Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Tin Can Treats

Tin Can Treats
Tutorial by Our Best Bites

Supplies:
Supplies:
canned fruit with tab tops, suggested size 7-8oz
candies for filling
tissue paper
hot glue gun
decorative paper
ribbon

1. Use a can opener to remove bottom (non-tab top side) of can, but leave it attached at one point.
2.  Wash cans thoroughly and dry completely.
3.  Fill with candies/treats/trinkets, leaving about 1/2 inch space at top.
4.  Fill remaining space with tissue paper.
5.  Use glue gun to secure lid back to can and let dry completely.
6.  Measure a strip of decorative paper (a child's drawing, marble painting, etc?) the same height as can.  Wrap around the can and secure with tape or glue.
7.  Tie decorative ribbons through the tab on top of can.
8.  Attach tag if desired.

I was thinking these would be a great teacher gift for the beginning of the school year or later on... here's the link for a teacher tag.There are also mother's day tags and father's day tags.

Project from Our Best Bites

Playdoh Lollipops



Ingredients

3/4 cup butter, softened
3 ounces cream cheese
1 cup white sugar
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
assorted colors of paste food coloring
24 lollipop sticks (we used wooden skewers since it's what we had on hand)

Directions

  1. In a bowl cream butter, cream cheese and sugar until fluffy. Add egg and vanilla; beat until smooth.
  2. In a medium bowl combine flour, baking powder and salt. Add dry ingredients to the creamed mixture. Stir till soft dough forms. Divide dough into fourths. Tint each with a different food color. Wrap in plastic wrap and chill for 2 hours.
  3. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Working with half of each color, shape dough into 3/4 inch balls and for each cookie place 1 pink, 1 green, 1 blue and 1 orange ball together to make 1 large ball. Shape into a 12 inch long roll (like a snake), starting at one end, coil roll to make a 2 3/4 inch round cookie. Place cookies 3 inches apart on lightly greased baking sheet. Carefully insert lollipop sticks into bottoms of cookies.
  4. Bake cookies for 8 minutes or until lightly browned. Cool and store in an airtight container.
(I got this recipe from the Entrusted blog and they claimed it came from www.allrecipes.com but so far I haven't been able to find it there.)

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Quick and Easy Fireworks


Supplies:

black construction paper
cupcake liners
markers
glitter
scissors
glue

Directions:

Color on flattened cupcake liners with the markers. If it's difficult to color and hold the liner then tape the edge with masking tape.

Fold the cupcake liners in half and then in half again so you have somewhat of a triangle shape. Cut slits starting at the widest part. Do not cut all the way to the point or you will cut your liner apart.

Add glue to your black paper or to the back of your cupcake liner and put your fireworks on the black paper.

Add glitter.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Butterflies

Here are a couple of quick, easy and adaptable crafts, using materials that most of us probably already have at home.

Hand print Butterflies



Materials needed:
  • Construction paper
  • Butterfly "body" template
  • Scissors
  • Glue
  • Googly eyes
  • Marker
  • Pompoms
  • Stickers
Help child to assemble the butterfly as shown in picture. If you prefer, instead of tracing their hands on paper, you could actually have them dip their hands into paint and make real hand prints for the wings! You can decorate the wings with sticker, glitter, or even just crayons. If you don't have any pompoms for the body, you could use cotton balls, buttons, or anything else circular you have laying around.

Butterfly Garden




Materials needed:
  • Construction paper
  • Paint
  • Butterfly sponge (I just cut a basic butterfly shape out of a regular rectangular kitchen sponge)
  • White cupcake papers
  • Scissors
  • Glue
  • Markers/crayons
Have child dip sponge into paint and then press onto paper. For the "flowers", have child color the cupcake papers. Caleb wanted to just color the middle of each. After they are done coloring, tear the side of the flowers to give the effect of petals. Or, you could use scissors, or have the child use scissors. Add construction paper stems and leaves.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Coffee Filter Butterflies



Materials Needed:
  • White round coffee filter
  • Watercolor paints
  • Clothes pin
  • Markers
  • Small googley eyes
  • Pipe cleaner
  • Yarn
  • Glue gun
Procedure:
  1. Flatten coffee filter so that the child can paint it. Encourage him/her to paint the entire filter. The less white the better. If you're like me, you might have to "let go" of the urge to paint all the white parts that the kiddos did not cover. =)
  2. When child is finished painting, set the filter aside to dry.
  3. While the filter is drying, have the child use markers, or more paint, to color the clothespin.
  4. Glue googley eyes on to one end of the clothespin. Make sure that the part of the clothespin that clasps is up...that's the end you'll glue the eyes on to.
  5. Form the pipe cleaner into the shape of antennae. Glue this on to the butterfly's "head".
  6. Once the coffee filter is dry, pinch the top and bottom together and use the clothespin to hold it there. "Fan" out the sides until they look like the wings you want them to be.
  7. Optional: Glue yarn to the back of the clothespin to hang it up.


Monday, March 14, 2011

Rainbows


Here are 2 rainbow projects we did, and both kids enjoyed them very much!

1. Paper Squares Rainbow


Supplies Needed:
  • White poster board
  • Construction paper
  • Cotton balls
  • White card stock
  • Scissors
  • Glue
Prep Work:
  • Cut rainbow shape out of poster board.
  • Cut 2-inch (or so) squares out of colored construction paper.
  • Cut 2 cloud shapes out of white card stock.
Procedure:
  1. Have the kids glue on the squares. Depending on the age/development of the kids, you can either have them put the glue on, or you can do the glue and then have them place the paper squares on the glue.
  2. Have kids glue cotton balls to the pre-cut clouds.
  3. Glue clouds on to each end of the rainbow.
  4. Label each color arc with the name of the color.
Important things the kids can learn:
  • Facts about rainbows (you can talk about the color order, how a rainbow is formed, etc.)
  • Spiritual significance of a rainbow (Genesis 9:12-17)
  • Color identification
  • Color word recognition
2. Noah's Ark


Supplies Needed:
  • Paper plate
  • Brown construction paper cut into a half circle, the same size as half of the paper plate you are using
  • Paint and paintbrushes
  • Stickers
  • Glue
Procedure:

1. Have the child paint a rainbow in the top half of the paper plate. If you have a little one,
like I do, the rainbow might look more like this, and that's okay.=):




2. Glue the brown "ark" on the bottom half of the plate.
3. Have kids pick out animal stickers to put on the ark. Caleb was a bit concerned that there
was no Noah, so you could always add him as well (a sticker or an image printed off of the
computer). If possible, include 2 of each animal, to stress that important part of the story!

Important things the kids can learn:
  • Story of Noah and the Ark (Genesis 6-9)
  • Color identification
  • Order of colors in a rainbow
I got the idea for the Noah's Ark craft from here. I modified it to what would work for my kids (ie: stickers instead of animals printed off the computer that needed to be colored), as well as to what materials we had (ie: no brown paint, so we used construction paper).

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Tissue Paper Flowers




Supplies:

-tissue paper
-green pipe cleaners
-scissors
-ruler (optional)





Directions:
-Cut a few pieces tissue paper into roughly 5x7 inches pieces. Exact size is not important, the bigger your pieces the bigger the flower. The more pieces the fuller the flower, 15 pieces is often suggested.
-Stack the pieces of tissue paper. Use the same color or different colors.
-Accordion pleat the tissue paper working from the long side.
-Wind one end of the pipe cleaner around the middle of the pleated tissue paper.
-Trim the ends of each side to give the petals a unique look. (Trim to a point or rounded for example.)
-Gently separate each layer pulling upwards toward the middle of the flower on one side, then the other.
Tip: If you want your flower to have some leaves, place a small stack (maybe 2-6 sheets) of green tissue paper on top of your other stack before folding. Trim the green paper into the shape of a leaf.