Showing posts with label Haul. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Haul. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Craft Room Storage Tips


Have you ever experienced your own form of a Craft Room Obstacle course? 😉 I have and when you buy crafting supplies, you need to figure out where you are gonna store them when you get home. In my case, I live in a tiny home -- basically it is a two bedroom cottage. I LOVE looking for storage ideas and gadgets.  So I thought I might share some of my favorite ideas with you.  Some have been gleaned from another post called "My Best Tips." I decided to put the storage ideas in a separate post as I will be sharing them with a new crafty friend. 

DATE: June 29, 2010

I love all the newest gadgets, but can't always afford them. So the next best thing is to crank up the ole creativity and repurpose an old gadget into a new one. I found this stainless steel holder thingy at a thrift store for about 50 cents (I had no idea what it was in its old life at the time, but later my husband told me he thought it might have held pipes, you know the smoking kind). Anyway, I brought the new-to-me gadget home, cleaned the dust off of it, looked it over (it revolves!) and added a few things to it and wha-la – on the top shelf, it holds all kinds of scissors, hole punches, pliers, a hammer in the center, and in the bottom spaces where I guess the bowls of the pipes went, is just the perfect size for embossing powder jars. And it has a handle in the center, so if I need to move it to clean off my table (yeah, right, in the next century), I can!

P.S. The above might also be a revolving spice rack. Looks very similar to something I saw at a thrift store this last weekend with all the jars in it. This is the mark on the bottom -- MADE IN CHINA. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. MMII M, KAMANSTEIN, INC., ELMSFORD, NY 10523

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DATE: 17 Feb 2011

Post - God Richly Provides!

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DATE: 25 June 2011





Since I save all the used ribbons that come my way and have purchased bundled, spool-less odd lots at a local children’s museum teacher’s resource room, one year I asked Santa for a ribbon iron and my son purchased this Tulip Mini Fashion Iron for me. It’s so light and easy to whip out from the little zippered pink makeup bag (also purchased from thrift store) to iron those ribbons flat. I found the cute little ironing board for $2.50 at a our local salvage store. It’s for ironing collar and cuff seams when sewing clothing, but it makes a dandy counter ironing surface instead of having to drag out my big ironing board to set up. If your husband is handy in the workshop, he might be able to saw you a little ironing board from a picket fence board (16” long) which you could cover the top with old cut up potholders to give it a little padding, topping with fabric and stapling it on. The legs on mine are like the big ironing board legs that let it fold up flat, but your hubbin could attach dowel rod legs that screw on to the bottom. I would also slip on rubber chair tips on the ends of the legs so they don’t mar your counter surface & would give it a little gripping power as well.

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DATE: 12 Jun 2012



I found this cartoon in my news feed on Facebook and thought how appropriate it was when applied to my “craft room” which is actually a corner of my kitchen. I’m not going to enlighten you with a photo of the mess in one-half of my kitchen, but there are some of my crafty friends and I’m not naming names, like you Amy, who are in the organization mode. You can celebrate Christmas (or Hanukah) more than once a year when you decide to clean out, that is, finding goodies you “forgot” you bought! *smile*😁
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DATE: 1 Jul 2010
I was looking for an easy way to store my extra die-cuts, stickers, and assorted stamped images in one place. My husband worked in a computer warehouse and at that time brought me a bunch of extra CD envies home that they were going to throw out. I repurposed them to hold my extra bits and pieces in this shoebox. As I've been digging through some of my drawers in my craft corner for the extras that I've squirreled away, this box has gotten fatter and fatter, so much so that I think I'm gonna have to divide it into two – one for card bits and another for scrapbook ephemera.

Update: Since my husband no longer works for that particular company, I use zip-loc baggies to store my images in. I still slide them upright into plastic baskets/shoeboxes though. I like the baggies because they are clear and I can see what I'm selecting from the basket. The best baggies are the kind that have a space for writing on the front and a permanent sharpie marker is perfect for writing on it! 
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Date: July 19, 2010

I found a plastic three drawer shoe keeper at Walmart and started keeping my cards in it. The top drawer holds all-occasion cards (mostly blank inside), the middle drawer – birthday, and holiday cards. The box on top holds the envelopes. If you slip the invitation sized (A2) cards inside the drawer with the fold towards the top, you can keep approximately 150 cards in each of these drawers.





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DATE: 12 Sep 2012
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DATE: 25 Dec 2013
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DATE: 3 Jan 2015
TUFF SHED UPDATE (2022) = While we still have this building, I will give you some things to think about when considering whether or not you should move out to your backyard to an arts and crafts studio she-shed -- 

1. How many out-buildings does your city/county allow in your yard? (Our city allows for 2 and we have that many, this craft barn and another smaller shed for gardening tools, camping equipment, etc.)

2. How big of a building can you afford? (This one cost about $6,000 bare bones. It was built for us on Valentine's Day).

3. How many people are you willing to share the building with? And will they respect your space? (My dream was to have an arts and crafts studio with room for a few friends to come craft with me, but since my husband decided he wanted to realize his dream too, for a library/office -- think Rex Harrison's library in "My Fair Lady" movie, that has never happened.)

4. Is it going to have running water for washing up and perhaps a toilet (We don't have running water in the barn. What I did have was a large drink dispenser with a spout on a small table and our house has a back door for access to the restroom in the house.)

5. Are you going to have electricity for lights and electric crafting tools? (I do have electricity for lights, electric tools and a small heater and/or fan via the seasons. It took a while for me to get a large heater for the space. The building was insulated on the walls and ceiling when it was built and carpet was placed on the floor, but we forgot to add insulation under the building, so the floors get cold. We were trying to build it on a shoestring.)

6. How are you going to heat or cool it? (Tiny homes have the same issue. Many of them are going to a wall mounted heater plus air-conditioner similar to a built-in that hotel and hospital rooms have.)

7. Are you going to have built-in cabinetry or free-standing shelving? (We didn't have a Restore store back then, so we went shopping at thrift stores for bookshelves.)

8. Are you going to have enough space to invite a few friends over for a crafting party?

I don't get as much use out of it as I thought I would. It's basically a storage shed and I have my YouTube table set up in the corner of my living room and a few supplies in two 3 tier, rolling carts. I'm very protective of my corner and hubby gets to run out to the shed for me when I need something. 😁
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DATE: 22 Jan 2015

 I had been using transparent plastic shoeboxes (see above) . Right now all my spool ribbon are stored in cardboard shoe boxes. With two guys in the family who are hard on shoes, I have a steady supply of them. I was given a big sack of sewing trims and bias tape and I found they fit perfectly in these three metal index card catalog boxes. I really like the sliders in the bottom to keep the trim cards standing upright.


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DATE: 22 Jan 2015
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DATE: 8 Mar 2015
Post - Shed-Oh! 
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Date: 26 Nov 2018
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DATE: 3 May 2019



Yes, my husband is up to collecting stuff from the trash bin again. He brought home a bunch of heavy duty cardboard tubes that were at the end of the roll of label stickers that they use in the warehouse where he works and asked me what I could do with them, so here's one of my ideas. I also had squirrelled away a couple of wider tubes from crochet thread, so those got glued down in the center of the ramen noodle cardboard soup box and then I inserted the smaller tubes around them until I couldn't fit in anymore. I like the color of the cardboard so left them au natural, but they could be painted before gluing. I tied a strip of denim cut from an old pair of jeans that my husband or son gave me into a bow around the box, inserted my crafting tools into it and wha-la - a tool-box!

Later, I found a basket at a thrift store with two large dowel handles on the sides that the box fit down into perfectly. Easy to carry from place to place now! 
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DATE: 3 Dec 2019
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DATE: 15 May 2021
Video - More Happy Mail!  (my video shows an ATC storage idea)
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DATE: 15 July 2021
In my Best Tips post, I mentioned these "sponge applicator tools." Around our house, we have a never ending supply of these little bottles, so we use them as storage containers for tiny beads, nails, and tacks, etc., after all the pills are gone. This is my newest idea -- a two-in-one storage/tool handle for Tim Holtz's replacement sponge applicators. I use a long forceps/tweezer tool that I picked up at Harbor Freight to grab and pull a sponge out of the bottle to add to the lid (click on photo to enlarge and see the Velcro hook tape circle I glued to the top with E-6000 to hold the sponge applicator.) Then I use the "handle" of the upside down bottle to pounce ink from the moist sponge onto a piece of paper.  Handy-Dandy!

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DATE: 17 Dec 2021

When I homeschooled our son, I was a unit study gal. I loved pulling everything together that we needed to study one thematic lesson with. Well, that seems to be my thing and I found the perfect solution to do just that with my craft supplies. I was watching Possum Patty on YouTube and she was organizing her craft room. I asked her what those large sacks she was using to slip her 12 x 12-inch scrapbook paper tablets into, and she said Hefty's 2.5-gallon slider bags. The 12" x 12" paper pads fit into them just perfect, and I was on a roll after my husband picked up two boxes for me at Walmart. This is my largest sack of farmhouse goodies to date. 

My main themes so far are
Black and White (stamped & patterned paper)
Boy (could be titled Male, too)
Celebrations (Birthday, Holiday & Seasons)
Colored paper
Cute! (Knockoffs, Mary Engelbreit, MacKenzie Childs) 
Dolly (my Teesha Moore inspired, art journaled zetti-doll stuff -- her faces, clothing,
     background, printable body parts, hair, accessories, quote sheet, etc.)
Girl (could be titled Female also)
Farmhouse (includes Western)
Heritage (vintage like Graphics 45, Tim Holtz, etc.)
Kitchen (housewife, farmhouse, & retro)
White CS (plain white cardstock)

I might add more categories after I see what I have out in my craft barn. 
In addition to the large Hefty Sack, I added a basic three smaller plastic zipper bags in a quart size for those things that could get lost in the bottom of the larger sack. So those sub-sacks are labeled: Images, Scraps, and Words (alphas & tags), however, I added an extra sub-sack to both the colored paper and white cardstock called Die-cuts. These are the items that you can sometimes cut down from the 12 x 12 paper packs to use as images, tags, and alphabets that coordinate with the paper pads. 
I also went through my stash of stickers that I picked up at Scraps KC awhile back and added those to the category sacks. Tonight, we went out and bought a large plastic tub at Walmart that was wide enough at the end (about 14" wide) and about 12" deep to use as a filing cabinet of sorts to store the ephemera in, in all their sacks and it didn't break the bank! 🏦$😊
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Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Week Three of the 30 Day Coloring Challenge

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Day 16: Kathy's Colored Pencil Bear


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Day 17: Kathy's Sweet Birdie Background Card

 
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Day 18:  Kathy's Video

I did this all in watercolor using markers and a water pen.


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Day 19: Kathy's video on Coloring Melody (and showing a cute screen door die
which is no longer being made -- phooey!)
 
 Click on photos to enlarge to see details.

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Day 20: Kathy's Mermaid Card

I had a lot of background to cover, so used yellow watercolor today and a flat bristled
water brush to cover in the large areas, then used the smaller tipped water brush
to add in the color around the lettering. The other colors were marker ink that I scribbled
out on a white ceramic tile that I'm using as a palette and 1 drop of water.


I'm whittling down my stack of divider covers for my faith-book binder.
I'm following Stephanie Ackerman's Documented Faith.

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Day 21: Winner, Winner, Chicken Dinner!


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Day 22: Kathy's Joyous Snowman!


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Day 23: Kathy's Razzle Dazzle Card

I added something different to this coloring sheet as I was looking
through some of Mary Engelbreit's illustrations for another project,
I found that it looked like she had stamped solid stamps
on some of her backgrounds, so I took a small heart stamp and
colored it in with a Marvy brush marker and stamped it several times on my green
background. I also added dots to the letters
and made the blue tablecloth a plaid one.


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Day 24: Kathy has a couple of fun cards on her site today!

 
 
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Day 25: Kathy's Easter Basket Card

 I think I forgot to mention that these coloring sheets are the size of standard
sheets of copy paper -- 8.5 x 11 inches and they are from
Mary Engelbreit's new coloring book that I received for my birthday
which is really close to Christmas.


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Day 26: Another video & fairy card by Kathy!

This was a tough sheet to water-color as the leaves and branches were intertwined
and small. I've got three more dividers to make for my Documented Faith-book
and then I will be done! Yippee!
 
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Day 27: Kathy's Healthy Eating Resolutions

Today was an off day for me.  I was just not feeling it.
The more I added to this page, the worse it got.
I'm sure Mary Engelbreit has had off days too, when nothing seemed to go right,
but I'm adding this to prove I worked on something.


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Day 28: "It's All About You" featured coloring

I decided that I needed lighter colored watercolors,
so we visited a new Hobby Lobby in the town south of us
and I looked high and low for a paint set with pastel colors
and finally found one by Sargent Art,
however, I'm not sure I like them. The cakes dry super fast,
so I had trouble keeping them moist. And I think of watercolor being
translucent and these were opaque,
with a gritty texture like chalk when they dried. We will see how they work
with colored pencils over the top.

 
 
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Day 29: Two Videos from Kathy

I struggled with coloring this. The chalky paint covered over some of the
lines, so I had to go back over the lines with a fine-line Sharpie.
The colored pencils did not want to layer very well, so I really
had to burnish it to get it to stick. I'm not at all pleased with
how the girl turned out. And the black lettering is covering over
some uglies underneath. sigh!

 

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Last Day of Kathy's 30 Day Coloring Challenge :
Kathy's gorgeous butterfly card + video

 
Have you ever been so mad you want to cry?
Well, I'm that mad.
The luck page has had a couple of days to dry
and I worked on coloring it in with my colored pencils like always,
but noticed when I took the eraser to a small mistake, oh, oh,
the paint disappeared and I wasn't erasing that hard. It crumbled into dust
and the white paper showed underneath. I continued anyway, got it all colored in,
and got it ready to attach it to my divider to mat it and the double-face tape
on one corner snagged the divider paper too early and you know,
you have to catch it quick before it gets bonded to the paper, so I went to roll it back
and put it down correctly, and wiped almost all the coloring off that corner.
If I had known that watercolor paint was going to crumble away like that I
would have used spray fixative before coloring it in with the pencils, however, I didn't
know and hadn't had that trouble before with my other cheapie watercolor paints
 and therefore had to fix the smudged letters.
So then, I wasn't sure how fixative would work on waxy colored pencils,
so I decided to laminate
the page after I carefully matted the rest of the divider.
It got stuck in the laminator.
Now, mind you, this is my last coloring project for the challenge
and my last divider for my Documented Faith notebook
and would you believe what it says? It's almost laughable, but not quite.
I'm uploading it anyway to prove all what I say is true.
 
 
 And by the way, I'm not recommending that "paint" to anyone,
especially not to kids or adults with allergies to dust or asthma, like me. 
I bought that 24 cake count tray of watercolor chalk
in the fine art paint department of Hobby Lobby --
all I got to say is, if Hobby Lobby wants to continue selling it,
it should be sold in the kid's section with a warning label --
"Persons with allergies take note: This paint turns to dust when dry.
It is not a permanent coloring agent."
 
The end! 

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Show Me MO Creativity


 
My husband collects tack pins and he bought this pin for me at a thrift store in Eldon, because he thought I would like it. It intrigues me and I'd like to find out why and who it was made for, so Missouri gals and guys, if you know, give a shout out! It's metal, about 1 1/2 inches long and 1 inch wide. Missouri's state motto is "The Show-Me-State" and it is represented as a halo above the fellow's head. Inside the, what I assume are binoculars, is Missouri's state outline and MO, the postal abbreviation for Missouri, inside of that. Then on the T-shirt of this fellow is the word "creativity." All the enameled colors are correct except for the outlines, which in the scanned form shows up black for gold.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Cozy Mysteries & Novels

Knowing I like reading cozy mysteries and novels related to crafts for fun, my hubbin and I visited two new-to-us mystery bookstores located in the metro Kansas City area this last weekend. The first one, “I Love A Mystery (store has either closed or moved-2020), was hosting a book signing with author Clare O’Donohue She’s a freelance television writer/producer and has worked worldwide on a variety of shows for the Food Network, the History Channel, and truTV, among others. An avid quilter, she also was a producer for HGTV’s Simply Quilts and is a very nice lady! I jumped in and finished reading her first cozy mystery in the Someday Quilts Mystery series called “The Lover’s Knot” last night although she was signing a book for her second series, a Kate Conway book.

Then we visited a Salvation Army thrift store just across and down the street from “I Love a Mystery” (one has to make the most of opportunities *smile*) where I found The Quilter’s Legacy by Jennifer Chiaverini and another Mary Engelbreit teacup minus the saucer plus 4 bottles of Stampendous embossing powder at a dollar each and a sandwich baggie each of wooden buttons, spools and other goodies.

Next we drove our new-to-us PT Cruiser (we love our car!) four miles away to the Mysteryscape Bookstore (store has either closed or moved also-2020). They have a big selection of Cozy Mysteries.

And one just never knows what’s in the neighborhood, because we passed a rubber stamping store and a yarn store on our way to Mysteryscape Bookstore before they closed. Of course, I twisted my hubby’s arm and we went back down the street to visit “Ink, Paper, Rubber”, but didn’t make it to the yarn store before they turned their sign around to CLOSED. I asked the clerk at Ink Paper Rubber (closed their doors permanently in 2020) if they have any clubs and yes, they have an beginning ATC club which I may have to go check out! And yes, I did buy a stamp – a front and back Art Impressions Unmounted (#UMT1518) which I will have to ink up soon!

My husband and I enjoy reading Laura Child's Cozy Mysteries. She has a Tea Shop Series, a Scrapbooking store series and the Cackleberry Club restaurant series. We just found three of her books at a thrift store from the Cackleberry Club series - #5, 7, & 8. I'm looking forward to reading them. 

Updated: 5/25/2021

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

I’ve Been Junkin’ Again!

Mound City, Kansas is well-known in these parts for their huge craft festival every fall and their Civil War battle site. However, I just found out that there is a new store in town, on Main Street that we’re going to have to go check out. It’s called “Treasure Hunters Cove” and is a consignment thrift gift shop. It’s run by sisters Kim and Vicki and has only been open a couple of months.
I ran into Vicki last Saturday while we were thriftin’. She was on a shopping trip herself and digging through a bin of pictures. I moseyed up to the bin and asked if there was any Mary Engelbreit pictures in there and she replied that she didn’t know who that was. Ever once in a while, I’ll take a fancy to talk to some total stranger in a store and have met some very nice people that way. I found a Mary Engelbreit book farther back in the store and since Vicki hadn’t left yet, I had to introduce ME to her at the cash register.
I became acquainted with Mary Engelbreit’s work through her greeting cards in a quilt shop on Massachusetts Street in Lawrence, Kansas several years ago and I’ve loved her nostalgic style ever since. I’ve acquired 18 ME coffee mugs and tea cups, plus a very nice cake plate, a tin Easter basket, two ME/JC Penny tin boxes, salt and pepper shakers, a plant pot, a few rubber stamps, stationary, and several ME books plus bookmarks and bookplates, most from secondhand shops and as gifts. I’m also looking to outfit my kitchen, so have been hunting for items to theme.
My hubbin has the patience of Job and was such a gentleman as he opened the door to gently nudge Vicki and I towards our vehicles as we swapped information. She had been a Sprint graphic designer and did portraits on the side, but decided to pursue a dream to open this store with her sister. I wish her well. You all will have to stop in and say howdy when you are in the area. She said she believes there may be a gallon-sized zip baggie of rubber stamps in her store at the moment if anyone is interested!

Friday, September 9, 2011

Bargains Galore

I’ve been shopping for new and gently-used but new-to-us Sunday School stuff at charity/thrift shops, Dollar Tree, Mardels, Michaels (where my son works), US Toys and Walmart. I update or rotate posters and toys from time to time to pique the children’s interest. Also I like shopping creatively. I might not purchase much, but often come away with many FREE ideas percolating in my head. 

At Dollar Tree, I found a set of four signs on tongue depressor handles for “Quiet” (looks like a stop sign); “Hold Your Hand Up” (large white glove), and “Line Up Quietly” (footprints) that I rolled through my Xyron 900 ) laminator. It will laminate a 8.5” x 11” sheet of paper.

We sit at a table during lesson time. Little ones are impulsive, talkative and wiggle, so we practice sitting still (feet on floor, bottom on seats) and being quiet (zip lips and let’s put on our listening ears) when Mrs. Dolores is talking. I thought these would be fun to hold up when ordinary methods fail to work. One time I made huge cardstock ears to wear around my ears (think Ferengi) and wore them to class. It made a huge statement! LOL!
Found a couple of posters at US Toys for my Sunday School classroom and was delighted when asked if I would like to have them laminated for $1.00 each on top of what I paid for them (which was a little cheaper as I have a teacher’s reward discount card). So the blank poster sheet that I was going to use for our memory verse has been converted to a white board which I can use for more than one verse. I was also looking for a poster of all the New Testament Books of the Bible written in large print that I can read from across the room, but haven’t found one yet. I may have to make my own on blank desk name strips. I’m memorizing the books of the New Testament as well as the children. Most don’t read yet, but are learning to recognize different letters and to write their names. We also do a sword drill from time to time --looking up the books of the Bible that they have already memorized in our classroom New Testaments (or their Bible if they remembered to bring it) by matching the name on a flashcard to the word at the top of the page. 

We were at Mardel’s at the right time as they were selling children’s T-shirts for 59 cents on clearance. We just about cleared out their Veggie Tale selection! I also purchased two new figures to the The Pirates Who Don’t Do Anything Ship toy and an extra lesson teacher’s book from a Veggie Tales VBS curriculum packet on sale for $2.50. I feel like I made out like a bandit! I have coloring sheets for The Pirates that I pulled from the movie DVD or online.

Saw the cutest hand pointers at Mardel’s. Didn’t buy one as I couldn’t decide whether the kids would try to play with them or not. Also saw that DJ Inkers, the Stick Kids, and Mary Engelbreit have posters and bulletin board borders now! But they weren’t Veggie-Tales!