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Make homemade vanilla extract with vodka

vanilla beans
I love to bake and I gasp every time I have to buy a new bottle of vanilla extract. I go right past the organic vanilla because, even though I know it is best for me, it is just too expensive. Some of you may not think vanilla extract, whether it be real or imitation, is very expensive, but as much as I use it, there has to be a real good alternative to buying from the store.

Ian sent me a personal email on an instructable he wrote, how to make diy vanilla extract. He put months of work into his vanilla making project. He tells us that it is better to make our own vanilla extract so that we can be free of the artificial colors and corn sweeteners that are found in commercial vanilla extracts. Ian tells us what real vanilla is and where it grows, how to choose our vanilla beans, what supplies we will need, including vodka, and the steps and directions needed to make the extract.

Make sure you have plenty of time to read Ian's instructable, because he not only gives us the background of the vanilla bean, he shares with us what he knows about the different flavors of beans from various regions around the world. In my opinion, Ian's vanilla bean reviews are priceless, and I for one appreciate all the time he has taken in finding just the perfect beans to make the best tasting vanilla extract on the planet.

15 creative uses for tea bags

tea bagsWe know that drinking tea has great health benefits. Now your tea bags can be used for alternative healing and other creative problem solving uses. I knew that tea could freshen tired eyes or ease a sunburn, but I had no idea that it could stop bleeding and pain after losing a tooth or even serve as an effective furniture polish. You'll find more interesting tips in these 15 wonderful uses for tea.

A reader comments that a green tea bag can clean stubborn stains off a white board. Here are a few other uses I was able to dig up. What inventive ways have you used tea bags. Share your tips in the comments.

Continue reading 15 creative uses for tea bags

Bam Pop paper-craft supplies

Image made with Bam Pop supplies, by Flickr user Shopping Diva.Mainstream scrapbooking has grown by leaps and bounds in the last decade, developing a much more sophisticated look than the one initially associated with it when it emerged as a major hobby in the mid-1990s. Nowadays, I hear a lot of my friends talk about how scrapbooking appeals to them, and how happy they are to have discovered "alternative" scrapping.

Until pretty recently, a lot of people felt neglected and unwelcome and in the scrapbooking scene, based on the products that were most readily available -- which can seem boring to them. Many of those people tend to be young, single people with full-time jobs and no kids, though they may have a pet who is like a child to them; they're hipster types who would rather do a layout about an indie rock show that they went to -- or that they performed in! -- than one about a two-year-old making bubbles.

(That layout is probably adorable, but it's likely that however cool she is, the mom in question didn't have much trouble finding paper and embellishments for it that she didn't find bland or embarrassing: she is the market's target customer.)

Of course, it's not true that hip, youthful scrappers were unwelcome, and since this demographic is a hungry market, plenty of products have come out for them in the last couple of years (though, even now, many ostensibly "youth-oriented" scrapbooking products actually seem to be aimed at the parents of teenagers, in a "we'll look back on your rebellion and laugh" sort of way). Today, I'm writing about some of the coolest scrapbooking stuff I've ever seen. Read more about it after the break.

Continue reading Bam Pop paper-craft supplies

The AntiCraft

Vinnland socks from TheAntiCraft, by Flickr user Bradyphrenia.

I really like The AntiCraft: even when the projects aren't something I want to make, the site's cheeky attitude entertains me. Maybe you will like it too? It's a free online craft-zine with lots of projects, but instead of being sunny and trendy, it's goth all the way, with a lot of mordant humor and projects with skulls on them. Their slogan is "Macabre Craft Snobbery."

This is a cool site, but it's definitely not for everyone: adult language is often in full effect (man, check out that breakfast tray project -- or don't, if swearing offends you); some people just won't be into the vibe, which is both punky and pagan. From one point of view, there's something there to offend almost anyone, so I think many of our more conservative readers will probably prefer to skip this one. But other people might be pleasantly surprised by some of the nifty stuff that qualifies as "goth, punk, or pagan" in the minds of the site's contributors.

They have many interesting projects, and if you don't like the "theme" of a project, you can almost always use it as a starting point for something more mainstream... i.e., you can make the Skull Lariat without skull beads, if they aren't something you'd wear. Many of the projects have no particular theme at all, like the Painted Lady mini-sweater from the current issue. Projects from past issues that may have a wider appeal include Seven-Ten Split, a knit bowling bag (which also includes photos of a green-and-white version), the beautiful Vinnland knit socks, an intricate crocheted lace choker called Asphyxiation, a beaded necklace called Henry VIII's Wedding Gift, and A Maiden's Glory, a lovely knitted leafy crown.

The Anti-Craft has been around for a while: there have been eight issues so far. The current issue, Lughnasadh 2007, has a bunch of late-summer projects. The site publishes seasonally, according to the old Irish calendar: Samhain (winter), Imbolc (spring), Beltane (summer), and Lughnasadh (autumn). A book, titled Anticraft: Knitting, Beading, and Stitching for the Slightly Sinister, will be released in November.

Punky kitty chart for fiber crafters

Doubleknit Dead Kitty scarf by Arlette Thibodeau, sucka-sc.arlette.us.Over at her Sucka SC knitblog, Arlette Thibodeau offers this awesome "Dead Kitty" chart to use in knitting and crochet projects.

The chart features a cat's head with crossbones, a play on the traditional skull and crossbones motif. Think of the irony of it, a cat, normally cute and cuddly, now the symbol of death, evil, or pirates. It is pretty funny if you think about it.

She designed it for a double-knit scarf (shown in photo), but you can use it for just about anything! Stuff made with this chart would make a great present for the punky teen girl in your life... even if that girl is you.

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