You will always be your child’s favorite toy. — Vicki Lansky, Trouble-Free Travel with Children, 1991

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Wrap-N-Mat

NeatoGroovy.com Wrap-N-Mat

NeatoGroovy brings us our product review this month!Stephanie sent me a WRAP-N-MAT and I’ve been sending it to school with my son. He loves it! I love it! I’ll tell you why in a minute.

WRAP-N-MAT - Saving the planet one sandwich at a time!
Have a clean eating surface anywhere! Place the sandwich or other snack food in the center of the mat and fold left to right, top to bottom and close the loop and hook fastener. It really is that easy! WRAP-N-MAT keeps food fresh for hours. When needed, place a cold pack along side of the mat.

I’ve put PB&J in here, apple slices, chips, grapes, pretty much anything that can be contained in it without spilling out (which is darn near anything). Made of a thin bit of plastic and cloth, it’s easy to clean and easy to dry.

While I wouldn’t send one to school with my younger children, myolder seems about the right age to remember to bring it home and not toss it in the garbage. I love saving at least a bag a day (sometimes more!) and it makes my son feel better by having an extra bit of responsibility.

Don’t have a kid to use it for school? Use it for work! Wrap up your sandwish, your afternoon snack, your morning scone, anything!

NeatoGroovy recommends hand washing in warm water and air dry. I just give it a rinse in the kitchen sink and dry it on the counter. It’s that easy. WRAP-N-MAT may also be machine washer and dried on low heat, but I didn’t try that. I don’t trust my dryer quite that much.

If you order from NeatoGroovy soon, you get a free reusable beverage bottle too! WRAP-N-MAT comes in an EcoPrint or a Skulls print.

Popularity: 14% [?]

Creating a Kitchen

Play Kitchen - After Renovation Angie is a work at home Punkymom in Orlando Florida, with the same ideas as the rest of us. Why spend a fortune on crap for our kids that we hate? Play kitchens are usually made from plastic and never match the décor of our punk rock homes! Just as soon as Angie’s, 2 year old little girl, Sofie, took a liking towards cooking, Angie decided an investment in a play kitchen was necessary. Investment? Yes, unfortunately toys like this are, and as parents we become unwilling consumers at times. Angie put a halt to this idea, as she had an old entertainment center cabinet that she really wanted to just throw away. Seeing that Sofie was a young chef in the makings, Angie and her husband decided they would turn the old cabinet into the perfect gourmet kitchen for Chef Sofie! They wound up saving a lot of money, not throwing junk into a landfill and making Chef Sofie the happiest little thing in the whole world, as it was custom designed just for her!

Play Kitchen - Before RenovationYou need not an old entertainment cabinet to do this project. You can construct this from an old bookshelf, vanity or just about anything…its up to your style, imagination and a few simple tools and accessories!

This project took Angie and her husband about 8 hours total. Here is her tutorial….

First we took off the two cabinet doors, removed the hardware, and covered them in silver contact paper ($10, Home Depot - one roll should be enough) to give it a stainless steel look. Then we moved the handle on one of the doors to open from the top (instead of the side) so it was more like an oven. Most entertainment centers have magnets on those doors, so you should not have an issue keeping the door closed. We used all the original hardware, so this was free.

Next, we cut a hole where the TV originally sat and placed a silver mixing bowl (free from our kitchen) to use as a sink. We bought a real faucet ($7, Home Depot) to install behind it. Ideally you would have a jig saw to cut a hole for the sink, but we actually used a drill to cut out the hole since we didn’t have a jig saw. We measured just below the rim of the bowl, cut a hole, and placed the bowl in the hole - we didn’t need glue or anything. Same thing for the faucet - measure, cut, and screw into place.

For the stove, we removed the glass door and covered the bottom part in the same silver contact paper. For the burners, we spray-painted plastic lids (sour cream lids for the small burners and large, Sam’s size cottage cheese lids for the large burners) with a high-gloss black spraypaint. We screwed a at-head screw through the middle to screw it into the wood. The knobs were given to us for free by a friend who was trashing her stove. If you can’t find a stove that is being trashed, you can buy the knobs at Home Depot for $15. We used a large bolt and washers to attach the knobs in place so they could still turn. We added the oven knob directly to the oven door using a bolt and washers.

For the back, we bought two pieces of heavy cardboard from Home Depot ($5) and covered one with floral contact paper ($3, KMart). We attached it to the back of the entertainment center using screws and lots of nails. If your entertainment center still has a backing, you can use that instead (ours was totally trashed). To give the appearance of a real backsplash, we raised the bottom piece a few inches and hung it in front of the top, wall-papered piece. We painted the portion that would hang above the stove black to match

the rest of the stove. If I were to do it again (and I had a truck), I’d probably just buy one larger piece to hang. Working with two pieces was a major pain. You can buy a really big piece of the pressed board for $8 and have it cut at Home Depot and then contact paper the whole thing.

The long beam that runs the width of our entertainment center was totally chipped, so we also covered that in silver contact paper. For decorations, I bought push lights ($4, Home Depot - not yet hung as they need batteries) to hang above the sink and stove, a kitchen mat that matches the backsplash ($0.60, KMart), and two metal baskets to hold all of her dishes and utensils ($10, KMart). Total cost for materials and accessories - $40.

Popularity: 21% [?]

Pimp Tha Kiddo Ride!

kiddo ride beforeLet’s face it, unless you are a Winnie the Pooh or Disney enthusiast, you are pretty much screwed once you have a kid, as far as acquiring anything for your child to match your punk rock lifestyle.

Welcome to your newly decorated home, soon to be littered with all the non-recyclable, neon red and blue plastic crap to keep your baby happy as a little clam! As new punky parents we are forced into a different kind of consumers world, one which makes us believe we must purchase a multitude of brand new “eyesores” in order to make our children happy.

Not so, according to Winter Rosebudd. With a trashed hand-me-down Little Tykes car, a glue gun, some paint and scrap materials, she was able to save money, help the environment (by recycling an old car), and wind up with a really cute toy that matched her families home and lifestyle! Not to mention her 2 year old had a blast helping her re-design it, making it that much more special.

Materials needed…

  • One old and trashed kiddie car
  • Spray paint (preferably one that adheres to plastic, such as Krylon Fusion)
  • Fabric and trims. Here’s where you get creepy and crafty! The skies the limit! Don’t forget to hit the auto parts store for all kinds of stick on mirrors and reflectors.
  • Hot glue gun, glue sticks, scissors.
  • Possibly a needle and thread, or a sewing machine if you want to make curtains.
  • One energetic toddler, to chat and climb all over you, while you are working. Just keep the glue gun and scissors out of reach. Yeah.

Start by cleaning the car really well. In a well vented area, spray paint the entire car, the desired color. If doing 2 colors, then mask off your areas. I suggest doing 2 coats of paint and let it dry completely.

After car is dry, start working with your fabrics and trims. If you are putting fabric on the top of the car, like the leopard one, lay a big piece of fabric over the top and mark four corners, so you can cut out a cool shape. Glue the shape on top, then cover the edges with a trim, such as a 1/2″ flat braid…just glue it down all around the edge. Same goes for the doors and seats.

Now add your accessories. You can buy small domed mirrors for the hubcaps and headlights…they work great! Don’t forget the fuzzy dice and air fresheners!


Ideas for Jr. Addams


ideas for the Monster Truck lover in us all

Popularity: 19% [?]

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