Last week I had my first little DIY experiment and I am
proud to say: I did it! While I consider myself creative and like a project
here and there, I prefer a method known as BIY – Buy It Yourself. I feel like I
can get a good idea but instead of crafting it, I usually find someone to do it
for me. Fortunately, I have a wealth of helpful resources in that area; the
husband has not only refinished but built furniture from scratch to match my
hairbrained ideas (I usually provide him with very specific instructions, such
as “I want it painted chocolate CHIP mint, not cucumber mint!”), my very
talented friend has designed gorgeous Christmas cards, shower invitations and
thank you notes (her Etsy shop is reopening next week here), another is gifted at
party prep and planning, and when I’m really desperate, I can find something
pretty dang quick on Etsy. Or my other best friend comes in handy, Amazon
Prime. So, DIY does not really have a place in my heart. Or home. However,
Halloween reared it’s evil head, and I had no choice.
Of course, we already had Gavin’s Halloween costume planned.
The husband, being the king of costumes, requested about 9 months ago that the
baby be a bear for his first Halloween. (He has a weird obsession with bears
right now that I don’t get or care to further investigate.) This was no
problem, as one of Gavin’s older girlfriends had previously worn a bear
costume, so we were set. (Here is a sweet non-Halloween edition if you just want something cute to keep baby warm with - love these things.) Then comes the night of October 30th.
“What are you going to wear?” asked the husband, accusingly,
I might add. “What do you mean? Gavin is going to be a bear and I am going to
be… me.” I actually (mistakenly) thought I would finally be off the hook for
dressing up now that the husband has his own protégé – my dream come true! No
more weird rainbow ballerina costumes for me! I was going to enjoy this
Halloween costume-free. But no. He acted like I should have known all along I needed
a costume too. For someone who has 21 tubs of dress-up clothes, it’s odd to me
that this was never mentioned until the DAY BEFORE. I digress.
Anyways, if I HAD to dress up, at least maybe I could
finally get my wish of dressing up 1) as something normal and 2) as a family. I
have always wanted to be a cute couple dressing up, like Don and Betty Draper
or something equally dapper. But no. I have had the pleasure of going to
Halloween parties with the Chiquita Banana fruit-basket-on-her-head lady, a fairy,
a rainbow DJ, and more. The closest I ever got to my cute couple costume was
when we were the “Tequila Bandits” and that is a whole other blog post for a
different trip down memory lane! (And that memory is a foggy one; the costume
title alone can give you a hint.)
First, I thought we could be the 3 Bears. It took him about
2 seconds to shoot that idea down. Of course, it was way too NORMAL. Plus, I
admit, I wasn’t thrilled with dressing up as a bear myself. Goldilocks was
another option, but I really don’t have the hair for it. Terrified, I asked the
husband what he might be dressing up as. “A bear hunter.” Um, excuse me? Your
kid is a bear and so you are going to be a bear hunter? Great, you want CPS
alerted on our first Halloween. No. His second costume choice (always gotta
have a back up) was Timothy Treadwell. Typical. Another costume that no one
will understand what/who he is. I explained that he would look like a blond guy
with a black eye, which did not go with the bear theme. Had we planned this in
advance, the aforementioned talent (or Etsy, or Amazon) could have helped
produce something great for all of us. But time was not our friend.
So, inspired by none other than the famous Yogi Bear, I
decided to be a honey pot and suggested the husband join us as the bee. If I
was going to dress up, I was going to take charge! For the first time in 9
Halloweens together, I won. I practically ran a victory lap around the house!
But it gets better. I could tell he didn’t have full confidence in this yet. Skepticism
was oozing from the costume king. Especially when I called him at work to ask
him if he thought it was a good idea to make my honeycomb hat out of the pasta
strainer. (I had no time for the DIY ideas I frantically searched for online –
sandwich boards and foam tubing? I don’t think so!) I had to act fast and make
it legit. So, a quick trip to target and literally 10 minutes of crafting
later, my strainer was transformed by a little gold wrapping paper and masking
tape. I threw on my gold cardigan (with some gold necklaces of course) and
turned a pencil into a honey wand/stick/thing. Boom! I was a honeypot and there
was nothing he could do about it. When a stunned, “Wow, that actually worked,”
came out of his mouth, I had made it. To be considered quality on Halloween by
this man ranked right up there with my life’s crowning achievements! Truly, I
usually don’t care how he feels about what I wear, but Halloween is his
holiday, and I had finally risen to the occasion!
missing stripes + a martini = creepy bee |
Then, there was him to worry about it. That bumble bee.
While yellow painters tape on a black shirt was a good idea in theory, in
practicality it was not. Unfortunately, the pencils did not serve his costume
as well as mine, as his bee antennas were pitifully un-pointy. One beverage in
and his stripes were peeling and his antennas were drooping. His DIY was kind
of… a fail. But the husband was a good sport. I consider it payback for all the
“joy” I have endured with him on Halloweens past. Moral of the story: when you
need a DIY costume, be a honeypot, not a bumble bee. (And don't ever assume your Halloween can be costume-free... at least not in this house.)
PS Let me know if you need your own honey pot building instructions by commenting below and I'll give you the skinny!
PPS If you have better DIY costumes (and i'm sure you do) - share those too!
Your costumes turned out so cute! I'm sure you owe some bit of your crafty DIY success to those amazing sorority years. Can't wait to see what you come up with next year!
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