Showing posts with label Imaginative Play. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Imaginative Play. Show all posts

Thursday, August 14, 2014

Sticker Lightning Bugs

(4 1/2 Years)

Last Christmas, Bella (our Elf on the Shelf) gave Little Miss and Wild One a going away present.  It was a three-month gift to Kiwi Crate.  These little gift box gems are PERFECT for those times when you want (or need- you know those times) a project that they can work on semi-independently.  Today was the day; we painted, we built, we played with the kinetic sand, we made the volcano erupt- again, and it was only 10:30!  Out came the kit with everything in it.  I handed the kids their bottles, and colored stickers, and let them have fun decorating.
Quick!  Throw in a load of wash, load the dishwasher, start organizing the craft area (again!).  
It took less than ten minutes for them to decorate their bottles.  I thought it was going 
to take two or three minutes, but I saw how carefully they were working and I 
seized the opportunity to get a few chores done.
Wild One created a collage of color, overlapping some stickers.  Whereas, Little Miss 
created rows of the same color, making sure to space them apart ever so slightly.  Twins.
 I love how proud she is of her work!
 I helped them attach the straw, wings and feet.  They added the goggly eyes.
All finished!
 Time to make them fly.
Let's do it again!
 Experimenting the differing rates of speed if the string is held at a steeper decline.  
They loved this.  I did too!  

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Preschool Paper Mache

(4 Years)


Paper mache!  It screams childhood.  Ripping paper.  Mixing flour and water.  Putting your hands in a goopy solution.  Painting the dried creation.  Fun!  Making a paper mache project is a great way to work on so many skills at once, in a playful way of courseripping in strips (it's harder than it looks for a four-year old),  following directions, hand-eye coordination, measuring, pouring, mixing, transferring, using a paint brush (great practice for writing with a pencil), color mixing, and of course developing those fine motor skills.

They liked the fact that they got to rip paper.  We haven't ripped paper (other than wrapping paper) in a long time.
Look at that smile!  That's right my little one, rip the paper, develop your pincer grip to prepare you for writing.
Measuring the flour and pouring in the water.  We used a 1:1 ratio.  We also added in a teaspoon of salt, it's supposed to make the mixture resistant to mold- at least that's what I was told in school.

Wild One getting wild mixing his solution together.  
I think he thinks that he is one of the kid chefs on Master Chef Jr.  

"It's fun to mix fast.  Do you want to try it?"
"No.  I like mixing slow."
Twins?  Really?
I wrapped a small glass bowl in plastic cling wrap.  Turned it over and modeled how to dip in the strip of paper, squeeze it out between two fingers and then place and smooth the strip down on the bowl, and they were off! 

Look at that concentration!  Wild One is squeezing it out perfectly.  
Little Miss found a short strip of paper to begin with, she loves tiny things.

Goopy!

Ta da!  On the left is the one Little Miss created, on the right is Wild One's. There was about three coats of strips on their bowls.  Let them air dry for two days.

Carefully, pull the cling wrap until the paper mache bowl starts to release.  If the inside of the bowl feels damp, continue to let dry.  Ours was ready after the two days.  I grabbed 
our Dollar Tree muffin tin, some paint, paint brushes and called the kiddos over.

Little Miss was stunned that the paper hardened into a bowl.  She loves painting.  If you don't want to see any of the newsprint, I'd recommend spray painting the bowl a base color first.  

 At first Wild One didn't want to paint.  He changed his mind a few minutes later.

She is painting the rim of her bowl a contrasting color.

Wild One is excited because he created gray.  

He's holding his paint brush like a magic wand.

We let our painted bowls dry and then I sprayed them with a clear coat of spray paint.  Now we have beautiful handmade catch-alls to hold some of most-used art supplies.  They are remarkably sturdy.  I thought we would have to be careful with these, but they dry into a pretty rigid bowl.
When they saw how beautiful they turned out, they asked to do this again.  Yay!  
I just love zero-added cost projects, don't you?

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Colored Glue Monster Window Clings

(4 Years)

My little ones love working with glue, especially brightly colored glue!  Dying glue is so simple.  If you are starting with brand new bottles of white glue, you'll need to empty some out about a 1/3 into a squeeze bottle (they sell them at The Dollar Tree) or another container with a lid.  Then add either 1/2 tsp of liquid or gel food dye or liquid watercolor to your 2/3 filled glue bottle.  I use a chopstick to stir the glue and color together first, and then just cap the glue bottle and shake until it's all combined.  Add more coloring, stir and shake, until you have achieved your desired shade.   While the kids were napping (yes, after four years, they decide NOW is when they want to start napping - not when they were one, or two or three years old, but now), I made six colors and left one bottle white.

Materials needed:
Colored glue
Googly eyes
Zip top freezer bags sliced along their edges - to open it up
Trays or large books (to tape your freezer bags to- that way you can move their art to a drying area without it dripping or sliding off the plastic)
Tape (to tape down the freezer bag to the tray, so that you don't have glue on the floor)

Let the fun begin!  When making window clings, we learned that thicker glue is easier to peel off the paper than thin strands of glue, those tend to break off.

They loved squeezing and swirling the glue.

Wild One at one point decided to pick up two bottles of glue at the same time to squeeze together.  Look at those fine motor skills developing.  SQUEEZE!

Monsters must have googly eyes!
 

Little Miss decided that she wanted to create a rainbow.

Squeezing a glue bottle with precision takes a lot of strength and focus.  Her little hands got a HUGE workout this morning.

Let creations dry for one or two days.  If it's dry to the touch, try to peel it off the plastic.  If it peels easily then it's ready.  If it doesn't, then it needs another day to finish drying.

If the clings don't easily stick to the window, just wet the back of the cling with some water and they will adhere better.

They were so happy when they were able to stick their clings to the window.