, because we've done it since he was a baby, and every Christmas, we haul out all the sequential pictures and add the newest one. It's a wonderful way to see how Huxley has changed over the years. Then there is the fact that with DH being Canadian, Santa is what he can relate too, and it is what he wants to share with his son. A real conundrum, since for me, it has no meaning, but then I live here now, and there has to be a fine line of having both traditions and overloading Huxley, and selecting which ones are important to us. 

Spiderman, eh?… Well, Huxley goes to a Waldorfschool, and we don't expose him to any commercial media. We have a TV and a DVD player, but no commercial television. If there is something important on, i.e. key speeches by the government or world events, we go and visit with our neighbour who has a TV. I love the old-fashioned notion of doing that. It builds solidarity and friendship with our neighbour, and we are not in a vacuum when receiving news. Huxley of course does not attend these things yet. So how does he know about Spiderman? Well, when he went to the local home-daycare, one of the families also attending had their boys (2 and 5) talking about superheroes constantly. This was also a reason why we were so happy that we found a way to have Huxley attend the Waldorfschool exclusively. His play has changed so much and become so imaginative since he is there. Yet, every so often, he had expressed a desire to own a spiderman. 

In yesterdays advent calender, his daddy had put a note that we were going to have a bubble bath. A tub full of foam. I figured, that the cheapest bubble bath would probably have the most foam. For a one or at the most two time event, it will not harm Huxley to bath in a mixture of chemicals I generally don't allow in the house. Hence when we where at the store, he notice the Spiderman on the bottle of bath stuff, and I figured, okay, let him have it, so it doesn't become that forbidden thing that he will pine after. He had a lot of fun, and I convinced him after the bath, that Spiderman was a bath toy, and had to stay in the tub. I was already prepared for tears and arguments, but Huxley just said, okay. The bubbles where a disappointment though, I put about half the bottle into the water, but this was not the bubble bath like I remember it from my childhood.

Spider-bath

So that is the story of how Spidey-man came to live at our house.

Lebenszeichen (a sign of life)

I'm still here, but we've been bogged down by a nasty cold, luckily not the flu. Also trying to get the house organized for the holidays. Finally ironed a whole laundry basket of clothes that has been sitting in the back room since (gasp) August. Now all the summer clothes are ready for next year. DH finally hung up some shelves that have been purchase back in June. Got a new bookshelf for the dining room that is really for now the playroom, computer room (we eat in the kitchen, so that Huxley has a room near me where he can play and do crafts). Dreaming about a super airy extension we will one day make to the house, so the kitchen can become a dream to work in and we can still have a lovely living room and a dining room. So much potential for our little house (little being a manufacture of our times, as the family before us raised four children here). 

Off to the studio now, to get lots done. Boats and canoes and some abstract work.

Wishing you all a wonderful day!

Felted diet and a big Iceberg

I'm on a diet, the meal created late at night because I didn't have white serger thread to sew the crowns for this years Winterfair at our Waldorfschool:

Felted-veggies

At the fair, I volunteered with Jennifer doing candle dipping. She had the spur of the moment inspiration of turning our room into an ice cave, a wonderful idea of creating the basis for warm light within the caverns of frozen water. So, I headed back downtown, procured us some ice fabric in the form of japanese nylon organza. While driving I got thinking about paper snowflakes and how wonderful they would look all over the room. Back at the school, I went about finishing the decoration of the room and cutting the flakes. We both agreed, that it looked marvelous. Sadly, I didn't have the camera at night, and when it was time for takedown, the light came right into the windows, eliminating some of the effect.

Iceberg-winterfair

The iceberg was created by hanging a large oak branch (found across the street by the parking lot) upside down and hanging lights within, then covered with blue organza and snow flakes pinned to it. 

And, how was your weekend?

Fibrous Nurishment

A bit of puttering for my soul.

Silkgarden-for-me

For a scarf for me, inspired by Stephanie's excitement and originally from Brooklyntweed. I was very disappointed though, as I wanted to make a scarf to match the acorn hats I knit for Huxley and I, but could not find colourway 203 anywhere at the Knittingstore. Actually, they had no colours in regular silk garden that appealed to me. So, I knit one scarf out of colours 10 and 7 in Silk Garden Chunky, but the one out of 2 and 10 will be for me (I think I might also have mixed up some of the taggies… the red is definitely number 2, but the other one might be a number 8. I'm not knitting it exactly as the others did. For one, I only cast on 31 stitches, for another, I'm doing a moss stitch on the one for me, a texture that I like a lot more, but I'm also thinking that I might need to go and purchase another 2 balls, as I would love to have this scarf be very long.

This I did for the Winterfair at our Waldorfschool this Saturday:
Ahws-bags

Don't want to give them all away though, as some I will sell at the party I'm attending next weekend. 

If you are interested to attend, send me an e-mail and I will send you an invitation with the details. 

Also, one or two will become Christmas gifts and swap gifts as well. Huxley of course had first pick and choose one that I like too. Oh, yeah, there was also number 19, a quite different little number that I'm now doing some straight stitch embroidery on and that will be mine, all mine…. 19 bags in one day, not bad.. but it also meant that I didn't make it to the studio to work on paintings. Went there today though and painted some backgrounds, laminated some old portaging maps to some other panels and generally got myself excited in the next series of vessels, i.e. boats, i.e. canoes, i.e. boats. Most to go to the Galleries in Whistler, Vancouver and hopefully also some to stay in Toronto. All in all there will be about 14 pieces of work forthcoming.