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I decided it was time for a new business card holder to carry in my purse, and thought that'd be a great little project.

Because I'm Me easy to make hand sewn wallet and business card holder

For my card holder I used some fabric set aside for camera strap covers that I just love. I opted to mix and match the fabrics, using three of them. For this project I used a tutorial found here at The Crafty Cupboard. I chose to leave off the button and loop closure, knowing this would rest in a pocket of my purse that's seldom disturbed, except to retrieve business cards.

Because I'm Me easy to make hand sewn wallet and business card holder

Total project time was about 15 minutes.

Because I'm Me easy to make hand sewn wallet and business card holder

These little holders would make terrific gifts - if you did a pocket on just one side it'd be neat for giving a gift card. Or as a more decorative way to carry a driver's license or school ID. Lots of fun possibilities.

Of course, once I made the business card holder I didn't want to stop. What fun would it be to stop after making just one pretty little thing?

Because I'm Me easy to make hand sewn wallet and business card holder
Old wallet
It crossed my mind that I needed a new wallet. I got the one I was using from my former husband, who bought it on eBay thinking it was authentic Louis Vuitton. It was most definitely a fake, but the gesture was sweet so I was happy to use it. Then I got used to it. Everything had a place, and I knew what all those places were, and once I'm used to something I'm not real big on change. I wouldn't be surprised if I'd been using that same wallet for 10 years. I often considered replacing it but knew I wouldn't find one exactly the same and I'd have to come up with a new system ... and if it's not broke why fix it?

Well, couldn't I make my own? Maybe? I've sewn plenty of handbags over the years, surely I could try a wallet. Taking a look at my old faithful wallet I realized that yes, I could try to make one as the lines were very logical and simple.

Two hours later I had a new wallet, in the same style as the previous wallet.

Because I'm Me easy to make hand sewn wallet and business card holder

I used the same fabrics used in the business card holder, with the exception of the cover - there I opted for a red laminate which would be easier to keep clean. Not exactly my first choice, but it was very early on Sunday morning, I was still in my pajamas, and I wanted to make a wallet NOW, so I used what was on hand.
Because I'm Me easy to make hand sewn wallet and business card holder

I love the slip-in pockets for the cards, and the closing pocket. And I love the fabrics. It's very bright and cheery.

Because I'm Me easy to make hand sewn wallet and business card holder

Downsides: The snaps I used are too thick and when the wallet is folded they sit on top of each other, adding way too much thickness is one place. It's not stiff enough at all. The fold-down flap is super loose and is catching on all sorts of stuff in my purse. Both of these things are super easy fixes, and when I make a new wallet I'll use super stiff interfacing and leave the snap off of the inside envelope pocket.

Overall, though, I'm very pleased. These two pieces are a great addition to my purse.

Because I'm Me easy to make hand sewn wallet and business card holder



Shop Handcrafted Because I'm Me Bow Ties and Neckties

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5 Days of Homeschooling EssentialsThis week I'll be posting some of my "home schooling essentials", a couple of the items that I can't live without when teaching the kids at home, as part of the Schoolhouse Review Crew's winter blog hop: 5 Days of Homeschooling Essentials. The items in my posts this week may seem very simple and some even silly and, yes, they are simple items. Home schooling, like life, is as simple or complicated as we choose to make it and I prefer to keep it simple. I know no magic secrets or products that make home schooling successful, but after many years of teaching at home I have found a few things that make my world flow well and I'm excited to share them to you. 

I keep two home school schedules - an annual one, listing my goals per child for the year, and a weekly one, listing what each child must do each week. These schedules are organized in my 1" binder, which is then kept in my bucket.

Because I'm Me home schooling essentials, the schedule and how it's organized

At the beginning of the year I sit down with The Well-Trained Mind and previous years schedules and write an annual plan. This plan gives me general parameters of what we will accomplish over the school year.

The annual schedule's used to be kept taped to a wall, but are now kept in a separate section of the weekly schedule binder so they're easy to look at, allowing me to see if we're staying on track or what I have planned to do next when we finish a book.

Because I'm Me home schooling essentials, the schedule and how it's organized

The annual schedule stays similar from child to child ... what Cassie did as a seventh grader is similar to what Adam is going this year. Having her schedule, and Ian's and Mia's, to refer to helps to keep the annual schedule writing pretty simple, and allows me to double check and be sure I'm not forgetting something I did with them that worked well.

After writing the annual schedule I can then proceed to write a weekly schedule.

Because I'm Me home schooling essentials, the schedule and how it's organized

Right now the weekly schedule is just for Adam and Kaden. River works closely with me, so I know what's he done. I don't believe he should have to do schoolwork at his age (not yet Kindergarten) so I work at his pace and keep it fun for him, and when he doesn't want to do school he doesn't have to.

Back to the schedule ... I started doing the schedule this way pre-divorce when both parents were teaching and needed to be on the same page, and wrote about it here. It allowed us both to quickly know what needed to be done and what had been done, and we could both easily work from the same schedule page.

Cassie worked very independently and, when given her schedule, would just barrel through it and have plenty of free time. Mia worked this way as well, but the boys prefer to be given a day at a time, not an entire week, so with them I go day by day.

The schedule lists exactly what they need to do in a given week. If I've checked everything off at the end of the week then I know they're done.

Like our other binders, the schedules are organized with the newest on top. I take this binder to our annual review, to show what we've been working on.

The schedule is not set in stone. I can add or subtract from it as needed. My goal is to get everything we set out to do done by the end of the year, and as long as we're on track to accomplish that then I don't sweat it when day-to-day issues come up that throw us off track. Allowing for give and take is part of the reason I don't write the schedule more than one week at a time.

If you have any questions about anything I mention this week feel free to ask.

Please visit these other Home School Review Crew members' post this week as they share their homeschooling essentials:
Shalynne @ Wonderfully Chaotic
Melanie @ A Year of Jubilee Reviews
Emilee @ Pea of Sweetness
Nikki @ Angels of Heart
Sara @ Embracing Destiny
Heather @ Only Passionate Curiosity
Jennifer @ Simblissity Cottage
Kathy @ Kathys Cluttered Mind
Annette @ A Net in Time

For even more terrific blog posts in the 5 Days of Home Schooling Essentials series click the image in the top left corner.

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5 Days of Homeschooling EssentialsThis week I'll be posting some of my "home schooling essentials", a couple of the items that I can't live without when teaching the kids at home, as part of the Schoolhouse Review Crew's winter blog hop: 5 Days of Homeschooling Essentials. The items in my posts this week may seem very simple and some even silly and, yes, they are simple items. Home schooling, like life, is as simple or complicated as we choose to make it and I prefer to keep it simple. I know no magic secrets or products that make home schooling successful, but after many years of teaching at home I have found a few things that make my world flow well and I'm excited to share them to you.

Each home schooling child has a bucket. A square storage box or bin, rather than a sand bucket - but in our house, for some unknown reason, they're called buckets. As in, "Grab your bucket and let's get started on schoolwork."

Because I'm Me Homeschooling Essentials: Buckets, sharing what works for a larger homeschooling family

The buckets fit perfectly into my fantastic Ikea Expedit bookcase that lives in the dining room. While the dining room is an odd place to keep schoolwork it's close to the kitchen table and the pretty (at least when they were new) buckets, supposedly, hide the mess and look nice. I'm so embarrassed by the following photo, we clearly need some new buckets and the shelves are usually much more organized, but this is real life homeschooling and sometimes it's a mess ...

Because I'm Me Homeschooling Essentials: Buckets, sharing what works for a larger homeschooling family

Ok, moving on ... Each schooling child has a bucket. Actually, each child in the family has a bucket, even Cassie still has a bucket (mostly because she hasn't ever cleaned hers out). The buckets are in order by age so I always know who's bucket is where and can quickly toss things into the right bucket.

In their bucket the kids keep their binders. They have 1"-2" 3-ring binders for Language Arts, Math, Science, and History. Some years they have more binders than others, it just depends what we're working on. The binders are divided by topic - the Language Arts binder has a section for each different area we work in in that field, such as spelling, creative writing, and the various books and worksheets we use. Every week the kids are supposed to put their completed work into their binders, with the newest work on top. In theory, when it is time for our annual reviews we can just grab the bucket with the sorted binders and run out the door. In reality, this sorting and organizing happens 3-4 times a school year, with most of it being done the morning of our reviews. Even with our less than ideal end-of-year hustle we can get ready for reviews in an hour or two, because each child's work is already in their own space and we only have to sort by subject. After reviews the binders are emptied and all the work stored away, giving the kids clean empty binders for the next year.

Because I'm Me Homeschooling Essentials: Buckets, sharing what works for a larger homeschooling family
Adam had just finished organizing his bucket

Also in their buckets is the work they've just completed or are working on, as well as texts, pencils, calculators, and rulers.

Because I'm Me Homeschooling Essentials: Buckets, sharing what works for a larger homeschooling family
Kaden's bucket, below all this paperwork it's very organized, he's just hard at work

Each morning their buckets are brought out and they can get to work. There's no digging and searching for anything, it's all just there in their own buckets. Also, clean up at the end of the day is simplified as everything can go straight in their buckets until the next morning.

Because I'm Me Homeschooling Essentials: Buckets, sharing what works for a larger homeschooling family

I too have a bucket. My bucket contains the answer books for their texts, joint books the kids are using such as History and Science texts, the schedule binder (more on that later this week), some of my favorite idea books (also to be discussed in more detail later), my "must have" writing utensils, some of River's workbooks, and, and I give River the credit for this one because I have no idea where it came from, quite a bit of glue.

Because I'm Me Homeschooling Essentials: Buckets, sharing what works for a larger homeschooling family

Each morning my bucket comes out and sits next to me. Everything I need is right there with me.

We've used the buckets for about six years. Before that we used a kitchen island and everything got stacked with each child having their own pile. The island was wide enough for 3 children's work. When Adam reached school age a new plan became absolutely necessary or schoolwork was going to be all over the place, and that plan was the bucket system. It has worked wonderfully for us.

If you have any questions about anything I mention this week feel free to ask.

Please visit these other Home School Review Crew members' post this week as they share their homeschooling essentials:
Shalynne @ Wonderfully Chaotic
Melanie @ A Year of Jubilee Reviews
Emilee @ Pea of Sweetness
Nikki @ Angels of Heart
Sara @ Embracing Destiny
Heather @ Only Passionate Curiosity
Jennifer @ Simblissity Cottage
Kathy @ Kathys Cluttered Mind
Annette @ A Net in Time

For even more terrific blog posts in the 5 Days of Home Schooling Essentials series click the image in the top left corner.

  • 2 Comments
Because I'm Me stash-busting sew your own boys flannel pajama and play pants

Time for a little fun sewing. Mixed in with some stash busting.

Because I'm Me stash-busting sew your own boys flannel pajama and play pants

While on our last camping trip I realized, as I was taking pictures, that River was roaming around the campground in his pajamas. I have no problem with that, at all, but thought he might appreciate some comfy flannel sleep "pants" rather than knit "legging looking" bottoms to do his exploring in.

Because I'm Me stash-busting sew your own boys flannel pajama and play pants

I have quite a bit of flannel hanging out on my shelves. It's not a fabric I use for ties so it tends to just sit there. Time to dig on in and make a dent in it.

Because I'm Me stash-busting sew your own boys flannel pajama and play pants

I did consider making pants for some of the other kids, but River is the only one little enough to wear a pair of pants squeezed out of just one yard of fabric, which is what I had of these.

I do have some fun girlier flannel in 2 yard pieces that I make make into pants for Mia.

Because I'm Me stash-busting sew your own boys flannel pajama and play pants

I didn't use a pattern for these pants Instead I simply traced a pair of pajama pants he already owned, adding an inch or so to the top, bottom, and sides, to allow room for the seams and room for him to grow.

I opted to not put pockets in these pants. In hindsight I think pockets would have been a good idea - this boy, like every boy, always has a pocket full of treasure.

Because I'm Me stash-busting sew your own boys flannel pajama and play pants

I added a coordinating fabric to the hem of one pair of pants, just to add a little character and fun to them.

Because I'm Me stash-busting sew your own boys flannel pajama and play pants

To put the pants together I sewed the front and back crotch seams, then the inside leg seam (one long continuous seam), the pant hems, and finished with the waistband.

Because I'm Me stash-busting sew your own boys flannel pajama and play pants

I don't have a serger (I wish!) so I sewed the pants with french seams.

Total sewing time for the two pairs of pants: About an hour.

Because I'm Me stash-busting sew your own boys flannel pajama and play pants

These pants will be great for camping, perfect for evening s'more sessions, late night trips to the potty, and morning exploration adventures.

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5 Days of Homeschooling EssentialsThis week I'll be posting some of my "home schooling essentials", a couple of the items that I can't live without when teaching the kids at home, as part of the Schoolhouse Review Crew's winter blog hop: 5 Days of Homeschooling Essentials. The items in my posts this week may seem very simple and silly and, yes, they are simple items. Home schooling, like life, is as simple or complicated as we choose to make it and I prefer to keep it simple. I know no magic secrets or products that make home schooling successful, but after many years of teaching at home I have found a few things that make my world flow well and I'm excited to share them to you.

Every morning, after getting my bucket, I grab my writing instruments - a black or blue ink ballpoint pen (preferably a nice one ... I love a nice good pen but so do my children, so typically I find myself with something basic grabbed at a back-to-school sale), a red ink ballpoint pen, and a yellow highlighter. I also grab my water bottle and phone, but it's the writing instruments that I absolutely must have to get into my groove.

Because I'm Me Homeschooling Essentials: Writing Instruments, sharing what works for a larger homeschooling family

The black or blue pen is used to write the schedule on Monday morning. I also use it throughout the week to take care of my business stuff and notes for myself. When the boys have questions and need help with their work this is the go-to pen for math examples.

The red pen is for checking. The majority of our schoolwork is still done with pencil on paper, the boys have a few online classes but 85% of their work is done at the kitchen table with pencil to paper. All mistakes are circled and all must be corrected. Yes, much to the dismay of my children, they do all their work until it's correct, and I just keep circling until they do. The red pen is also used to check off work on the schedule, it stands out from the blue/black the schedule was written in so I can easily glance and see what's done. I also use the red pen to put a checkmark on their completed work. This way if I forget to check something off on the schedule they can show me, easily, that they did the work.

The yellow highlighter is for my green-brown-red colorblind child (the three youngest boys all have varying colorblindness issues - if you play "I Spy" with them don't let them pick anything red or green ... just saying). I can circle his math errors til my red pen runs out of ink, but he still won't easily see it. He sees the shape, but he also circles his problem numbers and answers, so my red circles just blend in with his pencil circles. As a result, all his mistakes or things he needs to be aware of are circled and highlighted.

So there you have it, as simple as it sounds those three pens are very essential to me and I do not sit down and begin the home schooling day at the kitchen table without them.

Please visit these other Home School Review Crew members' post this week as they share their homeschooling essentials:
Shalynne @ Wonderfully Chaotic
Melanie @ A Year of Jubilee Reviews
Emilee @ Pea of Sweetness
Nikki @ Angels of Heart
Sara @ Embracing Destiny
Heather @ Only Passionate Curiosity
Jennifer @ Simblissity Cottage
Kathy @ Kathys Cluttered Mind
Annette @ A Net in Time

For even more terrific blog posts in the 5 Days of Home Schooling Essentials series click the image in the top left corner.

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