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Homeschoolers Create - A Gift Guide for Christmas

12/5/2016

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You've probably heard of homeschooling, one alternative to public education. You may even know a family that homeschools. You may even homeschool your children. Homeschooling has become so common that it usually doesn't raise eyebrows anymore. Homeschool graduates are succeeding in college and the work place. They are starting their own families and raising another generation of homeschoolers. And homeschoolers, like so many others, are creative.
​
As a homeschool mom myself, recently retired, I found my creative outlet in making items that were both pretty and practical - quilts, knit scarves and cowls, handmade soap. Homeschooling is a full time job and creating helped me de-stress, relax, and re-focus. I am truly thankful and blessed to have been able to educate my children at home for over 20 years. We grew closer as a family and established deep relationships which we will enjoy for a lifetime. My children have told me that they, too, are thankful to have been homeschooled. And I am pleased to see the fruits of my labor as they do well in their jobs and marriages. 
Heritage Academy
Our home school - Heritage Academy
Go ahead and chuckle. I do. When my kids cringe, I remind them that I am in the photo, too! Yes, we all survived homeschooling.
Homeschool mom and graduate son
Our youngest graduate
This holiday season my shop,The Lathered Lamb, was included in a list of Etsy shops with a tie to homeschooling. Alisha Gratehouse of Flourish was kind enough to write a blog post promoting these shops. She is also a home educator. I love how she summarizes the link between creativity and homeschooling this way:

​"It’s just in us as homeschool moms to desire to teach and train our own children, to have them with us, to instill in them our own values, and to equip them to live a successful life. And because we are often limited to a single income due to this choice, it’s also in a lot of us to want to have an some form of outlet in which we use our creativity and imagination, as well as contribute financially to our home and family."
​

Although I am no longer in the homeschooling season of life, my desire to create unique and useful items hasn't diminished. I suspect that the creativity of other homeschool moms will also continue long after their children have graduated. Please take a few moments to browse the shops listed. Buy something. Your purchase will encourage the moms who work hard to educate their children, and you'll get to enjoy a little of their creativity this holiday season.
http://alishagratehouse.com/homeschooling-moms-shops/
http://alishagratehouse.com/homeschooling-moms-shops/
Here are a few of my favorites which highlight the creativity of these homeschool moms.
Click on the picture to go to the listing.
Alabaster Box Shop
Alabaster Box Shop
Picture
Alisha Gratehouse Art
Four Happy Faces
Four Happy Faces
A Grateful Heart
From The Rookery
Needle felted sheep
Bear Creek Design
Cosmetic Bag from Sixmunchkin Stitching
Sixmunchkin Stitching
Necklace from Craft Like an Artist
Craft Like an Artist
Lace Snowflake necklace
Lacy Treasures
Purple Flower Necklace from Timeless Trinkets
Timeless Trinkets
Cinnamon Spice Soy Candle from Besem Natural Scents
Besem Natural Scents
Shaving Soap from Cindy's Suds
Cindy's Suds
And please remember to visit The Lathered Lamb for more gift giving ideas.
Handmade soap from The Lathered Lamb
Handmade Soap from The Lathered Lamb
Fingerless gloves from The Lathered Lamb
Fingerless Gloves from The Lathered Lamb
Hand knit cowl from The Lathered Lamb
Hand Knit Cowl from The Lathered Lamb

As always, thanks for stopping by! May your Christmas be joyful, and as you celebrate, consider the One who brings everlasting joy to the world.

​~Debbie
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Harriet Powers Bible Quilt Reproduction

4/13/2016

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Harriet Powers Bible Quilt Reproduction
Before I began making handmade soap, I made quilts. My home is decorated with many wall hangings and lap quilts that I made over the years. I confess that I have quite a few unfinished quilt tops stashed away. Recently I was motivated to continue hand quilting a queen size bed quilt that I started over 16 years ago. Yes, 16 years ago. It was a project for the new millennium. After hand quilting 80% of the top, I set it aside when I took up knitting again and started making soap. Although I haven't been quilting much in recent years, I still enjoy going to quilt shows and seeing the creativity of quilters.
​
Anyways, while waiting in a doctor's office, I was struck by a quilt hanging on the wall. It looked vaguely familiar to me, but when I questioned the receptionist about the quilt, she had little information other than that the doctor had purchased it in Columbia and that the quilt depicted the birth of Jesus. So I snapped a picture with my phone and when I got home Googled the image. This is what I found.


Harriet PowersHarriet Powers (1837-1910)

​The quilt in the doctor's office is a reproduction of a famous quilt made by Harriet Powers in 1886.

​Harriet Powers was an African American woman who lived in Clarke County, Georgia. After the Civil War, she and her husband worked their small farm and had many children. She made several quilts, but only two survive - The Pictorial quilt 1898 and The Bible quilt 1886. Harriet created her quilts using both applique and piecework techniques, hand quilting, and machine quilting. 

The Bible quilt was exhibited at the 1886 Athens County Fair. Several years later, Harriet sold the quilt for five dollars to Jennie Smith, who had admired the quilt and recognized its uniqueness. The eleven panels of the Bible quilt depict scenes from the Bible from the Creation to the birth of Jesus. 

Harriet Powers Bible QuiltHarriet Powers Bible Quilt
This is the original Bible quilt, which is now part of
the Smithsonian National Museum of American History.

The first row panels depict:
Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden 
Adam and Eve with a son
Satan surrounded by seven stars 

The second row depicts: 
Cain killing his brother Abel
Cain and his wife in the land of Nod
Jacob's dream of a ladder reaching to heaven
The baptism of Christ

The third row panels depict:
The crucifixion of Jesus 
Judas Iscariot and the thirty pieces of silver
The Last Supper
The birth of Jesus

In 1992 the Smithsonian caused quite a controversy in the quilting world when it licensed reproductions of four quilts in its collection, including the Harriet Powers Bible quilt. The reproductions were made in China, which sparked protests from American quilters. Over 23,000 reproductions of the four quilts were sold in 1993 with a numbered Certificate of Registration card. One of these reproduction quilts hangs in the Great Lake Quilt Center at the Michigan State University Museum. Another is hanging in a doctor's office waiting room in Jacksonville, Florida.

Have you seen a reproduction Harriet Powers quilt? The original is not currently on display, so for me even a reproduction was a treat to see. 

~Debbie
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    Handmade Soaps - Free Shipping - Courage

    Discover the benefits of using handmade soap - gentle cleansing, luxurious lather, soft skin. Handmade from start to finish, with beautiful color and wonderful fragrance, natural ingredients are combined to produce a simply unique bar of handcrafted soap.


    You are sure to be delighted with my handcrafted artisan soaps. Due to the handmade nature of these beautiful soaps, individual bars may vary from the photos shown. Each bar of handmade soap from The Lathered Lamb is truly one of a kind!


    My handcrafted artisan soaps are made using the cold process method of soap making from scratch. Vegetable oils and butters are mixed with sodium hydroxide, resulting in a chemical reaction which produces natural soap. Small batches are made in my kitchen with care and attention to detail. Some batches are limited edition, so snag a bar while they are available because once they're gone, they're gone!


    My original soap formulas produce luxury soaps with silky, bubbly lather that gently cleans the skin. These handmade soaps are scented with body safe fragrance or essential oils and are colored with natural pigments. Each bar of my handcrafted soap weighs over 4 ounces and comes wrapped in an attractive label with a complete ingredient list. Shrink wrap protects the soap while ensuring the fragrance can be smelled through an opening in the back.


    Did you know that body wash is made with detergents? Sodium lauryl sulfate and other sulfates strip the skin of beneficial body oils. Sure a body wash smells great and looks pretty. Plus the plastic container is convenient, even if it usually ends up in a landfill, but many folks don't realize that they could wash their dishes with that bubbly body wash!


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    To order other fragrances, see individual product listings.



    Courage - 4 oz net wt

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    Courage handmade soap is scented with masculine notes of black peppercorn and leather are carefully crafted with warm woods, patchouli, musk and citrus. The slate blue soap has a textured top.


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    To order other fragrances, see individual product listings.





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