Remember, tonight is the Quilted Cow's Party in Your PJs Facebook Live Party. Fun fabrics and patterns for sale - including my most popular vaccine card holder pattern - and giveaways as well!
Get registered and be ready at 7 PM CST (6PM for those of us in Idaho). I don't have Facebook or I'd share it properly, but you can find them right here: www.facebook.com/thequiltedcowmo
For today's Tutorial Tuesday we are making a decorative pocket tissue holder with a pocket for your hand sanitizer and lip balm. A quick and easy three in one sewing project!
Disclosure: Deb's Days is a participant in affiliate advertising programs designed to provide a means for me to earn fees by linking to affiliated sites. This means that, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. Your purchase helps support my work in bringing you new sewing and crafting content.
Looking for more quick and easy projects? Check out these ideas!
Otherwise, you can just watch the tutorial to make these homemade fabric pocket tissue holders with a pocket for your hand sanitizer and lip balm right here:
Despite the week being full of the words like continued isolation (kitties) and quarantine (me) and of new eye infections (kitties) and hospitalizations and in-home antibody infusions (inner family circle), we made it through. Made it through and then some.
For this week was the one bottle baby foster parents dream of. The week the 'round the clock every-two-hour feedings seemed so far long ago. Yep, the kitties are growing up. And are WEANED. No more bottle babies here!
While they are self sufficient in the litter box and with eating off the plate, they are not so self sufficient in eating neatly. Or in cleaning up after themselves.
What's the best way to eat off a plate? Curled up in the middle, of course.
Naptime, perhaps?
Does someone need their face wiped?
Yes, please.
Someone need help washing their hands paws?
Most definitely!
A messy week for all of us in so many ways, but the cuteness factor the kitties brought to the table made it a good one.
It was almost three years ago when I made the 10 Reasons You Should Foster a Cat video.
At that point in my foster-parent-to-kittens life things were relatively easy going. But these last few years have taught me that fostering is full of ups but is also full of just as many downs. While it's fun and exciting to play with cute little kitties all day, it's also work. And this bunch of babies are work.
I left off last week's post with some new terminology - foster home biosecurity. With Dewey having come down with ringworm, foster home biosecurity had to kick into high gear. Anything and everything now is about treatment and a decontaminated environment. Which really means kitties being isolated in the bathroom. Gloves. Multiple changes of my clothes day and night. Constant laundry. Pill popping. (For the kitties, not me.) And bleach. Lots of bleach. We need to cure the kitties, keep them from getting reinfected, and keep the adults from catching it and the only way to do it takes work. Making sure there is no cross-contamination while feeding bottle baby kittens day and night is hard.
How serious and contagious is this ringworm business? While the kitties will be just fine in the long run, they will have to remain in the bathroom the whole time they are here and I won't be able to have any more kitties coming in the house until a month after these kiddos are gone and a subsequent deep cleaning of my home happens.
Despite the work and exhaustion (did I mention fostering ringworm kittens is hard?) we had so many exciting things happening with them this week. I have to keep my phone out of the isolation room but I made an exception for one day so I could grab some photos. I had to thoroughly disinfect the phone afterwards but it was worth it.
Litter box users? YES!
They always use the litter box at the exact same time!
Climbers and jumpers? YES! They almost can get out of the tub on their own.
Paws over the side. He's oh-so-close!
Kitties who are excited to tell us how proud they are about weaning off their milk and are happy to show off their gruel eating faces? YES! (Gruel is how we transition them to more solid foods and is a mixture of kitty formula, canned baby food, and canned cat food.)
Huey is ready for his closeup.
Dewey wants you to know the harder you chew, the more that comes out. And he wants you to see his baby teeth.
Louie wants you to know a gruel face, a pink nose, and baby blue eyes are a great color combination.
With these kinds of pictures the ups outweigh the downs, don't ya think?
For this week's Tutorial Tuesday we are making a project so many of you are asking for - a passport cover and vaccination card holder all in one. You'll find a pocket for your passport and a clear vinyl see-through pocket to keep your vaccine card safe. For those who are ready to travel, this easy sew project is for you. If you're not quite ready to travel yet, make it anyway and stick in your safe until the time is right!
Teflon sewing machine foot or painter’s tapeTip: If you don’t have a Teflon sewing machine foot, place painter’s tape on bottom of the foot so the vinyl feeds through easier.
Disclosure: Deb's Days is a participant in affiliate advertising programs designed to provide a means for me to earn fees by linking to affiliated sites. This means that, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a small commission if you click through and make a purchase. Your purchase helps support my work in bringing you new sewing and crafting content.
Looking for more travel accessories? Check out these other projects!