Use a permanent marker to turn one of your ice trays into a herb freezer so you never waste your harvest! After you pluck and wash each herb, just pop them into the wells of the tray and freeze. I add a little water to each full segment because I love the perfect little block that comes out, but you really don’t need to. Next time you make a sauce, soup or dip, just pop one out and stir it in!
Tag Archives: DIY
Herb Saver
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Modern Quilting
I’ve been working hard this summer on two quilts for my store, and I’m so pleased with how they turned out. The process completely re-energized me and now I can’t wait to design the next one. It was my goal to come up with something that was truly fit for a modern home but also had some elements of tradition attached. After a visit to a quilt museum, I settled on a spare map of the United States and a spin on an Amish quilt I had fallen in love with.
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Comfort Food: Monkey Bread
Every proper southern sleepover I attended as a child ended with orange juice and fresh, gooey monkey bread in the morning. It wasn’t until I was an adult that I realized it goes much better with coffee and that there was, indeed, a huge difference between the made-from-scratch kind and the biscuit-in-a-can kind. When you’re a kid, sweet and cinnamon-y is always the bees knees, but later on, you just know what’s real and what’s not. Continue reading
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Homemade Insecticide
After unsuccessfully trying to maintain a garden on our roof (how many times would you climb a ladder with buckets of water in your hands?), Jeff and I decided to grow veggies and herbs inside this year. Within a few days, our herbs were being taken over by these teeny tiny flies that apparently LOVE thyme more than anything else on earth. After a little research, I developed a natural insecticide that the bugs absolutely hate. You have to spray the whole plant and soil every few days to once a week, but the benefit is that you can still eat your harvest after a little washing! Continue reading
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Community Baby Quilt
Here’s a quick post to show you how the community baby quilts turned out from the April baby showers. Giving 30 people a block regardless of artistic ability could spiral into something pretty ugly, but if you carefully control what people are allowed to use to make their block, it will turn out adorable no matter what. (And as the putter-together of it all, you could also tweak things a bit to make it look a little better too! ;-)) 
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Rust Stain Demolisher
I use a lot of vintage and antique textiles in my housewares, so I’ve removed thousands of those rust and yellow colored stains from doilies, linens, and lace. Personally, I think the three best stain fighters for delicates are cream of tartar, lemon juice and Oxiclean. Continue reading
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Milagro Heart Wedding Cake Topper
My dear friend, Kalimba, is getting married on Cinco de Mayo and she asked me to make her a sacred heart cake topper. I love this little topper and I wish I had thought of it for my own wedding! I used red velvet, vintage lace, rust silk charmeuse, stuffed it with bamboo filling and poked a wooden skewer in it….done and done!
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Cheap and Cheery- Clothespin Card Holders
I’m planning two baby showers right now, so I was thrilled when I came up with an idea that utilized something I already had in my house. You could use this idea for place settings at a wedding or for the food and activity signage at any shower or party. I simply cut 1.5 inch squares of Kraft chipboard with my paper-cutter and glued ONE end of the clothespins in the center of the squares. You have to leave one end free so you can still open the pin to hold the card. I printed the food labels, gift table sign and activity instructions on regular old card stock from an office supply store and then used my edge cutter to round them out. The whole process took about 1 hour!
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