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Happy Valentine’s Day from Pokémon

Category : Craft Room, Holiday Crafts, Paper Crafts

Cupid shot his arrows at the Pokémon so they would be available for Valentine’s Day! What better geeky Valentine than these cute little pocket monsters who are all about love and loyalty. These Valentine’s are themed with the Pokémon featured in PokéPark2, the sequel to PokePark Wii: Pikachu’s Adventure. Click on the image below for the full image to print.

Valentines from VIDICOM, used with permission.

 

Also, look for my interview with Pokémon’s Seth McMahill, coming soon!

Have a great Valentine’s Day Pokémon Trainers!

Cathe Post

Cathé Post is an avid gamer raising v2.0 & v2.1 with her husband. You will likely find Cathe playing, Dungeons and Dragons, Magic the Gathering, Pokémon, Legos, crocheting, or playing Minecraft.

Handmade Math Tools Endangering The Protractor

Category : Education, Elementary, Experiments and Science, Paper Crafts, Technology, Teens, The Web, Toys, Tweens

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ViHart’s latest video reminds us once again of the value of idle hands. In it, she demonstrates how easily our humble appendages can make us look like fiddly geniuses – or at least like common math whizzes – if only we’d allow ourselves the necessity of reinvention.

To play along, grab paper and a pen and lock your protractor in a drawer. It’s time to build our own Angle-a-trons!

Kay Holt has a habit of getting science on everything.

 

Project: Science and Art Come Together

Category : Craft Room, Elementary, Experiments and Science, Kids' Room, Kitchen, Paper Crafts, Toddlers

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Stuck inside? Going a little ca-razy trying to keep the kids occupied? I have a solution. Weave science and art together, and watch your kids get tangled up in fun with this web of glue and salt. Oh, so easy. OH so entertaining.

  • The science: The dry salt absorbs the liquid color until it’s saturated.
  • The art: A web of glue gives the liquid color a path to follow, creating a new design (and lots of oohs and ahs) every time.

You will need:

  • A recycled piece of paper board (think: cereal or cracker box)
  • Shallow box or tray
  • All-purpose glue
  • Table salt (several tablespoons)
  • Food coloring
  • An eyedropper or pipette

Set the paper board in the box. Make a web-like design on the board with glue. Create lots of intersections and criss-crossing lines to make the final step more dramatic. Sprinkle the web with salt, making sure the wet glue is completely covered; tap off excess. Mix five drops of food coloring into a tablespoon of water. Use the eyedropper to add color to the web, drop by drop. As the salt absorbs the colored water, you’ll see the color spread along the lines of glue. Watch the intersections as the color travels in several directions at once! Set flat to dry.

A slightly different version of this activity appeared in FamilyFun.

 

Kris Bordessa is the voice behind Attainable Sustainable: Reviving the Lost Art of Self-Sufficiency. She's authored several hands-on books for kids, including Team Challenges: Group Activities to Build Cooperation, Communication, and Creativity. She lives in Hawai‘i with her husband, two teens, 5 million Legos, and 5 ‘ukuleles.

Adafruit Industries fostering even the youngest of makers!

Category : Education, Electronics, Elementary, Paper Crafts, Toddlers

"E is for Electronics" used with permission from Adafruit Industries

Its likely that as a geek you are aware of the Maker movement. I have to admit it is hard being a parent in a house full of electronic parts. My kids are enamored with all of the shiny parts and LEDs that are hooked up to the latest project . Unfortunately it is pretty to tough to teach young kids about electronics since the parts are small and sharp.

Luckily for us Limor Fried (Ladyada) and Phillip Torrone over at Adafruit Industries recognized the plight of the Maker parent and are collaborating with illustrator Robert Ullman on a coloring book filled with all the basics of electronics that a maker-in-training could need.

The “E is for Electronics” coloring book is currently a work in progress, that you can watch come to fruition over the next few months.

Here are the current ideas for each of the letters:

a – amperes
b – battery / breadboard
c – capacitor
d – diode
e – electronics
f – fpga/frequency/fet
g – ground
h – hertz
i – current/infrared/inductor
j – joule
k – kelvin
l – led
m – motor/microcontroller/multimeter/mos/mosfet the cat
n – noise/npn
o – ohm/oscilloscope/opamp
p – potentiometer/pcb/printing in 3D
q – quartz / quantum field effect transistor
r – resistor/relay
s – switch/silcon/soldering iron
t – transistor
u – ultraviolet/usb/uart
v – voltage
w – wire/watt
x – xtal
y – yagi antenna (something else?)
z – zener

I have to say that I am excited to be able to set my kids up with a coloring book and crayons while my husband and I are working on our latest electronics project, and have all of us be able to do electronics as a family.

Do you have any ideas for the Adafruit team? Visit the collaboration site and leave them a message!

Helene McLaughlin is an astrophysicist taking a break from working to raise her two young boys. She has worked on programs such as Hubble Space Telescope and James Webb Space Telescope.  In her time as a data analyst at the Space Telescope Science Institute, she discovered supernovae, explored the Hubble Deep Field, processed Spitzer galaxy images and analyzed FUSE spectra. She is an avid fan of Doctor Who and Torchwood, and is proud to be raising another generation of Whovians in her two sons.

Survivable Holidays: On the 8th Year of Christmas the Post Family Gave to Me…

Category : Fabric Crafts, Family Room, Holiday Crafts, Paper Crafts, Photography

Christmas gifts past and future. Freezer paper stencil elephant, crocheted bear, Find It game, and spaghetti sauce. Photo: Cathe Post

Since my husband and I were married in 2003, we started making things for people at Christmas along with purchasing that perfect gift. When we became a one-income household, we cut back to just making gifts. This worked out well because everyone received the same gift and we spent the same amount of time and money on all of the gifts. Here is a list in case you are looking for last minute ideas.

For the adults:

  • Soap: You can purchase kits, molds, and dies at your local craft store. We are fortunate enough to have access to lavender and made lavender soap with a sprig in the middle for decorative purposes.
  • Bread: We have made bread but it goes stale quickly. So, one year we put together baskets with the dry ingredients for making beer bread, a good bottle of beer, and a handwritten recipe card.
  • Project bag: Most of the women in my family are into some sort of fiber art. We made project bags one year for the women, and gave beer with the dry goods for making beer bread to the guys. For those who don’t knit/crochet, I crocheted hot pads.
  • Lavender Sachets: Sachets are SUPER easy to make. If you grow your own lavender, these are practically free, and all you need to know is a straight stitch, or even use fabric glue if you don’t sew. For the guys in your life who wouldn’t be likely to appreciate sachets, why not make a neck wrap with rice, buckwheat, or lavender?
  • Pickles: Who doesn’t like pickles? It’s an easy canning activity along with jams, jellies, and sauces.
  • Brag Books and Calendars: We made brag books for the grandparents the first years of the kids lives. But, the company stopped offering a half sheet size book. This year we chose to order calendars from Costco for all of the grandparents. We also purchased School Days picture frames  one year so that when we give a wallet and 5×7 at Christmas, the pictures have a frame.
  • Bonbons and Bark: Bonbons are complicated, messy and had to be refrigerated. They were our first gift, and we won’t do them again. We have also made hard candy, peppermint bark, and cookies for Christmas.
  • Coupons: I made up certificates for free photography sittings and gave them to the family members who have kids. All I had to do was print them, roll them up and put a bow on them. If you offer a service that is useful, this is a great gift.

For the kids…

  • Name Frames: I looked up what each child’s name meant and made a framed collage based on the name meaning.
  • Drawstring Backpacks: We did these as the main gift and put other little stuff in them. A good pattern for these is easy to find.
  • Soap: Again, you can find kits at your local craft store. We put toys in the soap for the kids to look forward to getting when the soap was gone.
  • Amigurumi: Last year I crocheted this bear or something similar for all of the kids. I knew what I was doing early in the year, so I was able to pace myself to finish all of the projects (since I had 10 of them to make and I am a slow crocheter).
  • Find It Game: You can sew one or save clear pop bottles and fill them with rice and found objects. Just be sure to make a list or take a picture of what you put in the game. These are great for car trips or quiet time.

SPOILER WARNING for those family members and friends who read this: This year we are making spaghetti sauce and homemade pasta for the adults and freezer paper stenciled T-Shirts for the kids. You can check out most of the shirts on my Pinterest board. Next year we are already making plans for the adult gift, but that will be for another post (Hint: Wil Wheaton might have some advice for us).

 

Cathe Post

Cathé Post is an avid gamer raising v2.0 & v2.1 with her husband. You will likely find Cathe playing, Dungeons and Dragons, Magic the Gathering, Pokémon, Legos, crocheting, or playing Minecraft.

GeekMom 2011 Holiday Gift Guide: Etsy Gifts Part 2

Category : Clothing Design, Craft Room, Fabric Crafts, Holiday Crafts, Paper Crafts, TV, Movies, and Music

Here at GeekMom we love handmade gifts and know that there is nowhere better to shop for something unique and lovingly made than on Etsy and so we’ve rounded up some more of our favorite Etsy stores to shop at this holiday season. In fact, there are so many great Etsy shops selling cool geeky stuff that we had to split the Etsy guide in two, lest we overwhelm you with awesome. Here we continue with gift ideas for  jewelry lovers (and a little bit of everything else).

Jewelry Geeks

 

Jewellery © Spiffing Jewelry

Jewellery © Spiffing Jewelry

Most of the time I’m happy enough living with the severe metal allergies that limit what jewellery I can wear, but when I see items like this I want to weep. Spiffing Jewelry make a range of pieces including necklaces, bracelets, rings and earrings. Guys aren’t left out either with a range of tie clips, cuff links and money clips. Some pieces are NSFW but the rest include quotes from Star Wars, Disney, Game of Thrones and Harry Potter. There is also a great range that are based around latitude and longitude designs, allowing you to specify the coordinates of a special place to be engraved on your item of choice. One of my favourites has to be a pair of rings: the first engraved simply “I love you,” and the other “I know.”

Jewellery and Paper Weights © Comic Salvage

Jewellery and Paper Weights © Comic Salvage

Comic Salvage makes a range of jewelry and paper weights using old, recycled comics. Many of the pieces are single words of the type you only see in comics, for instance: “BLAM,” “BOOM,” “ZAMP!” There are also great little quote pieces using speech bubbles, such as, “To be truly free I must forgive myself,” or my current store favorite “a mother knows.” You’ll also spot lots of classic characters. The store welcomes custom orders and will source characters for you for an additional charge. (Now might be a good time to read the interview that GeekMom Sarah did with store owner Sue back in July.)

 

Jewellery © Persephone Plus

Jewellery © Persephone Plus

I stumbled across Persephone Plus during one of my periodic Etsy hunts for Haunted Mansion items. It’s my favourite ride at the Disney parks and I’ve had the great privilege to be able to ride three different versions (Florida, California and Paris)–more if you count upgrades. The ballroom scene is possibly my favourite because there’s always something new to spot, but I love the two duelling ghosts who always grab my attention. These Haunted Mansion earrings are so perfect, they make me want to get my left piercing re-opened just for them, I adore the little crossed gun charms. The rest of the shop features a range of gothic, Victorian, and horror inspired earrings and necklaces.

 

Jewellery © Casstasstrophe

Jewellery © Casstasstrophe

I love laser cut jewelry. I have a little “Deathly Hallows” symbol which I wear constantly as well as a gorgeous purple dinosaur who comes out occasionally (but not when I’m wearing low cut tops – he has a very pointy tail.) Looking around the Casstasstrophe store, I cannot decide which piece I need to buy first. There is a mixture of science symbols and geeky logos for dozens of shows and films, plus an assortment of other designs such as Little Bo Peep with her sheep. If I was pushed to decided on just one, it might be the beautiful “Winter is Coming” phrase necklace, perfect for the approaching chilly months.

And now for something completely different…

 

Cool Products for Nerdy Babies © Tiffany Ard/electric boogaloo

Cool Products for Nerdy Babies © Tiffany Ard/electric boogaloo

Nerdy baby products are cute yet educational and the prints available at Tiffany Ard’s store will surely be a talking point. I’ve been a fan of this store for well over a year and wrote about them on GeekMom back in April, I own both the alphabet and number flash cards and they certainly had my in-laws intrigued. The prints feature laws of physics, fluid dynamics and a genetic alphabet. There’s also a new coloring book with pages like “The Very Hungry Polymorhonuclear Neutophile.” What’s not to love?

Square Bottom Dice Bags © Marsbarn

Square Bottom Dice Bags © Marsbarn

Every gamer needs a great dice bag that is functional, durable, and reflects their personality. Marsbarn dice bags do just that. $12 for a standard dice bag, or you can contact her for prices on a personalized bag.
Clothes, jewellery and plushies © Vivisect Apparel

Clothes, jewellery and plushies © Vivisect Apparel

Frankly, the frustrated pulmonologist in me just thinks this “lungs” design is cool. Printed manually by the artist with waterbased and plastisol inks on super soft lightweight 100% organic cotton (tee and hoodie available.) The store also sells a range of products for any Ohians in your life.
Prints, jewellery and accessories © Monkey Minion

Prints, jewellery and accessories © Monkey Minion

Zombie greetings cards, comic book pendant necklaces, crocheted Mutant Ninja Turtle  hats, and stunningly beautiful art prints: Monkey Minion has something for almost every geek on your list. One of my favourites has to be the Starfleet Academy enlistment poster.
Knickers © Bunny Jump

Knickers © Bunny Jump

Whilst Victoria’s Secret may be the usual place to shop for lingerie this Christmas, I doubt you’ll be finding any of these great designs in there. Bunny Jump makes cute knickers featuring everything from Beatrix Potter to the Marvel Avengers to The Beatles to Star Trek. My favourite pair must be the Portal design (which comes with a detachable charm in the shape of a slice of cake)! If you can’t find the design you want in your size, the store can make any of their designs (and custom orders) in other sizes.

 

Wine Charms © Wax Nostalgic

Wine Charms © Wax Nostalgic

If you’re hosting any kind of Christmas get-together that involves serving your guests wine, wine charms are a useful little accessory. Wax Nostalgic owner Laura says that she had always found them to be useless, as “If you are responsibly enjoying a beverage, often times that dramatically decreases your chances of remembering what non-descript, random charm you’ve been assigned.” However if your charm features a famous geek character your chances are greatly increased. The charms here feature all manner of shows, films, bands and historical figures. There are also magnets available, and custom orders are welcome.

 

Cloaks and capes © Blue Moonlighting

Cloaks and capes © Blue Moonlighting

Cloaks and capes are an essential part of many costumes, from steampunk to Star Wars to Harry Potter (but NOT the Incredibles) and GeekMom Sarah Pinault is very lucky to have a mother-in-law with an Etsy shop selling them. Blue Moonlighting sells a beautiful range of cloaks in a variety of colors and fabrics, from Victorian travel cloaks to medieval and Jedi style.

Sophie's AvatarSophie Brown is a busy stay at home mother living in England with her husband, one year old son and two middle aged cats.  She is currently studying for a Bachelor's Degree in Natural Sciences and also writes the blog The Geek Arts. Sophie can frequently be found wasting time on Twitter.

 

Printable Fun – Thanksgiving Place-cards

Category : Paper Crafts, Printable Fun

Thanksgiving Place-Cards

Thanksgiving Place-Cards © Brigid Ashwood 2011

This month’s Printable Fun is Thanksgiving place-cards. If you are anything like me you’re currently running around madly trying to get a dozen different things done at once. If the kids are underfoot, this just might be the perfect project to occupy them for a while. And they’ll feel like they are helping with the holiday preparations!

Download and print the place-cards onto card stock or heavy weight paper if you have it. If not, plain printer paper will work just fine. Color the cards and have the kids write out the names of the holiday guests on each card. Cut the cards carefully, see photo for reference. Each place-card should have a plain white rectangle attached above the decorative name plate section. You’ll need that second rectangle when you fold the card in half like a tent. This will allow it to stand upright on your table.

If the kids whip through this project too soon, don’t worry. Have them add glitter to each card or re-write the names to practice their penmanship.

Have fun crafting and have a Happy Thanksgiving!

CLICK HERE to download the PDF

 

Brigid AvatarBrigid Ashwood is an artist who paints steampunk bugs, clockwork dolls, fairytales and vinyl toys. She is a geek of the art, music and food varieties.

On How I Went to a Convention, met Sarah Sidle and Spent my Next Paycheck

Category : Babies, Craft Room, Holiday Crafts, Mom Time, Paper Crafts, Photography, Technology, Toddlers

All Images: Sarah Pinault

A few weeks ago I had the chance to sit in a hall for 12 hours with like minded people, obsessing over detail and form, preoccupied with graphics and images. I tested new equipment that I now need to spend far too much money on, oh and I met Sarah Sidle. Here is my secret geek obsession, I am obsessed with Scrapbooking. I was at a “convention” known as a Crop, and Sarah Sidle just happened to be the name of a woman who won a door prize, it tickled me, probably only me!

For anyone involved in any kind of craft you know how obsessive it can get. People fight over supplies, pay top dollar for packages, scour stores for particular items – for me it’s alphabet stickers – and trade with other like minded people for just the right item. Like any hobbyist, we have our quirks, I will happily drive to three different stores because each sells the one particular brand of something that I like. JoAnn’s tends to have the good paper, Michaels has the best stickers, AC Moore has the glue dots I like. This is your mother’s comic book convention, trust me on this.

My friend Casey and I arrived half an hour late to the game, at 8.30 in the morning, it was our first time at a Crop and we were full of enthusiasm for the potential twelve hours of craft time. We both have two year old boys, so therefore have a plethora of cute pictures and not nearly enough time to organize them. Upon arrival we were blown away. The local high school cafeteria was now full of tables, 129 women and one man getting set up at individual workstations to scrap away the day. The walls were lined with benches full of Cricuts, more on that later, and the Keurig machine was going strong. The hallways were lined with vendors offering discount Crop pricing and out of stock items (including Star Wars Episode two stickers), there was even a swap table where you could leave unwanted items and take on someone else’s. There was a raffle with about a hundred  prizes, we each won one. There was an ugly page competition, where you could highlight and laugh at each other’s early, uninspired efforts. We didn’t win, our bad wasn’t bad enough. There was even a bag of goodies on the table for each of us. Chex Mix, Butterfingers and Crop specific Tote Bags. After wandering around in awe for a little while, we went back to our table to unpack and get started.

I’m a busy woman, so usually a handful of pages is all I manage in a month. I had twenty five done by the time we began cleaning up at 7.30 pm. A page in my main scrapbook, is twelve inches by twelve inches and can contain one or many photographs, I aim for at least four to a page to maximise the capacity of each album. Four photos at twenty pages an album only makes eighty pictures an album. I took about six hundred a month in the first year of Toby’s life, so it isn’t logical to stick to four a page. So far I have two, forty page albums of the first six months of his life, so I have managed to maximize my space. I know it’s still insane but I try not to judge myself too harshly.

It was an inspiring and exhausting day. I took notes from the artistry going on all around me, the different ways that one hundred and thirty like minded, but unique women, could take the same materials and create such vastly different things. It also brought me out of my shell in quite a few ways. I’m no artist, I like symmetry and order which is why I don’t tend to experiment with my scrapbooking, at the Crop however I tried out several new things, one of which included the Cricut.

Cricut by Provocraft has been around for years, and I had never wanted one. It seemed frivolous to me, much like the laptop my husband would like for his games, even though he manages perfectly well on the one he has. Then on my second day of contractions with my first son I watched an infomercial, the morphine induced coma I was coming out of at the time had nothing to do with the viewing choice, GoodFellas was next. The Cricut is an electronic die cut machine. Using changeable cartridges and keypads, you type in what you want, insert paper, and the machine then custom cuts designs and lettering for you. It was certainly an amazing machine, but I’m a lazy scrapbooker, I enjoy stickers, so the idea of having all this cardstock in need of glue just didn’t appeal to me. I even re-purposed some of my husband’s old floppy disc labels for journaling. The thing is, just as a wireless mouse can enhance your laptop experience, there are machines that can enhance your Cricut experience. That’s where the Xyron came into play. There are many machines available, I just happened to use a Xyron that day. You cut whatever you need on the Cricut, or by hand if you are that way inclined, then you crank the pieces through your Xyron and have instant sticker. To say I was amazed would be a gross understatement.

I have a toddler, a baby on the way and a full time job outside the home. I also like to read a book, write for GeekMom and crochet on occasion. Anything that saves both time and hassle, is something I’m interested in. To make my Scrapbooking easier, to finally get caught up on Toby’s baby years would be wonderful. By combining these two innovative machines, I would no longer have to wade through my two hundred sheets of alphabet stickers looking for a set that has the right lettering for the phrase I need. Now I just type, cut, and crank it out. It’s the next generation of artistic label making and I am hooked. So hooked in fact, that I have been scouring the internet since then for any signs of upcoming Cricut sales on Black Friday. FYI, I shall be at Michael’s at 4.55 on November 25th, cash in hand.

People wore scrapbooking T-shirts and comfy pants, had trash cans that clipped onto tables and were already talking about what they planned on doing at their next crop. Every single person at the crop, has an obsession with this craft to one degree or another. But whether you are new, and have a small tote full of supplies, or an old hand with a basket load, you are welcome here. Young and old, male or female, newb or master. I had quite forgotten how welcoming conventions, of any kind, could be.

 

Sarah Pinault is married to her husband but not her job, has a baby that insists on being a toddler, and keeps one foot in the British time zone despite having lived in Maine for 8 years now. She blogs about the meaning of life over at mainemummy.blogspot.com and has been a self-professed geek for well over 20 years.

Get Geeky for Thanksgiving

Category : Craft Room, Fabric Crafts, Holiday, Holiday Crafts, Paper Crafts, TV, Movies, and Music

Okay, so I am a bit of a holiday geek. I tend to go overboard at this time of year, admittedly less so since having kids. I’m sure once they start participating more and destroying less, it will pick up again. So I thought I’d share some of my favorite holiday crafts to get you in the mood for Turkey Day next week. These are all things that can be done quickly, depending on your starting craft proficiency.

  1. The major craft I love to do at Thanksgiving is make turkeys. That’s right, I make them. Having discovered Amigurumi back in 2006, I soon realized I could use this new obsession to enhance my others. Thus emerged the year of Amigurumi turkeys. The best pattern I have found is free on a Vegan blog. Bittersweet’s pattern is simple, easy to follow and produces wonderful turkeys. I can knock one of these bad boys off in just a few hours. I made almost twenty in that first year. Toby has loved watching them come together this year, and loves playing with them. They are regular features now at our Thanksgiving table.
  2. Of course there are many other ways of crafting your place setting. This year I am loving turkeys made out of discarded books over at Lisa Storms’ blog. Though I do still struggle with the idea of desecrating a book, I do have a copy of It’s The Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown that is falling to pieces, it would make a lovely paper turkey.
  3. Decorations are not limited to the table of course, and this year I have big plans to adapt a favorite crochet rose pattern into a Thanksgiving pin. I’m thinking a deep rust yarn would be perfect additions to the family’s obsession. Whilst I have a cornucopia of Christmas themed accessories, thus far my Thanksgiving offerings have been slim. A leafy necklace and earring set from Danforth Pewter in Vermont, just about sums it up. I need to add to the Thanksgiving collection.
  4. Image: Nest of Posies

    Of course if you are not crochet-capable there are plenty of sewing crafts to tackle this weekend. One of my current favorites are the velvet pumpkins over at Nest of Posies. Her instructions are easy to follow and while you’re there, check out Fall Festival, a September project put together by Kellie to bring fall-themed crafts and obsessions all to one place. I also love her pumpkin themed staircase. Scroll down to the end for the Thanksgiving take on her Halloween decor.

  5. It would be remiss of me not to encourage kitchen crafts since most of Thanksgiving revolves around food. This year I shall be enjoying my famous pumpkin soup, a recipe that dies with me, Pilgrim Hat Cupcakes and as much green bean casserole as I can humanly consume. Try the leftovers as a dip with Tostito’s, you won’t regret it.
  6. And what’s a holiday without games? Get yourself a large picture of a Rancor, make Pilgrim hats out of construction paper, grab that blindfold and you are all set up for a Pinault family favorite: Pin the hat on the “turkey”. Make sure to spin each contestant before setting them off.

Go ahead and join my obsession this year and bring a little geek to your Thanksgiving celebrations:

Sarah Pinault is married to her husband but not her job, has a baby that insists on being a toddler, and keeps one foot in the British time zone despite having lived in Maine for 8 years now. She blogs about the meaning of life over at mainemummy.blogspot.com and has been a self-professed geek for well over 20 years.

Lego’s Life of George Really Delivers

Category : Craft Room, Elementary, Family Room, Kids' Room, Paper Crafts, Teens, Toys, Tweens

David Landis, maker of Desktop Gremlins which are very fun and free paper crafts, has posted a fantastic, thorough, and entertaining review of the new Lego app/toy/game, Life of George. To play, you need both the app on an iDevice with camera capabilities and the Life of George kit. Here is David’s video tour of the game:

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For a complete text review as well, and to check out David’s fantastic paper crafts, check out the Desktop Gremlins website. He includes several very useful tips for using the game, so if you’re considering purchasing it for yourself or a loved one this holiday season, do check it out.

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Jenny AvatarJenny Williams homeschools her two kids when she's not writing for blogs, and is a lifelong, multi-faceted geek.