Take pride in your work





With creative collaborative websites and online blogs, it's so easy for us DIY-ers to compare ourselves to every random Jane Doe we come across online. I LOVE scouring the interwebs, seeing what creative creations people can come up with. And should I even mention my Pinterest addiction?

For me personally, when it comes to my crafting, I am a complete perfectionist with the skill level of a grapefruit. So I spend more time critiquing my work than congratulating myself.

This coming Labor Day weekend, I will be wearing my (mostly-finished) World of Warcraft, Death Knight Tier 10 costume. This was the first mmorpg I ever played way back in bc, so when my husband and I watched the wow costume contest at Dragoncon last year, I couldn't help but think "why haven't I made one of these yet?" and decided to make a small goal for myself - I would forge my own armor set and participate in contest the next year. A goal and event (walking across the stage in  front of actual people) that is near inconceivable for me to carry out!

With remarkably inspirational Blizzard cosplayers and tutorials out there, I was encouraged to begin construction of my own.

Is it as well crafted as costumes like Kamui Cosplay? No! Of course not!

My glue seams show (you can even SEE the glue in some places), curves aren't consistent, the sanding is rough, pieces aren't attached evenly, my chestplate doesn't curve around my back and pokes out, I can find fault in ever piece of armor I spent the last 5 months constructing.

Why can't I just be proud of myself?

Instead of looking at the costume on my mannequin and seeing negatives, I want to instinctively be the person who sees the passion and time put into it. I compare myself to other people far too often, which makes me bitter, jealous and leaves me disappointed when I can't have or accomplish the things I see other people doing. It's not that I feel entitled or lazy, it's just that I set my standards too high. I look at something and see one persons skill level and I expect mine to be parallel with theirs, when they've been honing their craft for 10+ years.

So when I tried on my entire armor set last night and looked in the mirror, I wondered- does this display enough skill level to warrant entering a contest? There's nothing special about it at all. It's not based off a main character, it has no lighting or battery movement. It's just me wrapped in painted foam.

But then I remember, it's painted foam that's been littering my living room floor since January. There are scraps of foam under the couch cushions, globs of paint and paper mache stuck to the table I've been working on, faux fur balled up and tossed in a corner... my craft space is a complete mess. This has been my most expensive costume to date. I've spent half the costume budget on glue! This has been a 100% learning experience and I shouldn't compare myself to the professionals I follow online.

So when I read that we should take pride in our work, even if it's not the prettiest, I understand completely. My mom always told me growing up that as long as I did my best, that was all that mattered. As long as we put our best effort into our jobs and crafts, our love and passion for our work, crafts and selves will show.


Where The Wild Things Are bulletin board

When the summer reading decorations are taken down, the children's department looks so boring. The room goes from vibrant colors and exciting displays in every spare corner back to bare beige.

What better way to help this transition than a bright, book-inspired bulletin board?!



The characters were traced onto poster board and colored using oil pastels. Leaves are 3 different colors of green butcher paper -the lime green was re-purposed from the previous bulletin (hurray for re-purposing supplies!)

I started with the monster on the right and worked my way to the big guy. If I had begun with the big guy I probably would have made him smaller. He barely fits in the frame, but it worked out just fine. And of course, I forgot to save room for my letters, so imagination covers 2 lines.

Do you guys start putting up bulletins with your letters or images first? This isn't the first time I've forgotten to allow room for my words....





Harry Potter Birthday Party

πŸŽ‰HARRY POTTER Birthday Celebration πŸŽ‰

It's always a huge sign of relief when Summer Reading is over, the kiddies go back to school, you don't have to constantly print and fold reading logs and you can take the long needed breath. Summers are HARD in the Children's department!! But this year, we had a completely different reason to looking forward to the end of July...  HARRY POTTER CELEBRATION!! 

For this program we had multiple board games set out, snacks and a craft.  This was set up as a come and go event for the teens but most of those who came stayed for the entire length of the program, which was completely fine!

Board Games

If you've never played Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone Trivia game, you should. It's one of my favorites. It was released in 2000, so a year before the movie which means the questions are based on the book - a great way to differentiate the readers from the non-readers πŸ˜‰

Another type of game we had was Choose Wisely - a form of bean boozled roulette, created by this user at Craftster.org.

If you're not familiar with Bean Boozled Jelly Beans, the gist of it is, there are two flavors of each color jelly bean in the box. So there would be two jelly beans that look identical but one would be buttered popcorn whereas the other is rotten egg. Or one is Berry Blue while the other is toothpaste. 


You will need: 
  • Bean Boozled Beans
  • Dice with 1,2,3 and ALL  written on all sides. If you use a 6 sided die, 2 numbers can be duplicated.
Rules explained in the picture πŸ”ΊπŸ”ΊπŸ”Ί


CRAFT: Picture Frames

This is probably one of my favorite crafts to do for teen events like this. It's easy to gather supplies for and really, all you have to do is find pictures online to print off!  This Website is a great place to find printable prop replicas like for books and labels and sort.

Here's a PDF to the images I gathered to print off... CLICK ME

We had sequins, markers, small hp iconic shapes printed on regular paper that could be cut out, glitter glue - a crowd favorite amongst these guys- and scrap paper to decorate with. All you do, is pick a picture to use, glue it on some cardboard backing and start decorating! (Of course, anything with sequins and glitter is usually going to result in a huge mess but I'll gladly spend a little extra time cleaning up if it makes the event a little extra special).

The cardboard backing is super easy for us to come by. They're just cardboard rectangles approximately 20x14 inches that come in packages with our book orders on occasion (If I'm remembering correctly). If we cut them in half then they're basically the PERFECT size for this craft.

Here's one picture I was able to snag before the program ended...And of course, this person just glued a huge piece of construction paper over their cardboard.

Overall, we had a good sized crowd of passionate Harry Potter fans and the group seemed to have  a great time!





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