Thursday, June 12, 2014

Celebrating Dairy Month

Hi Friends!

Did you know that June is Dairy Month?  Having grown up on a dairy farm, I do, perhaps, have a special appreciation for dairy products like milk and ice cream (!).  But have you ever made your own ice cream?  It's actually a pretty simple and really fun activity to try with your kiddos.  My oldest (about 4.5 years) and I tried it together, and it turned out pretty nicely!  Here's the recipe we used (unfortunately, I cannot find where I got this from - online, I'm sure):

Ice Cream in a Bag

Supplies:  1/2 cup half and half, 1 tablespoon sugar, 1/4 tsp. vanilla, 1/3 cup salt, 3 cups ice - crushed, 1 sandwich size zip top bag, 1 gallon size zip top bag

- Add the cream, milk, sugar and vanilla to the smaller bag and seal.
- Add the ice to the gallon bag.
- Pour the salt into the bag of ice.
- Put the small bag of ingredients inside the gallon bag of ice and seal the gallon bag.  Carefully shake the bags, mixing and cooling the contents.  You might want a towel between the bags and your hands.
- Shake the bags for 5-15 minutes or until the cream becomes firm.
- Enjoy!

This turns out to be a pretty plain ice cream, with just a touch of sweetness, but it actually tastes pretty good!  After a quick Pinterest search of 'homemade ice cream recipes' I found tons of recipes for other yummy flavors too, so you could certainly make a more exciting flavor!  Have fun this June (or any time!) with your own ice cream creations.  :)
 
Have you ever made homemade ice cream?  What was your recipe like?

Have a crafty day!
Your friends at Fiddle & Frog

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

New Merchandise!

Hi Friends!
Hope you are loving the warm spring weather...and looking forward to seeing us at lots of summer events this year!  We're gearing up for the summer season by filling our inventory bins with new (and updated) merchandise.  Here's a peek at some of the goodies we've been working on.

KITCHEN ACCESSORY SETS - Available in two sizes, come with a potholder and oven mitt!

DECORATIVE PILLOWS - Lots of designs to choose from, both kid and grown-up friendly!

TAG-ALONG TAG BLANKETS - Small enough to hook onto a stroller or carseat, but still
with lots of fun tags and cuddly fabrics.

WOODEN VEHICLES - A whole fleet of little wooden cars, trucks, buses and more!
We hope to see you (and your kids and friends!) at an event soon!  And don't forget...feel free to contact us any time with questions, or if you have a great idea for a custom order.  We'd love to make it for you!

Have a crafty day!
Your friends at Fiddle & Frog

Monday, May 19, 2014

Upcoming Events with Fiddle & Frog

Hi Friends! 

Wondering where you can find us this summer?  Mark your calendars now...here's our schedule for the upcoming months!

June 21 - Healthy Living Fair (Rochester, MN)
July 1 - Kids' Day at the Eyota Farmers Market (Eyota, MN)
July 9 - Farmers Market (Stewartville, MN)
July 15 - Farmers Market (Eyota, MN)
August 6 - Farmers Market (Stewartville, MN)
August 12 - Farmers Market (Eyota, MN)
September 20 - Fall Festival (Stewartville, MN)
September 27 - Fall Craft Bee (TBA)

Please note: this list may change and be added to at any time as new possibilities pop up.  We'll keep you posted on changes!

Hope to see you this summer!

Your friends at Fiddle & Frog

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Fiddle & Frog, Where Are You?

Hi Friends!
Just a little note to remind everyone that we're still here, and to apologize for not being very present on the blog lately.  Life has happened around here (including a new house with LOTS of projects, whole-family-week-long sicknesses, etc.)  Not to mention fulfilling a few awesome custom orders, planning for the year and running my music studio (Chickadee Music Studio).

I'm hoping to be able to post more often (maybe after I get a bit more organized...I'm feeling a little all over the place!), but I can't make any promises about post frequency.  I've got tons of fun things to share with all of you, and I would love to see the blog grow.  Can you help by telling your friends about Fiddle & Frog?


So, please keep checking on us...we haven't gone anywhere, and we'll have lots to share in the future!  Thanks for supporting this small, crafty business!

Your friends at Fiddle & Frog
(especially Kristin, the chief blogger)

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Play Mail Set = Fun!

Hi Friends,
My littlest one recently celebrated her second birthday, and one of her gifts this year was this HANDMADE PLAY MAIL SET. 

 
 
Here's what is included:  a mini mailbox (from a craft store dollar section), a mail bag with Velcro closure, six felt envelopes with Velcro closure, laminated letters and advertisements.
 
This set was so much fun to design and make!  The 'letters' are little notes from family and friends, and the 'ads' are for imaginary places.  I laminated all of the mail so it'll last a bit longer.  The envelopes come complete with sewn-on stamps and addresses (nothing complicated here...just wavy stitches to look like handwriting!).
 


 
Do you have a play mail set at home?  What is yours like?
 
 
Have a crafty day!
 
Kristin at Fiddle & Frog

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Kids' Craft Bee COMING SOON!

Hi Friends!
On April 26, we're co-hosting a Kids' Craft Bee with our friend and mentor Shanna from Simple Soaps for Simple Folks in Dover, MN.  It'll be a morning of crafting fun as the kiddos are invited to make a CLOTHESPIN DOLL, PICTURE FRAME and TAMBOURINE.  All supplies will be provided, and all projects get to be taken home.  Plus, you'll get to shop with Fiddle & Frog before or after the crafting fun, and you'll get a discount on Simple Soaps merchandise.  Oh, and did I mention there's free snacks and goody bags?  Come on out to Dover for a great, fun event!  (Please register online at www.etsy.com/shop/fiddleandfrog)  Hope to see you there!

 
Have a crafty day!
Your friends at Fiddle & Frog

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Girls Just Want to Have Fun...and Play Dress-Up!

Hi friends!
Hope you are all enjoying the beginning of spring (though here in Minnesota, they're calling for a possibility of more snow!).  In case it is icky outside, here's a great idea for an indoor activity...PLAYING DRESS-UP!  My girls love dressing up, and have collected quite an amount of outfits and accessories.  These lovely ensembles usually ended up all over the floor...until I asked my sis (the other half of Fiddle & Frog) to build a DRESS-UP WARDROBE.  It's a lovely piece of furniture, in addition to being great storage for all those tiny dress-up clothes.  I added some baskets to keep all the little stuff (jewelry, etc.) together, and there's even a place for doll clothes.


My two little ladies posing with their wardrobe - notice the lovely ensemble on the little one!  Smiles!
 
 
Do your little ones like to play dress-up?  How do you keep all their little outfits in order?
 
 
Have a crafty day!
Your friends at Fiddle & Frog

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Preschool Learning & Crafts

Hi Friends!
Since about June 2013, my oldest daughter and I have been doing an informal preschool curriculum at home.  She's four years old (turned four in December 2013), and LOVES to read (be read to).  Actually, that's an understatement...she has more books than I do, and can sit with a stack of books and go through each one, making up her own story to go with it if she doesn't quite remember the actual one.  So, she was totally ready for a little more structured preschool.  Being a teacher, I knew that I would love planning activities for her to do.  However, I couldn't do it all on my own.  I turned to some amazing homeschooling bloggers for inspiration.  On their blogs, I found worksheets, games, ideas and activities to supplement my own ideas.  Mostly, though, I was inspired to keep going with L.  Some days have been really challenging - we definitely push each other sometimes!  But overall, I'm so proud of the progress she's made, and the fun we've had together. Since her birthday is in December, we'll have another year together before she starts school.  The possibilities for awesome preschool lessons are endless, and I'm very much looking forward to it!  Will we homeschool for future grades?  Not sure yet.  That's a whole different post!  For now, I wanted to share some of the activities we did so far, and maybe inspire you to try some with your preschoolers.  Have fun, and happy learning! 

We started our lessons with a Letter of the Week sort of plan.  Here's a sampling of some of our decorated letters.  For each new letter, we added stickers and other items that started with that particular letter.  Such an easy craft, but great reinforcement of the alphabet!
Here are some of the activities we did to go along with the Letters of the Week.  Noodle pictures, a dinosaur from shapes, flower petal fairy, Madeline mini book, leaf pressing and more...this is really only a small sampling.  You should see the actual stack!
Here's our Alphabet Box.  This has actually been more fun for L. recently, after we completed all the letter lessons.  (Yes - I know there's a couple of letters missing...they fell off!)  Each drawer contains items that begin with the letter on the front.  For example, in the 'P' drawer, there is a paintbrush, paints, piano, penny and pumpkin.  The 'B' drawer contains birdcage, bell, books, bird and bears.  (See pictures below for these letters.)  Some of the drawers also have laminated pictures of family and friends.  We take out one drawer, and L. names each item in it and lays it out on the blue felt mat.  Later, we'll spell out some of the names of items.  It was challenging to think of things to include for some of the letters, but I did find a couple of things for each drawer.


This is only a small sampling of the activities and lessons we've done together in our little home preschool.  While it does take a little extra time and planning for the parent, I feel so blessed to be able to help my daughter in this step of her learning.  (And did I mention that I'm learning right along with her?!?!  She's helping me understand how she learns, and making me be more creative than ever in the activities I choose for her.  Her curiosity and questions keep me on my toes, and challenge me to search for the correct answers for her.  Gotta love a preschooler's thought process!)

Special thanks to the following bloggers for their seemingly endless inspiration:
1+1+1=1; Homeschool Creations; Confessions of a Homeschooler; 123Homeschool4Me

Have a crafty day!
Kristin at Fiddle & Frog

Monday, March 17, 2014

A St. Patrick's Day Treasure Hunt

Hi Friends!
Happy St. Patrick's Day!  I wanted to do something fun and out of the ordinary today with my kiddos, so I put together a little treasure hunt.  I thought it'd be fun, but I didn't expect my oldest (who is 4 years old) to want to do it again right away!  Awesome!  It was pretty simple (and inexpensive) to put together, and I'll definitely be doing something like it again.  Here are the details:

- I found these cute clue cutouts online (at thecraftingchicks.com).  You can print already made clues, or blank ones and write your own.  (I chose to write my own, since my kiddos are a little young to make sense of tricky clues.)
 
 
- I made a treasure box from a small shoebox by covering it in kraft paper and decorating it a bit. 
 
 
- I filled the treasure box with a few little trinkets from a party store, like stickers and other goodies, and hid the clues around the house while the kiddos weren't looking.
 
- Off on the hunt!  Here's my oldest using her magnifying glass to hunt for clues. (She got really into it!)
 

 
 
I'm so glad I took the time to put this together...it was really fun, and so cute to see my kids so excited to find the next clue. 
 
Have you ever done a treasure hunt at home? 
What other fun St. Patrick's Day activities do you do with your little ones?
 
Have a crafty day!
Your friends at Fiddle & Frog
 


 
 

Monday, March 10, 2014

Homemade Fruit Roll-ups = YUMMY!

Hi Friends,
Thought I'd share a recipe with you today.  HOMEMADE FRUIT ROLL-UPS are pretty easy to make, and soooooo yummy.  :)  You can use your oven or a food dehydrator to make them, or both (like we did!).  Here's what to do:

1. Choose your ingredients.  We used applesauce as our base for all different kinds of roll-ups, then added fruit or jam.  We ended up with Cherry Applesauce, Strawberry Rhubarb Applesauce, Spiced Strawberry Applesauce and Peach Applesauce Roll-ups.  Quite a variety!

2. If you're using whole fruit (like the cherries we used), you'll want to puree them before adding your applesauce.  Then mix in your applesauce.  We used about a 2 parts applesauce to 1 part other fruit ratio.

3. Pour your concoction onto prepared (plastic wrap-lined or lightly greased) pans or trays and spread to about a 1/4" thickness.

4. If you're using a dehydrator, add your prepared trays and set it at about 135 degrees.  We left our trays in for about eight hours.  If you're using an oven, set it at 170 degrees.  These trays took longer - about 11-12 hours (the roll-ups were thicker).

5. Remove from oven/dehydrator when roll-ups are still barely sticky (otherwise you'll have fruit chips, not roll-ups).  Cut into desired sizes and roll up, then wrap in plastic wrap.  You can pop a bunch of wrapped roll-ups in a freezer bag and freeze them for up to six months (although ours never seem to last that long!).

ENJOY!

Your friends at Fiddle & Frog

Monday, March 3, 2014

Happy National Crafting Month & GIVEAWAY!

Hi friends!
Happy National Crafting Month! 
March is a great time to try a new craft project
(or get back into an old one!). 
What are you working on this month?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
On another note, it's time for another giveaway! 
This time, enter to win a this great little truck...perfect for all those little (or big!) kids to drive around.  They can even fill up the truck bed with tiny treasures!
 
 
 
TO ENTER:  Visit our facebook page at www.facebook.com/fiddleandfrogcrafts
and leave a comment for us under the truck pic. 
We'll randomly choose a winner on Friday, March 7 at 12:00pm.
Good luck!
 
 
Happy Crafting!
Your friends at Fiddle & Frog

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Musical Instrument Making EVENT!

Hi Friends!
Music is fun.  Making music is fun.  Crafting is fun. 
Combining crafting and music is AWESOME! 
 
On March 1, you can combine music and crafting at our
MUSICAL INSTRUMENT MAKING EVENT. 
This two-hour event will offer participants age five and up a chance to make three working instruments (and of course you get to take them home!) out of wood and other supplies.

Come join the fun! 
(Check out the poster below for registration info.  Register by February 25!)
 
 
 

Monday, February 17, 2014

Recipe: Gingerbread :)

Hi friends!
On a snowy day like today, I thought I'd share a yummy, cozy-type recipe with you:  Laura Ingalls Wilder's Gingerbread.  It's pretty easy, and I usually have most of the ingredients on hand.  Find it (and more recipes from our favorite pioneer gal) in The Laura Ingalls Wilder Country Cookbook, published by Harper Collins Publishers in 1995.  Enjoy!

Laura Ingalls Wilder's Gingerbread
(Makes 1 9-inch square loaf)

Ingredients:
1 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup shortening
1 cup molasses
2 tsp. baking soda
1 cup boiling water; measured in a 2-cup or larger measuring cup
3 cups all-purpose flour
1 tsp. each ginger, cinnamon, allspice, nutmeg, ground cloves
1/2 tsp. salt

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Grease a 9 x 9-inch baking pan.
2. Blend the sugar and the shortening and mix in the molasses.
3. Add the baking soda to the boiling water and mix well.
4. Combine the flour and the spices and sift.  Combine the sugar-molasses mixture with the flour mixture and the baking soda-water liquid.  Mix ingredients well and pour into prepared pan.
5. Bake for 45 minutes or until cake tester inserted in the center of the gingerbread comes out clean.

Have a crafty (and gingerbread-y!) day!
Kristin at Fiddle & Frog

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Hi friends!  Looking for an easy (even at the last minute, wink!) and cute valentine to make for your special people?  This 'COLLAGE HEART' took less than fifteen minutes, and I think it's really cute!  I love the quilty sort of look...ooh - maybe next time I'll try it with fabric scraps!  We (and by we, I mean myself and my two little girls) made some as cards and some as ornaments with ribbon hangers, but there are certainly other options too (bookmarks, etc.).  Here's the super easy play-by-play!

 
Materials:  scrapbook papers, fancy scissors (or you can tear the paper), stiff white paper, ribbon (if making your heart into an ornament), cardstock (if making your heart into a card), glue stick

Directions:  Cut a heart shape from the stiff white paper.  Cut or tear the scrapbook paper into lots of small bits.  Glue the small bits of scrapbook paper onto the white paper heart in any pattern you choose (or randomly, as I did).  Trim around the edges of your heart (so it still looks like a heart!).  If making your heart into an ornament, punch a hole near the top and insert a ribbon as a hook.  If making your heart into a card, glue it onto a folded piece of cardstock paper.  Deliver to your loved ones!

Have a crafty day!
Kristin at Fiddle & Frog

P.S. - Have you signed up for the Musical Instrument Making Event on March 1?  Promises to be a great, crafty, musical time!  Hope to see you there :)  Check out www.kristingontea.wix.com/chickadeemusicstudio for more info.

Monday, February 3, 2014

Book Review: Making Toys That Teach

Hi friends!  Wondering which books inspire us as crafters?  Here's a review by Amy of Making Toys That Teach by Les Neufeld (copyright 2003 The Taunton Press)

"Today's toys are different from toys when I was a kid.  Every toy nowadays buzzes, beeps, plays music or even talks to kids.  While kids do enjoy these battery-operated toys, I think they are missing one crucial aspect of play - creativity.

This is what drew me to check out Making Toys That Teach.  This book includes easy to follow plans for making wooden toys as simple as a set of blocks made primarily from scrap pieces of wood and as complex as an eight-car train set.  Plans include both top and side views with measurements and step-by-step instructions for how to put it together.  I found the plans quite easy to follow.  Mr. Neufeld suggests adding color to the toys by either using simple food coloring or using different, contrasting hardwoods. 

For Christmas last year I made the train set for my nieces, aged 2 and 4 now.  I used a variety of woods to build it and it turned out both beautiful and fun.  My younger niece, in particular, loves to take the pieces off of the train and put them back on.

I thoroughly enjoyed Making Toys That Teach, not just because, as a woodworker, I appreciate the detailed plans and instructions.  I love the concept behind the book - toys can and should encourage children to use their imagination and be creative."

Do you have creative books that inspire you?  We'd love to hear from you...so we can read them too!


Have a crafty day!
Your friends at Fiddle & Frog

Monday, January 27, 2014

Penguin Treats

Hi Friends!  Here's a perfect little recipe/craft for a frigid arctic-like day!  My amazing friend Beth made these little guys for her daughter's first birthday party, and they were so sweet (and tasty)!  Check out the recipe she used from allrecipes.com  Not too difficult, and ingredients you may just have on hand in your pantry.  Have fun!

 
  1. Cut a slit from top to bottom, lengthwise, into the side of each jumbo olive. Carefully insert about 1 teaspoon of cream cheese into each olive. Slice the carrot into eighteen 1/4 inch thick rounds; cut a small notch out of each carrot slice to form feet. Save the cut out piece and press into center of small olive to form the beak. If necessary cut a small slit into each olive before inserting the beak.
  2. Set a big olive, large hole side down, onto a carrot slice. Then, set a small olive onto the large olive, adjusting so that the beak, cream cheese chest and notch in the carrot slice line up. Secure with a toothpick.


Have a crafty day!
Your friends at Fiddle & Frog

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Paper Snowflakes

Hi Friends!
This week, my four-year old and I made snowflakes from white paper.  We just did really simple cut-outs, like squares, rectangles and triangles.  But I think they turned out kind of cute! 

 
 
Have any of you made paper snowflakes this year? 
What designs do you cut out?  Please share your ideas :)
 
Have a crafty day,
 
Kristin at Fiddle & Frog

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Must-Have Tools: Woodworking & Sewing

Hi all!
Ever wonder what tools we use here at Fiddle & Frog to make all the handmade goods we produce?  Here's a look at some of the tools we'd be lost without.

PART 1:  Woodworking

SCROLL SAW:  for detailed cuts, or working with small pieces
 
TABLE SAW:  for rough cutting pieces to size
MITER/MITRE SAW:  for cutting angles
DRILL PRESS & PLANER:  for drilling all sizes of holes and removing rough edges
DRILL:  for drilling, using as a screwdriver, etc.


PART 2:  Sewing
SEWING MACHINE:  kind of obvious, but an indispensable tool for someone who sews as much as I do!

MISCELLANEOUS TOOLS:  scissors, pinking shears, pins, measuring tape, scissors sharpener
Not Pictured:  notebook, pencils, seam ripper
There you go...the main tools we couldn't live without!  Please note:  Although you do see certain brands here, we are not affiliated with them and could also recommend many other brands of the same tools.  What tools are most useful to you in your crafting?

Have a crafty day,
Your friends at Fiddle & Frog

Monday, January 6, 2014

Storyboards

Hi friends!
For Christmas this year, I made L a STORYBOARD SET, complete with scenery and doll costumes.  It's basically a larger, more durable version of a felt board and made for 18" dolls.  I thought I'd share some pictures of it with you!

Here's the board closed up.  It's made of three pieces of MDF, with the side pieces hinged onto the larger center piece.  I added Velcro to the inside of the board so L can stick her felt pieces onto it.  To brighten it up a little, I glued paper flower cutouts to the front, and then sprayed poly over the top to seal it a little.
 


We're totally into Little House on the Prairie, so here's our Pioneer Scenes!  Two trees, a covered wagon with Jack (the Ingalls' dog) and a log cabin help L play out some of the stories from Laura's day.  All parts on the board are felt-backed, so can be easily moved and rearranged.  (I may add some Velcro to them in the future...they don't stay on perfectly now.)  I think my favorite part of these scenes is the doll outfit...love the little bonnet!
 
L is a little obsessed with princesses right now, and Cinderella is her favorite.  Here are a kitchen scene (with 'rags' outfit) and the garden scene (when Cinderella's fairy godmother grants her wish with a beautiful ball gown) from that fairytale.  There's also a costume for the fairy godmother, but it has mysteriously vanished (under a couch?  dog ate it?)!
L is also really enjoying horses and cowgirls lately.  Here's my version of a stable.

I always loved playing school as a kid, and I'm sure L will do the same.  Here's a school scene complete with teacher and student desks, chalkboard and room décor.  The doll's outfit is a little cardigan made from an old adult sweater...love it!
 
While this project was a bit time-consuming, I think it turned out alright.  It's really rewarding to see L use her imagination and creativity to act out the scenes.  Plus, with all the costume changes her doll has to go through, she gets great fine motor practice with Velcro, buttons, snaps.....!
 
What scenes would you have to include for your little ones, if you were to make a storyboard?
 
Have a crafty day!
Kristin at Fiddle & Frog