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Downton Abbey Paper Dolls

Category : Craft Room, Family Room, Printable Fun, TV, Movies, and Music

 

Season two is over and you’re pining for a little Downton Abbey action, right? Worry not, GeekMoms! If you’ve already dished about the latest Downton Abbey episode here on GeekMom and you’ve followed our Downton Abbey pin board, you can get your fix with these Downton Abbey paper dolls. Paper dolls. Take a minute to appreciate the Dowager Countess’s facial expressions. Or the fact that yes, a dead Mr. Pamuk is part of the package.

Image: screenshot of Vulture.com

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.

Printable Fun – February 2012 – Valentine Pop-Up

Category : Printable Fun

© Brigid Ashwood 2012

© Brigid Ashwood 2012

 

This months Printable Fun is a customizable Geeky Pop-Up Valentine card. Download the PDF, print out the sheets on card stock and make as many as you like. Instructions can be found on the last page of the PDF.

© Brigid Ashwood 2012

© Brigid Ashwood 2012

The cool thing about this Pop-Up is that the heart face comes with accessories. So you get to customize the look of the heart face however you wish! This version is in black and white. If you are lazy (Like me!) you can download the color Pop-Up card at my blog HERE.

Don’t forget last years Printable Fun – 4 geeky valentine cards. Available HERE.

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.

Printable Fun January – Mr. Cephalopod

Category : Printable Fun

© Brigid Ashwood 2012  Gentleman Cephalopod

© Brigid Ashwood 2012 Gentleman Cephalopod

This month’s printable fun is a gentlemanly cephalopod coloring page. Why did I choose this theme? Well it’s been a busy month for me, so I missed the obvious themes such as New Year’s Day and Martin Luther King day.

I know, I’m sorry. But hey, it worked out in the end I think. What with Steampunk and Downton Abbey being so popular right now, I figured it was about time to add a dapper octopod to the mix!

So please enjoy coloring Mr. January Cephalopod (no really, that’s his name), feel free to add accessories to occupy his busy arms. Maybe he’s a card player, or a mechanic, or an artist even! Certainly he’ll need your help finding an occupation. Octopation?

Okay now it’s just getting silly. Off you go! Download, print, color and don’t forget to share your pics with us!

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.

Printable Fun December – Geeky Gift Tags

Category : Printable Fun, Uncategorized

Geeky Gift Tags © Brigid Ashwood 2011

Geeky Gift Tags © Brigid Ashwood 2011

Geeky Gift Tags © Brigid Ashwood 2011

Geeky Gift Tags © Brigid Ashwood 2011

This month’s Printable Fun is Geeky Gift tags!

Whatever holiday you celebrate these are sure to be the perfect craft for your geeky little helper.

Zombie Caroler, Imperial Snowman, Geektastic Reindeer and enthusiastic gift giving Robot are ready for you to download, print, color and assemble.

Color and decorate the tags and cut them out. Fold each tag in half so that the TO and FROM are on the backside. Secure the two sides with a bit of double stick tape. Punch a hole in the white circle, tie on your ribbon and you are ready to attach these gift tags to your gifts.

Geeky Gift Tags © Brigid Ashwood 2011

Geeky Gift Tags © Brigid Ashwood 2011

 

 

Click HERE to download the PDF file.

P.S. These also make cute ornaments

P.P.S I love that the geeky reindeer came out looking a bit like Art Instruction Schools Tippy the Turtle. Sweet.

P.P.P.S. Don’t forget to check out last years December Printable Fun which was a super awesome Nutcracker paper doll ornament.

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.

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.

Printable Fun – Halloween Maze

Category : Paper Crafts, Printable Fun

© Brigid Ashwood 2011

© Brigid Ashwood 2011

This month’s printable fun is a scary Jack-O-Lantern Maze in honor of Halloween. Click the picture to download the pdf file, print, solve the maze and color your pumpkin. Happy Halloween!

CLICK HERE to download.

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.

Education Week: Printable Fun

Category : Paper Crafts, Printable Fun

My Daughter's rather optimistic afternoon schedule. I don't see homework on there anywhere.

This month’s Printable Fun coloring page was inspired by a suggestion from my daughter. She’s really into all things geeky right now, and bunnies are a perpetual favorite. This morning she asked me to draw her a geek bunny to color, and this was the result.

To make the whole thing a little more “useful” I’ve added a Back to School theme. If you have trouble getting your kids to stick to a morning or afternoon routine, then I hope this coloring page is of some assistance. My suggestion is to have your child write down the daily required tasks on the list to the right, then let them color the bunny.

Tape him to the wall and Geeky Bunny can oversee their daily routine, and hopefully inspire some fun!

CLICK HERE to download.

 

 

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.

Printable Fun – The 4th of July!

Category : Craft Room, Printable Fun

Printable Coloriing Page

Printable Coloring Page

This July 4th is the last one we’ll spend in our current house. Our family is moving to another state this summer, due to a job change (my husband’s), and in search of a more affordable lifestyle. (We currently live in one of THE most expensive zones in the country!)

While we are excited to move and start our new adventures, this July 4th is a little bittersweet. You see our house is 250 years old, pre-Revolutionary war, and every Independence Day I’m acutely aware of this fact. I think of all the families that lived here before us, of the people that helped build the town that we live in, and who fought in the Revolutionary and Civil Wars.

I am so appreciative of their efforts, of the sacrifices they made that I might have the opportunity to live in a free country. I look at my daughter and think I don’t know what I would do as a mother if I lived in a situation where she was considered second-class, and did not enjoy the same rights over her body, and her happiness, that she does in this country.

This month’s coloring page is in celebration of this great American Holiday.

Happy 4th of July!

CLICK HERE to download and print the coloring page.

P.S. If you color this page, feel free to take a picture and share it with us on the GeekMom Flickr pool!

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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.

Printable Fun for Easter: Plus, the Link Between Eggs and Rabbits, Revealed!

Category : Paper Crafts, Printable Fun

Bunnies and Eggs! © Brigid Ashwood 2011

Bunnies and Eggs! © Brigid Ashwood 2011 (click to download)

“What the heck is it with Easter? I mean bunnies and eggs? What’s one got to do with the other?” Easter perplexes the heck out of my daughter. She loves the candy and the decorating of eggs of course, but she’s long been incredulous at the array of seemingly unconnected symbolism that is so associated with this spring holiday.

This year we decided to buckle down and do a little research. What we found was pretty interesting. Of course there is the usual history of Easter Egg decorating, the finest examples of course being the Pysanky designs of Ukrainian tradition. Who doesn’t love a good Pysanky egg? Wikipedia will tell you all about the pagan origins of Easter, and the tradition of eggs and bunnies as ultimate symbols of fertility. Still we’d found this information in the past. What we really wanted was a good solid link between bunnies and eggs.

Finally we found it! Well sort of. One theory oft repeated on various Easter history sites is that in the “olden times” people tended to confuse the ground nests of birds called plovers, with the forms (another word for nest) of hares. Occasionally an olden timer would come across one of these nests in the spring and confuse it with a hare nest, subsequently determining that hares must lay eggs in the spring. At least that’s the story the internet tells. I tend to think we don’t give folks enough credit, and probably this whole idea was just part of the overall Easter story grownups told to kids for amusement. Regardless in all the old stories the Easter rodent is always a hare, not a rabbit. Hares and rabbits are different animals, albeit related. Bunnies in particular are young rabbits, not hares. So in fact all this hullabaloo about the Easter Bunny is just kind of totally wrong. At least according to the internet.

But really who cares? Easter is fun. Bunnies, candy, decorating eggs? Sign me up.

This months coloring page is a bunny (not a hare), surrounded by an assortment of pysanky eggs.

Happy coloring! And Happy Spring!

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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.

Printable Fun – Shamrocks

Category : Holiday, Paper Crafts, Printable Fun

Shamrock Celtic Knot

©Brigid Ashwood 2011 Shamrock Celtic Knot

Shamrocks have always been my favorite St. Patrick’s Day symbol. For the most part, shamrock imagery remains iconic, and has largely avoided the often offensive and stereotypical commercialization of Irish culture, that has long plagued the Leprechaun.

For many Irish Catholics the shamrock is synonymous with the concept of the Holy Trinity. Legend tells that St. Patrick used the “three leaves on one stem” of the shamrock to explain the concept of the Holy Trinity to the Pagan Irish Druids.

Personally, as a modern day Pagan and student of Celtic Lore and spirituality, I’ve always found this legend a little humorous. The ancient Celts were no stranger to the concept of “three in one” before St. Patrick’s appearance on the scene. Indeed the number three has long been a key symbol of Celtic spirituality, with the Celts revering the earthly elements, deities and other sacred concepts in triads as an inherent part of their culture.

Prized for its healing and mystical properties the shamrock was well known, and deeply treasured by the Druids for the very same triadic properties that St. Patrick demonstrated in his lesson of Christian doctrine. With its lush green color and consistent three leaved charm shamrocks enjoyed sacred status among the Druids, and was symbolic of the Spring Equinox, which not coincidentally happens at about the same time as the modern feast of St. Patrick’s Day.

In the 19th century the “Wearing of the Green” became a popular form of visible protest against the English government and a symbol of Irish rebellion. Today this phrase is interpreted to mean the wearing of anything green, particularly on St. Patrick’s Day. Offenders who forget to wear green on St. Patrick’s Day run the risk of getting pinched. Originally “wearing of the green” was very specific, and indeed referred to the wearing of the shamrock as a symbol of Irish independence and pride.

Today St. Patrick’s Day still has nationalist, cultural, spiritual and of course fun-loving relevance to many people. Consistent across all interpretations of the holiday is the shamrock. Ever green, ever free, ever three, ever Irish.
In honor of the Shamrock – March’s Printable Fun is a coloring page, and a sheet of Shamrock buttons for “Wearing of the Green!”

Buttons - Click to download

Buttons - Click to download

Coloring Page - Click to download

Coloring Page - Click to download

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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.