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More on lotion recipes – preservatives and bottles

A few weeks ago, when Kathy was here, I made lotion for the first time. I enjoyed doing it, so I decided I’d really like to make other beauty products. I don’t have any hand cream, and my night face cream is running out, so I’d like to make some of that. The problem? I can’t find recipes that include preservatives! I don’t understand why – emulsions of oil and water go bad quickly, and even in the refrigerator they don’t last more than a week or so. I’m definitely not going to use up even a cup of lotion in a week. I’ve also checked out several books on making cosmetics out of the library, but they are no better. What does everyone else do? Make this cosmetics without preservatives and use them up quickly? Do they not go bad as quickly as some of the literature say? Should I just take a regular recipe and add .5-1% of phenonip (the preservative I have)? I think I may try the latter.

The other problem is that I don’t have where to put the lotions. The kit I bought came with 12 4-oz bottles, but I used almost half of them with my first batch. Buying bottles online is ridiculously expensive. I did find these very cute jars at Michael’s, for $1 each. So far I think that’s the best I’ll be able to do – but it does add to the price of the lotion a lot – specially when my plan is to give away the lotion (though the kids may try to sell some).
anyway, those are my complaints for the day – pretty frivolous, I know šŸ™‚

NiƱo Silvestre – Wild Child

I was just listening to this song from Joan Manuel Serrat. My translation.
Wild Child
NiƱos de la calle

Child of the mountain
omen of bad death
wild child
comes and goes on the side walk.
Child of no-one
that trying to find a living
uglies the avenue
and gives the city a bad name
Newborn
with an amputated innocence
that in the pack
redeems his sin of existing.
Child without a child
defenseless and scared
who learns under the force of blows
to survive like the beasts
Wild child
shoe shiner and thief
sells himself in parts or whole
as an ounce of chocolate.
Roams the street
during the daytime
and at night he hides
so they don’t kill him.
And if luck,
to give it a name,
scares the wolf away,
and lengthens his life a little more.
If glue
doesn’t rotten his lungs
if he escapes the killing thugs
if he survives the whip, perhaps
He’ll become old
between jails and iron bars
seeding the ground
of more wild children, randomly.
And any night
in a cleaning job
they’ll blow the head
of one of them, without batting an eye.


You can help, visit Casa Alianza

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Communion Dresses

Well, my sister scanned the pictures of the communion dresses worn by my mother and sisters (I talked about them here). As I mentioned, it was one dress made with the cloth from my grandmother’s wedding gown, that was modified from child to child. Here it is:
My aunt Beatriz, the firstborn of the family
beatrizcomu.jpg
beatrizcomu2.jpg
My mother
mamacomu.jpg
My aunt Cuqui
estelacomu.jpg
My aunt Pipi
pipicomu.jpg
And here is my grandmother Zuni at her own first communion
zunicomu.jpg

Alex Happily Ever Crafter Kit – Review

Alex Happily Ever Crafter KitAs I mentioned in my sewing post, yesterday I got the Alex Toys Happily Ever Crafter kit. I bought it from JoAnne, a fabric and craft store. I paid about $28 (including shipping), but now the lowest price you can find it for is $35 at Amazon. I’m still evaluating whether it’s worth $28 – though probably the answer is yes. I’m not so sure about $35.
The kit comes with enough material to do 9 projects:

  • 1 headband
  • 3 felt bracelets (felt + buttons & felt shapes to sew on it)
  • 1 coin purse (felt + ribbon & buttons to sew on it)
  • 1 bandana (it’s unclear to me what to do with the bandana)
  • 1 stuffed dog (dog-shaped felt + stuffing)
  • 1 room sign (felt rectangle + ribbons/felt letters/buttons)
  • 1 felt broach (simple butterfly wing shaped felt)
  • 1 sewing pouch
  • 1 embroidered cloth & hoop
  • “wool” for crocheting & plastic hook

In addition you get a variety of buttons, a few felt cut-out shapes, some little beads (no idea how you’d saw these ones), some metallic shapes (id.), two needles, a bunch of thread, a bunch of pins, a small pair of scissors, a pin cushion, a threader, a thimble and practice cloth. There is a booklet of instructions for the crocheting and embroidering, but not for the sewing – though there are instructions for each project. As we make the different projects, I’ll write about them. (keep looking!)

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