Archive for October, 2007

Happy Halloween

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Our pumpkins



We could finally do ours today - if we do them more than 1 or 2 days before Halloween they turn to mush before the big day. The little green one was one that I grew - it didn’t have enough time to ripen.

Retro Game Explosion Part Five: Sega Dreamcast

Just before we took our trip to South Carolina, the local Goodwill got in a stack of Sega Dreamcast games and put them for sale at three bucks a pop. The only thing I really knew about the system was that it was beloved by longtime gamers. Went home and did some reading at Racketboy, a simply amazing retro game resource, and decided I should probably pick up a few in case I ever came across a Dreamcast. I put together a list of recommendations from that site and bought:

  • Crazy Taxi
  • Tennis 2K2
  • SoulCaliber
  • The House of the Dead 2
  • Resident Evil Code: Veronica
  • Sega Rally 2
  • Cannon Spike

After a couple of weeks of monitoring Dreamcast auctions on eBay, I saw what looked like an awesome deal. For $41 including shipping I got a Dreamcast, two controllers, one VMU memory card, two rumble packs, and three games: Quake III Arena, Silver, and Shadow Man. All of this stuff plus the initial games I purchased are my Christmas present. I figure we’d gone a little crazy with the retro systems since June and another one now would be a bit much. Plus it gives me something to look forward to.

I have been sneaking it out after the kids go to bed however. Again thanks to Racketboy and this article, I have discovered the seedy underworld of emulation and ROMS. The Dreamcast will read CD-R discs without any chip modifications, making it possible to play NES games on it. Pretty darn cool. I’ve tracked down all of the necessary software and figured out how to burn a self-booting disc consisting of an amazing collection of NES games.

There’s also a homebrew scene in which people have developed their own Dreamcast games. DCEvolution has free collections of these games where you simply have to download an image file and burn it to a disc. As recent as last year there were commercial releases of homebrew games. Kind of crazy, considering the Dreamcast came out in 2000 and has been out of production since 2001.

And if great commercial games, emulation, and homebrew weren’t enough, techno smarties have long since figure out how to rip backup Dreamcast games. I found a little group that shares torrents of impossible to find or prohibitively expensive games like Ikaruga and REZ. No, it’s not even close to legal but I’m not losing sleep over it. Instead I’m counting down the days until Christmas when I can break this awesome system out permanently!

For Claudia - how to make a Link costume

My friend Claudia’s son wants to be Link from the video game Zelda for Halloween this year. Since I had 3 Links last year (in the game Zelda: Fourswords there are 4 Links all dressed in different colors) I told her I’d post instructions on how I made the costumes.

First, Link needs some basic clothing. White or tan pants - you could probably get away with khakis if your kids aren’t sticklers for detail like mine, or the pants from a karate gi would be perfect. Link also wears a long-sleeved shirt under his tunic - a lighter color than the tunic. I ended up getting my green Link an XS shirt from the women’s area at Target - light green is not an easy color to find for a boy - but a less picky Link could probably even wear a white turtleneck.

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For the tunic I just measured from the front of one hip, over the shoulder to the back of the hip and cut a piece of fleece to the same length. The width was slightly larger than the measurement across his shoulders. This piece of fabric was folded in half and I cut a 6″ slit and the rounded it in the back and made it a v-neck in the front.

The only sewing I did for this costume was one straight line for the hat. This would have been really easy to do by hand, or staples or safety pins would also work. I measured Link’s head circumference and made a triangle with that measurement as the bottom leg of the triangle and the approximate height of the hat as um, that line that would go from the point of the triangle down to the line, I can’t remember what it is called! Anyway, just sew the two non-head-circumference sides together and trim the brim as needed to even things up.

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As you can see from the back of this shield it isn’t high tech and requires no fancy materials. There is a piece of funky foam under the duct tape handle to make it comfortable and stable. All three shields are still going strong after a year of use, so no complaints about durability either. Making the handle off center makes it easier for Link to hold in front of himself, and these handle will also allow the whole wrist to go through - Link has a candy bucket to carry too, you know!

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The shields are about 18″ tall and 12″ wide. First I cut the cardboard and spray painted it red (I actually had this darker red color from another project.) Then I put duct tape around the edges - half of the width of the tape is on the front and half is on the back - which makes the edge nice and neat. The swirls were drawn with a silver sharpie, the triangles are funky foam attached with white glue, and the eagle/bird/alien/whatever is cut out of white paper and glued on. Since I had plenty of time to let these dry I painted the whole front with mod podge to seal it, but that’s totally optional.

The sword is one of the free paint stirrers you get when you buy a 5 gallon bucket of paint. We had a lot of those around here, right Scott? Anyway, it is spray painted silver and the handle and hand guard are funky foam (glued on.)

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The belt buckles are also funky foam threaded on a piece of brown fleece, these are tied over the tunic to hold everything down.

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Looking again, I realize I did a bit more sewing. The boots are basically brown legwarmers - so just tubes - with a shoe-top flap on them the shoe flaps were attached to their shoes with rubber bands. As I tell the kids over and over - it is going to be dark, we can relax on the finer points!

Some of the other things -

Hazel’s slippers before felting-
Hazel’s slippers after felting-
I made this quilt/tablecloth with fabric I’ve been collecting at goodwill over the last couple weeks.
It is really long!

Close up to show detail of the fabrics.

I’ve been on a crafty bender-

And today I finally paused long enough to start taking pictures and put things back in order. While I finish up here why don’t you have a look at some of the Halloween decorations:




How to make Mario or Luigi hats

My kids are very particular when it comes to their costumes. They like all of the details to be just right, so a couple years ago when they wanted to have a Mario themed birthday party I started making prototypes of the hats that we’d give the guests as favors. After a few unsatisfactory attempts I finally came up with this version - which happily turned out to be the easiest to make. We ended up making 16 of these one evening. The kids were able to help tracing the circles and cutting them out, I just had to supervise and sew.

Polyester fleece is one of my favorite costume making materials. Like felt, there is no right side or wrong side and it doesn’t fray so raw edges are fine. But unlike felt, fleece is stretchy and elastic, so measuring and sizing can be very casual. Since it’s kind of thick it holds shapes really well and even really messy sewing gets blurred in the fuzz. My sewing machine usually needs to be cleaned after I work with fleece, but washing the material first gets rid of a lot of loose fibers. Sewing by hand is also a reasonable option for this project, and as crazy as it sounds safety pins or staples would also work.

Two hats can be made from half of a yard of fleece (1/4 yard will be too narrow.) These hats will fit anyone from a toddler to an adult.

Fold the fleece in half so that you are cutting out two pieces at a time. I use the lid from a 5 gallon pail to trace a circle on the fabric. (I use whatever marker I have around, it won’t show.) You don’t have to use a lid, you just need to make a circle with at least a 12″ diameter.

Cut out the two circles and keep the corner that is left over - this is going to be the bill of the cap.
Round off the corner and cut off the thin ends.
On one of the rounds, trace a smaller circle. It should have about a 4.5″ diameter. This is going to be the head hole. It seems small, but fleece is stretchy, remember?
These are all the parts cut out.

Sew the two rounds together about 1/2″ from the outer edge. Sew along the outer edge of the bill.
Turn both pieces inside out.
Place the open edges of the bill along the edge of the small circle and stitch all 3 layers together.
The hat is now ready for the finishing touches.

I like to use white funky foam or fun foam - whichever you call it - to make a circle for the initial - trace the lid from a can of frozen juice concentrate if you want to keep the lid theme going . I use a safety pin to secure it in place, if you make the safety pin come out and go back in through the letter it will be almost invisible.

Black funky foam mustaches complete the look - we just attach them with double stick tape.

Whew! Finally done!

I made this blanket as a graduation gift for my youngest sister, Emily, who is also saying, “Whew! Finally done!” She got her PhD in mechanical engineering a few weeks ago.

The blanket is inspired by the Babette Blanket pattern, crocheted in Mission Falls cotton yarn.

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We’re back!





We had a great week at Edisto Beach, SC.  We stayed in a cabin at a state park and went to the beach every day.
The first picture is a baby loggerhead turtle - they nest on the beach and are supposed to hatch out at night and return to the ocean.  This was one of the three stragglers we saw - crawling for the water in the middle of the day.