Family Fun Magazine
1 Year, 10 Issues
Cover Price: $34.90
Our Price: $9.99
*Get 3 years for only $9.00 8582 – valid 5/8/12 only
Family Fun for your whole family! Targeted for families with children ages three to twelve, each issue is packed with exciting activities & games, party plans, recipes, travel guides, educational projects, and tips on adding creativity and fun to your life. This magazine subscription will show you how to bring your whole family together and have fun.
I love Spring! And when I think of Spring, one thing that comes to mind is tea parties. A few years ago, my daughter Kat!e (pictured) and I decided to host a tea party for her friends. My Mom pitched in to help because she is a professional tea party planner (well, she should be!).
.
Before the party, I took the girls to a local thrift store to purchase their party clothes. They purchased inexpensive, frilly dresses and jewelry and hats, etc. Kat!e borrowed her beautiful hat from Grandma. Perfect!
.
The girls played croquet and read poetry to one another and, of course, ate delicious tea party treats.
.
I have the great pleasure of being on the test kitchen for Josi Kilpack’s culinary mystery novels. This means I get to test out all of her delicious recipes before they go to publication. One of our favorite tea party treats comes from English Trifle. Here is the recipe:
.
High Tea Lemon Cookies
.
Cookies
.
2 cups butter (room temperature)
2/3 cup powdered sugar
1 teaspoon lemon zest
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1-3/4 cups flour
1-1/2 cups cornstarch (this is not a typo)
.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Beat butter until creamy. Add powdered sugar and mix until light and fluffy. Add lemon zest and vanilla. Beat well. Add flour and cornstarch and beat until well combined. Do NOT refrigerate. Roll by hand into 1-inch balls or use a well-packed scoop, placing cookies about an inch apart as they do not spread much while baking.
.
Bake 15 minutes on ungreased cookie sheets until bottom edges are light brown. Cool on wire racks before frosting with lemon glaze (below).
.
Makes about 5 dozen small, delicate cookies.
.
Lemon Glaze
.
4 tablespoons butter
3/4 teaspoon lemon zest (get zest from lemon before juicing)
1/4 to 1/3 cup lemon juice*
2 1/2 cups powdered sugar
.
In a medium bowl combine butter, zest, juice, and sugar. Stir until well mixed. Place a piece of wax paper beneath the wire racks where the cookies have been cooling and drizzle glaze over cookies.
.
* For best results when using lemons, choose the largest lemon you can find and roll it on the counter for about a minute before juicing in order to get as much juice as possible. Zest only the yellow part of the lemon peel; the white portion leaves a bitter taste.
.
Print this Philadelphia Indulgence Cream Cheese Spread 8 oz coupon quickly, before it disappears! Remember, you can print each coupon twice.
Graveyard Mall Daily Deal LINK
Compare at: $189.00
Your Price: $19.99 (You save $169.01)
SKU: women-9west-9-1170
Product Description:
These are definitely not your typical drug store sunglasses. Made by Nine West Company, these glasses have retail tags ranging from $28.00 to $38.00 / pair
Graveyard Mall Daily Deal LINK
Women’s Nine West Sunglasses – 6 pair (includes 6 microfiber bags)
List $189.00
NOW $19.99
Mens Dockers Sunglasses – 6 pair (includes 6 microfiber bags)
List $156.00
NOW $19.99
Shipping is $6.99 for the first bundle of 6 and $1 for each additional bundle of 6
Acer Balloon Carnival 10.1″ Aspire One AOD270-1606 Netbook PC with Intel Atom N2600 Processor and Windows 7 Starter
Choose a colorful laptop that is fun for everyday use
Check email, surf the Net and chat over webcam
Fast Intel Atom N2600 processor; 1GB of memory
$248.00
*Free Shipping site to store
These incredible prices are only available through May 20th!
The following specials are not available directly online through our Shelf Reliance website. If you would like to take advantage of any of these deals, please click on the greenish blue link below to be taken to an order form:
Time Sensitive May Specials Order Form
Carter’s Striped Snail Turn Me Around Creeper – Baby
was $12.00
now $5.99
*$4.79 after code BABY20 (+ get additional 15% off if spend $100 with code MOM15OFF)
Levi’s Lurex Skinny Jeans – Girls’ 4-6x
was $36.00
now $19.99
*$15.99 after code SPECIAL20 (+ get additional 15% off if spend $100 with code MOM15OFF)
Codes:
15% off $100+ order MOM15OFF – exp 5/8/12
Can stack with:
Extra 20% off select apparel and accessories for baby BABY20 – exp 5/8/12
or
Extra 20% off Special Sizes SPECIAL20 – exp 5/8/12
Free Shipping on $75. No code required.
Women’s Canvas Pop Kicks *other colors available*
Was $17.94
Now $9.00
*$7.20 after code
Code:
20% off adult styles GROWNUP20 – exp 5/8/12
*excludes kids styles, everyday value & jeans
Free Shipping on $50. No code required.
Mach Speed Eclipse 180 4GB 1.8 in. LCD Screen Media Player – Red
Sold by Sears Sears Item# 05714603000 | Model# 1912187
Reg Price: $29.99
Savings: $20.00
$9.99
Today only! Free shipping on any order at Childrens Place!
Take an extra 15% Off EVERYTHING at The Children’s Place. Use Coupon Code: E4H2012 (exp 5/31)
girls graphic tees
was $10.50
now $8.00
*6.80 after code
girls skorts
was $10.50
now $5.00
*4.25 after code
boys tees
was $9.50
now $5.00
*4.25 after code
Today only! Free shipping on any order at Childrens Place!
Take an extra 15% Off EVERYTHING at The Children’s Place. Use Coupon Code: E4H2012 (exp 5/31)
rosette top
was $12.95
now $2.99
*$2.54 shipped after code
flip flops
was $3.50
now $3.00
*$2.55 shipped after code
fun flower flip flops
was $9.95
now $5.00
*$4.25 shipped after code
Today only! Free shipping on any order at Childrens Place!
Take an extra 15% Off EVERYTHING at The Children’s Place. Use Coupon Code: E4H2012 (exp 5/31)
Download the following iphone/ipad Everyday Mathematics Games Apps for FREE May 7-11, 2012
Addition Top-It |
Equivalent Fractions |
Beat the Computer Multiplication |
Monster Squeeze |
Divisibility Dash |
With a family of 5 constantly going in 5 different directions, I need an easy way to keep everyone’s schedules organized. We used a large paper calendar for a long time, but I decided I needed something bigger that provided a large visual for me to see the week at a glance.
I found this frame for $5 at my local thrift store. $5 is a great price in my area for a frame this size, so I snapped it up.
My original plan was to buy a sheet of dry erase board at a home improvement store and have it cut to fit in the frame. When I went to take this print out of the frame, I saw that it was stapled in VERY well and I started to think that maybe I could just use what was there. I knew I had some chalkboard paint in my garage – I wasn’t sure if painting this surface would cause it to warp, but I decided for free, I might as well try it.
This surface had a very slight texture to it, so I started by sanding it down. It is basically just a dense cardboard kind of material, so I sanded carefully with a fine grit sandpaper, then vacuumed the dust and wiped it down with a barely damp cloth.
Now paint the frame. I like to add just a little Plaster of Paris to my craft paint; not necessary, just my preference. It makes the paint act like expensive chalk paint; it covers well (sometimes in just one coat)
and it distresses very easily with sandpaper. Here is the frame all painted:
and then lightly sanded:
Now let’s paint the inside surface.
*Note – I lucked out and found a frame with a print in it that I could just paint over. If your frame doesn’t have this, I would recommend buying a piece of masonite from a home improvement store. They will even cut it to size for you. Masonite is inexpensive and easy to work with and provides a perfectly flat and smooth surface. Just paint it first, then staple or nail it into the frame when it’s dry.
I decided to start with magnetic paint so I could stick things to the calendar – bills to be paid, coupons needed, permission slips to turn in, etc.
Tape around the inside edge of the frame and start stirring your magnetic paint. Magnetic paint is really just black primer with tiny flecks of metal in it. It is very thick and hard to stir, so if you are buying it from the store be sure to ask them to shake it in their paint mixer. If, like me, you have some sitting around the house, you’ll need to stir it for at least 10 minutes.
Start painting by cutting in around the edges,
then rolling it on in the center.
It is pretty important to use a foam roller. You want as smooth of a surface as possible. The can says that three thin coats are better than a heavy coat, so that is what I did, allowing each coat to dry for 30 minutes in between and then for 4 hours after the last coat. Wrap the roller in foil in between coats so it doesn’t dry out, then wash it out well after the last one so you can use it for the chalkboard paint too. You’ll probably want to just throw it away after the chalkboard paint, so I would use a disposable foam brush, too, instead of a nice paintbrush.
After the magnetic paint is dry, you will want to do the same thing with the chalkboard paint. Do at least 2 thin coats, rolling vertically on one coat and horizontally on the other. I didn’t take pictures of this step because I used black chalkboard paint and you wouldn’t be able to see a difference, but chalkboard paint is available in all kinds of fun colors!
Remove the tape CAREFULLY. Here it is all painted:
Now let’s turn it in to a calendar. Decide how you want yours to look, and then measure and figure out how big each section will be. For me, I wanted just a week long calendar and instead of 7 sections, I only did 6, with Saturday and Sunday sharing the last section since those days tend to be less scheduled for my family. I decided to make the lines between each section 1/4 inch wide, so I grabbed a measuring tape, a ruler, a piece of scrap paper, a calculator – and then finally my high school son 😉 – and figured out how big each section should be.
I wanted something to separate the sections that would be permanent – no chalk lines that would just be erased. I considered using tape or vinyl. That would work, but I thought the edges would get dirty as the board got erased, so I came up with using slick fabric paint.
If you get the slick kind, it dries to a glossy, almost hard finish and it is available in dozens of colors, it is inexpensive, readily available and easy to work with.
In order to make the lines of paint straight, you will tape off a line to paint in. Make small marks on the inside edge of the frame with a pencil. I made two marks to indicate where the 1/4-inch thick line will be. Measure and mark on both sides of the frame, all the way across.
Then connect the dots with tape; press the edges of the tape down well so you don’t get bleeding under the tape.
Here it is with all the sections taped off:
Squeeze the paint out in a line inside the tape
Then just kind of smoosh it flat with a paintbrush.
I liked the way it looked textury and bumpy, but if you wanted it to be smooth, you could do it that way too; it will probably take a second coat, though.
Here is is all finished:
And a close up:
It works just fine with regular chalk, but I like the chalk markers (also called Bistro markers). They write brighter and tighter more like a marker, and they aren’t dusty, like regular chalk. They don’t erase with a regular eraser – you have to clean it off with a damp cloth – and they are a little more expensive, but for me it was worth it. I found them at Hobby Lobby, so be sure to use a 40% coupon!
Here is a final close up showing a magnet:
Making your own eye makeup remover is very simple. It is really just a combination of oils that does the trick. Dr. Bronner’s Castile Soap contains the oils that work so well for eye makeup removal (coconut, olive, hemp, jojoba). So, here is a simple recipe that really works well.
.
1 C water (distilled is best)
1/2 teaspoon Dr. Bronner’s Castile Soap (baby mild)
1 teaspoon olive oil
.
Simply combine your ingredients in the container of your choice (small mason jar works well) and shake. You can use cotton balls as usual and I think you’ll love the results! Plus, super cheap! The Castile Soap may seem pricey, but at 1/2 teaspoon per cup of remover, it goes a long way!