Vintage Ladybird Brownie Guides Book
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I'm pretty contented with being born in 1980 & being an eighties' kid with the best cartoons and toys, but every so often something makes me wish I was born in the 2000s.
My visit to Jumping Clay today was one of those moments when I found myself jealous of my five year old, and wishing it was something that had been around when I was little. www.JumpingClay.co.uk
Jumping Clay is a unique workshop & hobby course venue, with academies through out Northern Ireland. There are two venues in England, one in Galway & one in Glasgow, for my readers further afield.
As well as one off visit workshops, they offer parties where children can all make & take home a creation. There is also a weekly class where kids can advance their modelling techniques and learn about the world around them through play.
Jumping Clay also goes on the road, holding classes at Children's Hospices & workshops with the elderly. The creative process is so simple, but truly relaxing & therapeutic. We visited the bright, fresh & clean Belfast Jumping Clay, very aptly located right opposite the Ulster Museum, as who knows where encouraging your child with sculpting could end up!
Caroline showed us around, the shop where you can buy take home kits, or ready made models as gifts. Upstairs is the workshop room where parties are also held, with room for party food & cake too.
My five year old son perused the dozens of model ideas, and picked a penguin to make himself.
Nicola was his guide to his first ever Jumping Clay session. I say first as we've already had to promise we will be back, he's a big fan!
For his first time, he was pretty good. He made the penguin totally himself, under the expert guidance of Nicola who is one of the specially trained instructors. The clay itself isn't like any other modelling putty I've come across, it's different to Playdough & Plastercine, it's more springy and light. It's not messy either, and smells like jasmine. It doesn't need fired, it simply dries out overnight and becomes a lightweight, sturdy model.
We are already planning a return visit, and my son has started teaching Dad how to make a penguin, now he's the expert!
Plan your own visit at
I also picked up this kraken print hip flask for a birthday present, from Etsy.
And this plush Face Hugger. Of course.
It's handy that you all know I'm a weirdo already, because I'm about to confide in you a childhood desire that definitely wasn't normal.
When I was about seven, eight and upwards, I was drawn to the white goods section of the Argos catalogue, to the teasmades. I didn't drink a tremendous amount of tea as a preteen or anything, but I was fascinated by the clock, kettle, often picture frame, mash-up gadget and the idea of having one in my own bedroom came with very grown-up aspirations. My parents, being good, non-boiling-water-giving-to-child parents, never ticked the Swan Teasmade off my Santa list, but it's one product that's always tickled my fancy to this day.
Now Teasmades are seen as vintage, and one of their original manufacturers, Swan, know that there are Nesspressos & fancy podded coffee do-dahs out there, but there are folks like me who still want a part alarm clock, part kettle gadget. So they brought back the Teasmade in 2009 after an absence of a number of years, to great success. There are a number of models available though www.JohnLewis.com and www.Swan-Brand.co.uk fulfilled my lifetime dream of Teasmade ownership and sent me their crisp white model.
It's my very own non-weaponised Transformer- half alarm clock, half tea pot. Brew-a-tron!
Let me get this straight. I am not a healthy eater. I'm a KFC & bag of Galaxy Counters girl. The idea of 'raw food' makes me think of carrots & nuts & misery & despair.
I do get a weekly Graze box, but I've even tweaked the snack choice algorithm there in order to ensure 3 out of the 4 punnets include chocolate. Yeah, that's right.
Anyway, www.TheNutribox.com Team offered to send me a trial of their monthly subscription, healthy eating goodie box, and while raisins & dried slivers of apple don't do it for me USUALLY, I'm also not one to turn down free food.
I opened the box to strangely appealing looking bars & bags. Alien looking to my chocolate aisle lusting eyes, but tempting none the less. Also ACTUAL CHOCOLATE, which obviously was my first stop. The Coconut Om Bar was amazing. Didn't taste like a health food at all, in fact I'm going to go out of my way to find Om Bars in my local health food shop.
The apple crisps are under 70 calories a bag and taste tangy & delicious. There was a brownie! A health food brownie! I'm sold, Nutribox. Would you like to try a box of treats out yourself? Claim a huge 35% off with the code KITSCH35 at www.TheNutribox.com
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As heard on BBC Radio 6's Lauren Laverne Show.