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Giveaway- Color A Quilt coloring book and Tombow colored pencils

June 2, 2016 by Stefanie Girard

color quilt Tombow pencils

Yes! I have a second twofer fabulous giveaway. Leave a comment in today’s post by June 10, 2016 and you are in the running for a copy of:

Color A Quilt  adult coloring book

and

Tombow Irojiten Colored Pencils in Tranquil

Open to U. S. residents only please.

Pencils:

  • Set includes 12 colored pencils, sharpener and colored pencil eraser
  • Premium colored pencils with elegant enamel finish
  • Eraser cleanly removes colored pencil markings
  • AP Certified

More about the book:

Love to quilt? Love to color? This is the artistic activity book you’ve been looking for! Hours of creative pleasure await as you explore 45 quilt coloring projects plus a bonus table-runner created from one-of-a-kind designs featured in popular Martingale quilting books.

Want to sew a quilt based on the design you colored? Information about each quilt, its designer, and the book it was published in appear on the coloring pages. You can even go online and see a full color photo of the finished quilt.

  • Unwind and express your creative side as you color detailed full-page quilts
  • A selection of shaded blocks are included to spark creativity and help you visualize the distinctive quilt patterns
  • Both quilters and coloring enthusiasts will enjoy these unique designs
  • Coloring in sheets are a great way to calm the busy mind, as you focus on the coloring techniques your brain is actually able to calm itself and focus on less. Coloring is used to help relax and calm anxiety and stress. Coloring keeps out mental health in check and allows us to develop of creative brain. We highly recommend Copic markers or Faber castell coloring pencils .

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Comments

  1. Doris McCarty says

    June 6, 2016 at 9:56 am

    I would love to win this!!! Thank you.

  2. Lauren says

    June 6, 2016 at 9:59 am

    I need a set of quality colored pencils.

  3. aj says

    June 7, 2016 at 1:42 pm

    This would be a fabulous thing to win. I’ve been dying to try the Tombow colored pencils.

  4. Kimber says

    June 7, 2016 at 11:10 pm

    Love to color. Thanks for opportunity.

  5. jenny stratton says

    June 8, 2016 at 3:27 pm

    I love to color it would be fun to color while sitting on the deck this summer.

  6. Amanda B says

    June 8, 2016 at 8:30 pm

    What a great giveaway! Both are wonderful ways to de-stress. Thanks for hosting!

  7. Pat Trill says

    February 9, 2017 at 12:37 pm

    Love the colors that are used in projects, fabrics. They are more vibrant. Coloring is a wonderful way to get ideas for sewing, quilting, crafting.

  8. Carrie says

    February 9, 2017 at 8:25 pm

    This would be wonderful to color a quilt. What a great giveaway!

« Older Comments

Have you read?

Why Do Your Kids Play with the Box? An Interview with Child Psychologist Dr. Lucy Harper

I was at a recent blogger’s meetup—chatting, sipping lukewarm coffee, and exchanging parenting war stories—when the conversation turned to toys. More specifically, the boxes toys come in.

“You know,” I laughed, “my kid unwrapped a fancy, interactive toy last Christmas, and five minutes later, the box had become a spaceship… the toy? Completely abandoned.”

That’s when Dr. Lucy Harper, a warm and wise child psychologist with a mischievous grin, chimed in: “Oh, the box wins every time. And there’s a very good reason for that.”

Naturally, I had to ask her more. What followed was one of the most fascinating, reassuring conversations I’ve had as a parent.

Me: So, Lucy—why do kids love playing with the box more than the actual toy?

Dr. Harper: Honestly, it’s one of the most developmentally beautiful things kids can do. When a child chooses the box, they’re choosing imagination over instruction. A toy often has one purpose—it sings, it moves, it lights up. But a box? A box can be anything. Kids see endless potential in something we adults might just toss in the recycling.

Me: So you’re saying it’s not just them being weird or ungrateful?

Dr. Harper: [Laughs] Not at all. It’s actually a wonderful sign of creativity and cognitive flexibility. Think of it like this—boxes offer what we call “open-ended play.” There’s no one way to use a box. That freedom gives children the chance to invent, experiment, and take charge of their own playtime. It helps their brains build problem-solving skills, storytelling ability, spatial reasoning… the list goes on.

Me: Okay, but does it really help with development? Or are we just romanticizing cardboard?

Dr. Harper: Oh, it absolutely helps. When your child turns a box into a rocket or a cave, they’re engaging multiple areas of their brain. They’re building narratives (language skills), exploring size and shape (early math concepts), using fine and gross motor skills (tape, scissors, crawling inside), and even practicing emotional regulation. That “I made this myself” feeling is powerful for confidence.

Me: You mentioned emotional regulation—how does box play support that?

Dr. Harper: Great question. Sometimes, boxes become cozy hideaways—reading nooks, forts, quiet spots. For many kids, that’s self-soothing. It’s their way of saying, “I need a break from all the noise.” And giving them space to retreat into a world they’ve created can be incredibly comforting.

Me: I’ve definitely seen that. So how can parents support more of this kind of play?

Dr. Harper: Start saving boxes! Seriously. Don’t rush to recycle them. Offer markers, tape, scissors, scrap paper, fabric—just let kids take the lead. You’d be amazed what they come up with. And here’s the secret: you don’t need a Pinterest-perfect play setup. The messier and more imaginative, the better.

Dr. Harper’s Favorite “Box Play” Ideas
Before we wrapped up (pun intended), I asked Lucy for some of her go-to box play setups that parents can try at home. Here’s what she shared:

The Spaceship Command Center
“Flip a large box over, cut a few windows, and hand over some foil and paper plates for the ‘control panels.’ Bonus points if your child names the spaceship and creates a mission.”

The DIY Café or Bakery
“Boxes make great shop counters. Set one up with play food or paper treats, and let your child take orders and serve customers. This builds storytelling and social skills.”

Wearable Cardboard Costumes
“Kids love making robot bodies, animal masks, or even cardboard wings. It blends creative expression with physical movement.”

The Crawl Tunnel or Maze
“Especially fun for toddlers—just tape boxes together to make a crawling path. It feels like a mini adventure.”

The Giant Art Canvas
“Flatten a box and let them draw a city, a racetrack, a jungle… whatever they dream up. Then use toy figures or cars to play out scenes.”

Me: Last question—what would you say to the parent who feels bad that their expensive toy got ignored?

Dr. Harper: I’d say: it’s okay. Your child didn’t reject your gift—they just found a different way to explore joy. Playing with the box isn’t a failure of the toy—it’s a success of their imagination.

And sometimes, the best toy is the one that didn’t cost a thing.

So next time your child dives headfirst into a cardboard box, don’t worry—embrace it. You might just be watching their creativity take flight.

Want to turn this into a printable resource or social media share? I can help with that too!

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