Two years ago I had bought some cute sandals that I really liked. My husband and I thought it would be fun to take our daughter on a walk so I slipped on my sandals, and of course, just as we left our place, I tripped and scuffed my sandals pretty bad. It was pretty lame! Anyways, I kept my sandals because I liked them so much but I could never wear them because of how scuffed they were. However, with all the hype about washi tape these days, I decided to see whether I could try using some washi tape on my sandals. So I kept my eye out for some good deals.
After looking for washi tape that I thought would match my sandals well, I thought, plain old black would look the best....and decided to go with black duct tape! I got really excited and didn't take a picture of what the sandal looked like before the duct tape, but you can tell how badly the sandal was scuffed in this picture. I like how the black looks with the pink.
I applied duct tape on the sandal and then used a scissor to trim down the edges.
However to get a good clean edge, I used sand paper to sand down the edges of the duct tape.
I really like how they turned out and I don't think it looks like I duct taped my sandals.....but maybe I'm in denial...
I didn't know how well the duct tape was going to hold up, but my family and I just went on a trip to San Diego and my mom and I both wore the sandals for a good amount of time and they held up great.
So if you have any sandals that you have scuffed and you don't want to get rid of them, try some duct tape!
Sunday, April 20, 2014
DIY Sandal Fix
Sunday, April 6, 2014
Balloon Rockets and Mentos and Diet Coke Rockets
Hi again! I'm supposed to teach a rocket science class tomorrow and although I've taught some similar material, I haven't actually taught a rocket science class so I'm a little nervous. Also every time I teach a science class, I'm always hoping that there are just as many girls as there are boys. Often times, I'm a female teacher teaching to a room full of little boys and I wonder where all the girls are. Don't get me wrong, the boys are incredibly intelligent and fun to teach, I just would like to see something closer to a 50:50 ratio of boys to girls.
Maybe the girls feel like it's just going to be a roomful of boys and they'd rather hang out with their friends doing something else. I think that's how I felt when I was younger, I didn't want to be hanging out with a bunch of boys taking extracurricular science classes because you always had to work in groups and none of the boys wanted me in their group since they were all friends with each other. Jokes on them though... I don't know how, it just is.
Anywho, I have some interesting things I thought I would try with my first class. I will be trying to have the kids make a sort of rocket every class. I thought we would start of easy first, with a balloon rocket. This is pretty simple, take a piece of string (kite string or fishing string would work well) and have it go through a straw. Tie both sides of a string two stable pieces of furniture. Blow up a balloon and attach it to the piece of straw by tape. Release the balloon and watch it go! I know this sounds pretty elementary but it's eye opening when you start teaching Newton's three laws of motion.
I was also going to have the kiddos experiment with different things like; 1) does the shape of the balloon (airship vs. round) affect how fast or how far the balloon travels 2) does the length of straw affect things 3) does the type of string affect how fast or far the balloon goes (this is where we can start to talk about friction and how it comes into play with newton's first law of motion).
The next experiment I was thinking of doing was the classic diet coke and mentos experiment. This is where you drop a bunch of mentos into a huge thing of diet coke and watch the diet coke explode. This is all due to nucleation! Mint mentos works best since it has the rough surface creating all those nice tiny crevices. Since mentos are more dense than the liquid they are being dropped in, they sink to the bottom, thus reacting with the CO2 all the way at the bottom of the bottle. The CO2 gas is just looking for any escape out of that bottle and upon realizing that the mentos has all these tiny crevices it can escape into,they all race to get into the crevices, but there is not enough crevices and the CO2 gas molecules that didn't find a nice crevice become enraged and erupt out of the bottle. Okay, not exactly, molecules don't have feelings but you get the point right? So....I was going to have the students make their own diet coke and mentos rockets by doing the following.
1. Tape a string of mentos together and then tape a piece of string onto the already taped together mentos.
2. Tape a narrow tube around the cap of the diet coke bottle, something that is smaller than the paper towel roll (see number 3).
3. I was then going to have the kids make a rocket by using a cardboard paper towel roll. The top of the paper tower roll would be duct taped closed and then a small hole can be poked through the hole where string from the taped mentos can be fed through. They can cut out fins for stability and also make a coned top to make their rockets more aerodynamic. The string that is attached to the mentos would also be fed through the coned top.
4. When the students are ready to try their rockets, we would go outside and avoid parked cars, windows, and people for that matter. We would then open the cap of the diet coke. Place your rocket on the bottle, and slowly feed the mentos into diet coke bottle and let the mentos sink to the bottom of the bottle.
4. Then we stand back and see what happens!!
Well I'm excited to teach my class tomorrow, hopefully they like what I have planned and some of the rockets actually fly, it's pretty disappointing when stuff doesn't work, but alas, that's how science goes. I remember in graduate school, it was often times by accident when you discovered how to make certain things work, then if you could replicate it a bunch of times, you just pretended that you intended to make that "mistake." Anywho, I hope these experiments work for you guys! Cheers!
Maybe the girls feel like it's just going to be a roomful of boys and they'd rather hang out with their friends doing something else. I think that's how I felt when I was younger, I didn't want to be hanging out with a bunch of boys taking extracurricular science classes because you always had to work in groups and none of the boys wanted me in their group since they were all friends with each other. Jokes on them though... I don't know how, it just is.
Anywho, I have some interesting things I thought I would try with my first class. I will be trying to have the kids make a sort of rocket every class. I thought we would start of easy first, with a balloon rocket. This is pretty simple, take a piece of string (kite string or fishing string would work well) and have it go through a straw. Tie both sides of a string two stable pieces of furniture. Blow up a balloon and attach it to the piece of straw by tape. Release the balloon and watch it go! I know this sounds pretty elementary but it's eye opening when you start teaching Newton's three laws of motion.
I was also going to have the kiddos experiment with different things like; 1) does the shape of the balloon (airship vs. round) affect how fast or how far the balloon travels 2) does the length of straw affect things 3) does the type of string affect how fast or far the balloon goes (this is where we can start to talk about friction and how it comes into play with newton's first law of motion).
The next experiment I was thinking of doing was the classic diet coke and mentos experiment. This is where you drop a bunch of mentos into a huge thing of diet coke and watch the diet coke explode. This is all due to nucleation! Mint mentos works best since it has the rough surface creating all those nice tiny crevices. Since mentos are more dense than the liquid they are being dropped in, they sink to the bottom, thus reacting with the CO2 all the way at the bottom of the bottle. The CO2 gas is just looking for any escape out of that bottle and upon realizing that the mentos has all these tiny crevices it can escape into,they all race to get into the crevices, but there is not enough crevices and the CO2 gas molecules that didn't find a nice crevice become enraged and erupt out of the bottle. Okay, not exactly, molecules don't have feelings but you get the point right? So....I was going to have the students make their own diet coke and mentos rockets by doing the following.
1. Tape a string of mentos together and then tape a piece of string onto the already taped together mentos.
2. Tape a narrow tube around the cap of the diet coke bottle, something that is smaller than the paper towel roll (see number 3).
3. I was then going to have the kids make a rocket by using a cardboard paper towel roll. The top of the paper tower roll would be duct taped closed and then a small hole can be poked through the hole where string from the taped mentos can be fed through. They can cut out fins for stability and also make a coned top to make their rockets more aerodynamic. The string that is attached to the mentos would also be fed through the coned top.
4. When the students are ready to try their rockets, we would go outside and avoid parked cars, windows, and people for that matter. We would then open the cap of the diet coke. Place your rocket on the bottle, and slowly feed the mentos into diet coke bottle and let the mentos sink to the bottom of the bottle.
4. Then we stand back and see what happens!!
Well I'm excited to teach my class tomorrow, hopefully they like what I have planned and some of the rockets actually fly, it's pretty disappointing when stuff doesn't work, but alas, that's how science goes. I remember in graduate school, it was often times by accident when you discovered how to make certain things work, then if you could replicate it a bunch of times, you just pretended that you intended to make that "mistake." Anywho, I hope these experiments work for you guys! Cheers!
Labels:
balloon rockets,
diet coke and mentos,
Newton's three laws of motion,
nucleation,
physics,
rockets,
science
Thursday, April 3, 2014
First time blogger!
Well here it goes, I'm a stay at home mom bored out of my friggin mind and so I've decided to take this time (while my kids are young) to do things that I might not necessarily have time for later in life. Although I'm not keen on sharing my identity on the internet, I can tell you one thing, it rhymes with Shashmika. I defended my thesis in chemistry while I was 37 weeks pregnant and went from a full time student to a stay at home mom. It was a shock, I've never had more respect for pregnant women or stay at home moms, let me tell you, it sucks. I love my kids to death, but sometimes I just want to pee in private. When the kiddos are in bed, that's my time to get lost in the world of science and diy! Of course like many people out there, I fell in love with pinterest on first "site" (haha get it?) and entered the world of diy. Who knew you could re-upholster your own chair instead of just buying a new one. Okay maybe everyone knew that, but pinterest just opened my eyes. However, after a year of staying home with my daughter, I decided I missed that intellectual stimulation that graduate school had provided and began teaching for an after school extracurricular program teaching science and math. It's been an absolute joy, I feel like I'm having my cake and eating it too. I get to work a few times a week, an hour and a half at a time and then I come home and have the rest of the day with my kids. This way, I spend the majority of my time with my family but I get to go and use my mad science skilllzzzzzz! Anywho, I plan to blog about the science experiments I am teaching and share the protocol and procedures with everyone. Also, I plan to share my diy creations, and how I went about doing it. I promise I'll share the ones that didn't quite work out as well :)
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