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UsedEverywhere Blog

Monthly Archives: October 2011

Happy Halloween: FREE Pumpkin Stencils!

Carving Kurt

Carving Kurt

Happy Halloween! Tracy from Cool Pumpkin Stencils has made her awesome pumpkin carving stencils available FREE.

Finally a Halloween treat that won’t rot your teeth!

Here’s a list of the free pumpkin carving templates you can find on this site:

Have a safe and Fun Halloween Everyone!

Tracy ~ the Crafty Moma

Last-minute Halloween Party Ideas!

This is the weekend for Halloween parties! If you’re looking for some last-minute entertaining ideas, SavvyMom.ca has 24 wonderfully creepy suggestions. I’m particularly fond of this “Veggie Skeleton”.


Because let’s face it, if you’re trying to sell kids on vegetables on Halloween, you gotta get creative!

 

UsedVictoria: Show Us Your Wings and Win!

Hello Victorians! We have a challenge for you! Show us how creatively angelic you can be this Halloween and win an awesome baby gear prize pack!

Here’s what you gotta do:

    1. Pick up a set of angel wings and halo at our head office (2nd-floor, 818 Broughton Avenue) any time between 9 AM – 5 PM today (Thursday), Friday or Monday 
    2. Take a photo of yourself or loved one doing something AWESOME in said wings and halo
    3. Submit your photo to the lovely Alexa via email: alexa@usedeverwhere.com by 5 PM Wednesday, November 2nd.

 

We only have 17 sets, so if you want to enter make sure you get here quick! Plus, you’ll have a 1 in 17 chance of winning! Pretty good odds!

The most creative entry will this awesome prize pack containing the following Graco Pack ‘N Play with change table attachment, Ikea moon wall light, Bumbo, Huggies diaper & wipe, reindeer outfit. We’ll be posting some of the more creative entries here on the blog, so check back next week. Good luck and may the best angel win!

 

 

Show us your wings & win this awesome prize pack!

 

Hallowe'en, Cheap and Easy: Dive-bombing Potato Spiders

Are you getting sick of Hallowe’en yet? Shhhhh, yeah: me, too. But you know why I get sick of it? Because so many ‘experts’ seem to think we have the time to be experts, too. There’s a time and place for perfect Jell-O moulds of brains, and individually decorated cupcakes, but if you’re living fast and on the cheap like me, well, I’m just not sure when the time for the Jell-O is. So for those of you out there like me, who grew up with homemade holidays made of popsicle sticks and pasta art, here’s a three-step tutorial for awesome hanging spiders:

1. Start with a potato, some pipe cleaners, a screw, and some fishing line. Scissors are a bonus.

 

 

 

 

 

2. Stab (careful, now) four holes into the side of the potato. Repeat on the other side. This will make it easier to skewer the potato with the pipecleaners, which you can start to do now. These are legs.

 

 

 

 

 

 

3. Bend all the legs up to the sky…

 

4. Now bend ‘elbows’ into the legs. Move, bend, and arrange the legs ‘til they look leggy.

 

 

 

 

 

 

5. Take your screw and screw it into the back of the spider, basically right in the middle. Now tie the fishing line to the head of the screw.

 

 

 
6. Hang your spiders from anywhere you like.

 

BONUS STEP:

7. Take two buttons, and two of those sewing pins with the colourful ends. Stab the buttons into the spider’s ‘face’ area to make two eyes. See, now he’s kinda cute.

BONUS CREEPY FACTOR:
These spiders are a part of my childhood. My mom was always the crafting fanatic in our household, but Hallowe’en brought my dad a-runnin’ with glue gun at the ready. My brother and my costumes were always handmade by my parents, everything from Mr Fantastic, to Wednesday Addams. My dad loved to blast the War of the Worlds soundtrack from the windows of our house, letting it echo and bounce across the street and traumatizing me for years to come at the very mention of Martians. One year, Dad donned a Grim Reaper costume complete with giant scythe, and, with face hidden in the voluminous hood, he stalked the neighbourhood all evening, chasing kids and scaring toddlers to tears. This was one of the things that raised my father in my esteem from an early age…this, and the potato spiders.

Every Hallowe’en, Dad would stand outside and rig eye hooks into the little awning over our front door. He would then slide the screens open in the living room window, and we would help him feed yards of fishing line out the window. From these lengths of line would hang my dad’s army of potato spiders, all tied to pens and pencils like kite strings, the spiders pulled up tight under the awning. The neighbourhood children would come to the house, ring the bell for candy…and down would come the potato spiders, swooping like Valkyries from the awning to child-height. Genuine screams of terror were guaranteed; and woe to the parents who screamed, too, for their children would sense their fear and run, run, run. My father would give his fantastic belly laugh, reel the spiders back up, and wait for the next victims.

This may seem too scary for your neighbours’ kids, and perhaps you want to stay friends with your locals. In that case, don’t try the dive-bombing spider setup. But as a little girl who helped her dad crouch by a window ledge all evening, his Reaper hood thrown back and his spider minions terrifying everyone, I can tell you my dad was my Hallowe’en idol…and now I dream of one day having a house of my own, where I can dress up and drop potato spiders out the windows on a new generation of soon-to-be arachnophobes.

Halloween Recipes: Update!

You may recall my Halloween recipe post from last week… Well, I’ve had a chance to try the recipes myself.  They all were a hit at the party! Give them a try!

Shrunken Head Punch. It's so delicious!

 

Brain Cupcakes!

 

Monster toes! Yummy!

Trick or Treating in the 21st Century

 

Back when I was a kid, I knew exactly what the game plan was for Halloween night:

  1. Put on my costume that mom just finished sewing an hour ago as I decided that morning that I wanted to be a vampire instead of a witch (Sorry Mom!)
  2. Fight with Mom over putting on the giant poofy winter coat where no one will see my costume.
  3. Grab the largest pillow case in the house
  4. Hit the neighbourhood streets with my friends in search of the best candy houses (the house that gave away a regular size chocolate bar was always the winner!)

But nowadays trick or treating can mean so many different things. Gone are the days of going out unaccompanied by your parents to knock on strangers’ doors. People are more cautious of where they go trick or treating. Halloween seems to have become an organized event where the entire family celebrates together just like Christmas or Easter. So in the spirit of a family fun Halloween, I thought I’d give some ideas on what you can do to celebrate All Hallows Eve this year.

Go Trick or Treatin’ in the Burbs

Just because you don’t live in a newly developed subdivision cul-de-sac with well lit sidewalks and no traffic, doesn’t mean you can’t trick or treat there. A lot of people now drive the kids to these trick or treat meccas as they are safer. Also, the houses are usually built very close together so you can hit more houses (and get more candy) in less time….something I’m sure the parents will appreciate. (I remember trick or treating for 3 hours or until that pillow case was overflowing with candy bars!)

Trick or Treatin’ at the Mall

This is definitely a new concept for me but, turns out, it’s actually a very popular choice for families these days. Kids trick or treat at each store in the mall and are given treats from the businesses. Some parents really like this choice because they don’t have to worry about their kids walking around in the dark on busy streets. Plus, it’s warm so the kids don’t have to cover up their costumes with the big poofy coats. Also the malls are usually open in the late afternoon so you can finish your trick or treatin’ just in time for dinner. The only down side I can see (for the kids, that is) is that there are only so many stores, so that pillow case may only be half full by the time you leave (this could definitely be a plus for the parents who don’t want their kids jacked up on sugar until Christmas!)

Community Halloween Bonfires

If you don’t want to trek around in the cold in search of candy this year, another option is a community bonfire. These days, most cities and municipalities don’t allow backyard bonfires on residential properties but many will offer a bonfire on Halloween night put on by the local fire hall. These festive events are a great way to meet others in your community and stay warm as a family on Halloween. People usually dress up in costumes for the occasion and bring marshmallows and hot dogs to roast. Plus, if you believe in ghosts, bonfires are a great way to avoid them as they are supposed to scare off evil spirits if you stand near the fire.

Whatever you do this year, just make sure to be safe, have fun and eat lots of candy! Parents included! I believe the rule of Halloween is that parents get 25% of all candy collected by kids! (Sorry kids!  I don’t make the rules!) Happy Halloween!

Coupon tip of the week:  A great way of reducing your grocery bill is to look for grocery items you normally buy that offer coupons for another free grocery item. For instance, this week I bought 4 boxes of Honey Nut Cheerios (they were on sale plus I had coupons). But, right now they’re offering a cut out coupon on each box for a free yogurt. The cereal cost me $2.25 a box but the yogurt coupon is worth $4.77 and I’m getting it for free! Great deal! Also Nature ValleyGranola bars are also on sale and they’re offering a free 970ml Oasis juice coupon with each box.  I mean, who doesn’t love free juice?

A peek inside my collections: unlock my heart with a vintage key or two

I think the first key in my collection might have been one that belonged to my grandmother; tarnished brass with a rounded top and a tiny flourish:

Key

And then I started collecting more of them. Perhaps I should rephrase that… the keys started finding me. The second one I bought was at an odd sort of yard sale, from a local order of nuns that was moving out of their convent. The key just sat there, unattached to anything that might be remotely lockable. I remember handing over my dollar to the nun behind the table.

“A key is such a mystery,” I said jokingly. “You’ll never know it belonged to.” I think she looked at me kind of funny. But I ended up carrying that key in my pocket for a long time, perhaps as sort of a talisman.

It feels rather Alice in Wonderland, doesn’t it? What did it lock? What did it hide? I love the mystery of homeless keys. There could be a treasure behind any one of these:

a handful of keys

And once I’ve accumulated enough of them I hope to do something like this:

llubav obando choy of hableconstruction.com

It’s going to take me awhile to get there. But that’s the thing about collections, right? They have to grow…

 

Ikea Table Make-over

Ikea Ingo table + chairs via usedtoronto.com

Katie over at Matsutake has given the humble Ikea Ingo table a pretty impressive make-over. Check out her step-by-step tutorial and maybe give it a try yourself. Post your before and after photos, if you do!

Before:

After:

UsedBlog Covets: Kilim Area Rugs

original 1970 Oushak kilim via usedvictoria.com

I’ve been looking for an area rug for my living room for a while now. I’m drawn to Persian rugs, but I also want something that will work with my sort-of mid-century-meets-thrift-shop-kitsch aesthetic. And so, I turned to Apartment Therapy as you do in these situations. Lo and behold, writer Regina Yunghans just so happens to be thinking along the same lines. She’s considering adding kilim carpets to her home and well, now I am, too. A kilim is a flat-woven tapestry rug that’s produced from the Balkans to Pakistan. It’s thinner and flatter than other Persian-style carpets, which appeals to me for some reason. Maybe because it packs a visual punch but still manages to be a bit sparse? Not sure…

Anyway, after a quick search on UsedVictoria, I found the lovely kilim carpet shown above. I love the colours and pattern and I think it will work with the other textures in my home, adding some much needed warmth. I also love that it’s vintage. I think it would feel quite at home with my other second-hand treasures. What do you think? I know I love the look, but is there something about the lovely kilim I should know before doling out the do-re-mi?

 

Cross-Canada Tour of Awesomeness: Teal

the teal deal!

After reading Apartment Therapy’s Fall’s Coolest Color: Touches of Teal, I felt inspired to poke around the Used sites for a little shot of this fabulous shade. Perfect to brighten up a rather grey day here on the left coast….

From top left to bottom right: retro dresser, vintage chest of drawers, vintage Compact Electra vacuum cleaner, Micro Machines car wax station, La Parka, Osiris skate shoes, antique canoe candy dishes, retro shelving unit, Newport 1953 Coronation commemorative plate, vintage Sarah Coventry brooch & earring set, Airblaster sunglasses, Kuwahara road bike