Friday, January 25, 2013

Zigzag part, sideways French braid pigtails

This was a really simple hairstyle and looked so sweet.



I gave Meg a zigzag part all the way from forehead to neck. I French braided both sides of the part, but I only pulled new strands into the braid from the center of her head, never on the outside strands by the ears. (So for the braid pictured above, I only pulled new strands of hair in when I was crossing a strand on the left, not when I was crossing a strand on the right.) This made the braid turn on its side.



Bonus super-messy playroom for your viewing pleasure!


*I don't like to pull Meg's hair too tightly, both for her comfort and to avoid damaging her hair. I only heat treat (blowdry or use the curling iron) and use product on rare special occasions. You'll get a more polished look if you do these things, but I'd rather she be comfy and protect her hair while she's so young. I think she still looks darling even with things a bit looser.*


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Thursday, January 24, 2013

Brand Spanking New Playroom!

On New Years Day, I was struck with the wild urge to rearrange a few rooms in our house. We started with a large family room that held a couple couches, the TV, the grownups' bookshelves, and a few toys, and a small playroom that held the rest of the toys and had a few designated play centers set up in it (felt board, light table, dress-up wardrobe, etc.). We don't watch much TV, and we do a heck of a lot of playing, so it seemed silly that the largest room in the house was dedicated to the former and the smallest room in the house the latter. I also decided I wanted to move Meg's indoor art supplies downstairs. They were formerly in the kitchen, which worked well, but I wanted to use the bookshelf they were living on to house toys both kids can play with while dinner is being prepared. I figured the now-obsolete TV stand would be the perfect place for Meg to work on art projects when it's too cold to use our garage art studio.

The family room before (I neglected to take a picture of the TV before we started moving things around.):


The playroom before:


Now, because this was New Years Day, all the Christmas decorations were still scattered around the house, the kitchen was a mess from holiday baking and entertaining, and I was home alone with the kids. Perfect time to try moving large pieces of furniture, no?

During:


So I, uh, managed to get the couch wedged into the hallway and couldn't get it any further. When my husband got home, it actually took the two of us lifting and shoving as hard as we could, and also temporarily removing a doorknob, to get it into the right room. It only took a few days to get everything in place after that.

Playroom after:


There are still a few aesthetic changes I'd like to make. I want to hang two more matching clocks under the black one pictured and set them to different time zones (probably pacific and central where our extended families live). I have a wire and clips to hang above the art table for Meg to display her work. We need to install a chair rail around the perimeter of the room. I've found some cool maps of Middle Earth, Jurassic Park, Neverland, and Narnia that I think would be fun additions to our US and world maps. But for now everything functions. The kids love all the space to spread out, and my husband and I love that the TV is no longer the main focus of the room.

Details:
The old Ikea TV stand is the perfect height for Meg to kneel or sit at and create. Her art supplies are handy.


Homemade light table and transparent materials in jars and drawers.


This whole area can easily be sectioned off with the Superyard so Meg can play with tiny-pieced toys without fear of the baby swallowing any.


Record/CD player and our favorite CDs.


Easel and buckets of chalk, dry erase markers, and colored pencils.




Doll houses (the giant one was a pristine handmedown from a family friend) and dress-up wardrobe.


Homemade felt board.




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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Double puffy braid "headband," fishtail braids

I wish the lighting had been better and my girl more cooperative for photos, because this turned out to be a really cute hairstyle. Meg is insisting that every hair style have two braids right now, so I've been trying to get creative on top to keep things interesting.







I made a row of puffy braids going horizontally along the front of her head in a faux headband. Then I made a second row behind and parallel to the first. I took the tail from the first row and pulled it into the last pony, then I took that final tail and pulled it down into one of two fishtail braids.

*I don't like to pull Meg's hair too tightly, both for her comfort and to avoid damaging her hair. I only heat treat (blowdry or use the curling iron) and use product on rare special occasions. You'll get a more polished look if you do these things, but I'd rather she be comfy and protect her hair while she's so young. I think she still looks darling even with things a bit looser.*


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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Uneven strand braids, triple ponies with split center





This was our first fancy hairstyle on a preschool day, and you can see that we didn't manage a straight part. The rest turned out nicely, though. I pulled back the front of the hair into three small ponies. I split the center one and joined each half of it to one of the small side ponies. Then they each joined pigtail braids made with three uneven strands. Finished it off with a couple of our flower clips, and we managed to make it out the door in time for school!

*I don't like to pull Meg's hair too tightly, both for her comfort and to avoid damaging her hair. I only heat treat (blowdry or use the curling iron) and use product on rare special occasions. You'll get a more polished look if you do these things, but I'd rather she be comfy and protect her hair while she's so young. I think she still looks darling even with things a bit looser.*


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Monday, January 21, 2013

Crossover twists, fishtail braids



For this style, I parted the hair all the way from forehead to neck. I took two front sections and twisted them back, crossed them over each other, and continued twisting down to meet the rest of the hair in pigtails. I added a small clip where they intersection to define the crossover a bit more. I finished the pigtails in two fishtail braids. Fishtail braids are the very simplest braids to do. There are a million great tutorials for them on YouTube. Take a moment to have a peek, and you won't regret it.



Aren't these tulle pom pom bows cute? I found them for just a few dollars on Target's website.



*I don't like to pull Meg's hair too tightly, both for her comfort and to avoid damaging her hair. I only heat treat (blowdry or use the curling iron) and use product on rare special occasions. You'll get a more polished look if you do these things, but I'd rather she be comfy and protect her hair while she's so young. I think she still looks darling even with things a bit looser.*


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