Thursday, October 22, 2009

Stubby Pencil!

Not as cheap as made-in-China stuff on clearance, but cheaper than mainstream supplies at Walgreens, Stubby Pencil is the best site I've found for general art supplies. They have some awesome cute things like rock-shaped crayons designed for learning the pencil-style grip, nice! (not vitally important to have, but fun) Also all soy crayons for 1$ - the mainstream "non-toxic" ones are still made of petroleum, the natural soy ones give a really smooth and pretty line. These are the standrad 8 packs that we carry in the coloring purse and break out in multiples for play-dates.

Speaking as an artist myself, the pleasant feel of a good crayon or pen sliding over the paper is a big part of enjoying drawing enough to stick with it. Cheap art supplies make art a lot less fun. Good art supplies make it more fun & more successful too. We really don't need cheap art supplies, and don't use them. I'd rather pain in plain water with a good brush than do anything with a really cheap-o one. Good brushes last and last, we don't need cheap ones.

I didn't get any of the school supplies we bought for kindergarten back, so we're buying all that stuff again. I'm thinking to get a bunch of those DIY cars too, for play-dates indoors in the bad-weather months. Another thing we'd love to get is any set of the recycled color-them-yourself cards. They have specific and generic ones, Lily really likes the dinosaurs, garden, barnyard, and space sets, and the Thank You's and Get Wells would be most appreciated too. We've gotten a few from this shop, the quality was really nice.

Thanks for looking!

Friday, October 16, 2009

HomeSchool

So we tried kindergarten, we liked the school, but decided 5 is too little to be inside 7 hours at a time, too little to eat lunch without help, go for 7 hours without cuddles. As much as we like Glendale, we're back to our previous plan, homeschooling. We found a group of super awesome homeschoolers, that made all the difference. I'm still being slowly ground into a miserable paste through basically 24-7-365 childcare with zero assistance or time off, but school didn't give me the promised respite, so that's a lateral switch for me, and an upgrade for the Bun.

Anyway, if you want to help, come and baby-sit for me! No? OK, didn't think so. Here are some secondary wish-list items.

Ladybug &/or Click magazines. These are non-commercial age appropriate magazines, the first a seasonal fiction magazine with craft projects, the second a science focused one. We already get The kid-sister magazine of Ranger Rick magazine, it's called Big Back Yard, it's great - no advertisements, lots of fun with nature topics. Contact me if you want to renew that one for us for next year.

Curriculum. We're doing the Oak Meadow program of Waldorf for HomeSchoolers, and like it so far. I haven't bought the kindergarten package yet, we need that. I have the Preschool Heart of Learning book, so I don't need the elementary school one, but could use the Teaching Process one for elementary. I'd be happy to get Growing, Growing Strong too, we already have the basic book for the bear yoga. (we call it spirit bear, we don't do angels) I'm pleased to say we also have everything in the Kindergarten craft package already, so no need for that. Look at the quality too, it's good stuff: we don't need cheap art supplies, they are just frustrating. Having a good result from artwork takes a lot of effort, and there is honestly no use expending effort with low-prices / low-quality supplies. Good tools give you the chance to do good work.

Other stuff we could use? We have loads of books so we don't *need* more, but if something really catches your eye, go for it! You can also check out my Amazon wish list, linked over there on the right hand side of this page, for loads more things - mostly books but also some toys and other stuff we extra-especially want. Actually there are a few links there with wishes! Check it out, & Thanks for reading!

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Rainy October

So... It's been quite a while since I posted here.

I got about as fed up as a person could get with being hit, nearly hit, honked at, sneered at, and screamed at by motorists while biking or walking in Chicago. I love Chicago, but I don't want to be hit by any more cars, so we moved to Madison Wisconsin. Madison is a great place to live: I hope I'm not contributing to ruining it by moving here; it would be the first time I was on the ruing-the-awesome-by-moving-into it side rather than the forced-to-move-out-of-a-place-I-love-by-clueless-and-careless-new-residents-ruining-it side of that equation. Wish me luck there.

Anyway, we signed up for school here because we didn't know anybody, much less a bunch of homeschoolers. School was OK, I think it was a pretty good school as schools go, but it wasn't a good fit for us for a bunch of reasons, mostly related to food, health, and lifestyle. Most of the kids were bussed into the local school, so we still weren't making friends in the neighborhood by going there. Then after less than a month of school, we met a really wonderful group of local homeschoolers, so we quit kindergarten. Now we're doing roughly 2 days a week of playdates, where the kids play together in a public park, and one more day of group outings; so far these have been things like apple picking, watching a parade, attending a theater production with juggling & a visit from the medical helicopter, and going to the zoo. (We missed some of them in the transition period, but hope to do better there now that we're formally withdrawn from public school and officially Homeschooling.) We're also signed up for twice monthly classes at a local nature center, they have some in the middle of the day specifically geared to homeschoolers.

More later, I'll post a recent picture, some links about Homeschooling, and our Homeschool curriculum wishlist.