Posts Tagged ‘crafts’
We visited a preschool this week. Unfortunately they were all full so we’ll keep doing things at home! While we were there, Sammi got herself into this adorable bee costume. Afterward, when she was sad they didn’t have a spot for her, I promised her we’d practice some letters. She choose to practice the letter B and I set to work thinking of a few things we could do.
B the Bee
The first activity was to make a bee. I drew it with pencil. Then I had Sammi trace it with the black marker. I helped her trace it in the direction that we write the letter b. Then we drew stripes for the body and colored away. I was going to have her glue yellow construction paper on for the wings, but she colored them in on her own while I was finding the paper.
My favorite part is the pipe cleaner antennae with pompoms glued to the ends. I let Sammi pull the trigger on the glue gun to attach the pompoms to the pipe cleaner. She loved it! She felt so grown up and since it was a short project, it was easy to keep it clean and keep her safe.
B is for Butterfly
Since the bee was such a hit, we moved on to butterflies. To introduce how the B could become a butterfly, I folded a piece of paper in half and drew the letter B on the fold. Then I held it up to the mirror and asked Sammi what it looked like to her. She saw the butterfly right away. To make the mirror image appear, Sammi painted the B with black paint. Then while it was still wet, we hurried and folded the paper back in half and pressed down with our fingers. When we opened it up, the image had transferred to the other side. Sammi thought it was pretty cool. We did it a few times to get the paint dark everywhere on the mirror side.
To decorate the butterfly, we took cut squares of tissue paper. Sammi chose purple and black and I chose the multicolored ones. I gave her a sponge brush and put some glue on a plastic plate. She painted the paper first then put the squares over the glue. We folded the edges in so they wouldn’t cover up the paint lines. Then Sammi drew the antennae and added the jewel stickers.
In the Meantime
Elli was awake from her nap in the throes of both these activities. So, to entertain her she did her own projects. The Bee day she colored a Cars ColorWonder page. She wanted googly eyes, too so I gave her two to add to Lightening McQueen. Instead, I found one eye stuck to the side of her head. She’s just too cute!
On the butterfly day, Elli painted one half of the paper and then we folded it in half. When we opened it back up, it looked just like something out of a psych evaluation. She sure looked cute with her black smudge of paint under her eye. When she was done with her picture we strung beads on a string while Sammi finished gluing the tissue paper to her butterfly.
2009 was a fun, fast and fantastic year for our family. Because Babies Grow Up launched on New Year’s Day 2009. Given all that’s happened in the last year, I’ve spent some serious time reflecting on all our experiences. I’d like to share some highlights from the year as well as some of the most popular posts.
My Highlights from 2009
Amazing New Friends
I met some amazing people through blogging and have developed some pretty cool friendships over the last year. As I started my blogging, I was invited to participate in Play Activities‘ Operation Playtime. Melitsa has become a close friend and encourager over the last year. We both released our first eBooks in 2009. I enjoyed reviewing Treasure Basket Play and hosting a giveaway just this month.
I also enjoyed meeting many of the gals from Sassy Scoops long before they formed this amazing marketing team. Vanessa of I Never Grew Up drew me in with her Nature Days. Through her I was able to meet Jyl of Mom It Forward and subsequently get involved in local blogger events in Utah such as the Goldsmith Jewelers pearl necklace promotion and the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival. Through the TSF I re-met Carol Rice and was able to be a mommy blogger for the Jonesborough Storytelling Festival in Tennessee. All that, alone, was enough to keep our year busy and exciting. But there was more.
Favorite Products
Toward the end of 2009 our product reviews have focused primarily on music for children and families. We have added some terrific music to our collection and look forward to finding more great albums to share in 2010. My favorite from 2009 isn’t actually on sale yet, but it will be in just a few weeks. It’s Bari Koral’s Rock and Roll Garden. While we were away from home over the holidays the girls had a few days of being out of sorts. I just popped this CD in and it worked like a charm every time to bring my girls back into good spirits.
Another favorite of the year was Wow! Wow! Wubzy! Pirate Treasure. Even Brent enjoys listening to this when driving the car. Elli has just started trying to say Wow! Wow! Wubzy! and it’s too cute! We also love our Band in a Box from Melissa and Doug and use the instruments weekly as we make our own music.
My Favorite Posts
I was so sad to hear that Reading Rainbow was taken off the air and then further saddened by the reasoning behind the decision. I already described my feelings and elaborated on the overlooked need Reading Rainbow filled in creating lifetime readers.
I was fascinated by the benefits of rocking I learned from a child development professor at BYU. This post is one of my favorites because it shows just how perfect mothers are for their children.
While Brent was away at Officer Training for the Air Force, I wrote this post containing my thoughts on love. Fulling loving another person, spouse, child, parent or friend, entails a bit of hurt along with a wealth of joy.
Most Popular Posts in 2009
- The End of Reading Rainbow
- Twinkle Twinkle Little Star Crafts
- Musical Monday: Twinkle Twinkle Little Star
- Gingerbread House Frosting Recipe
- More Pumpkin Crafts and a Book
- Monster Mania: Crafts for Little Monsters
- Laptime Songs for Mommies eBook
- Physical Friday: Crawling
- Leaves Are Falling
- Pumpkin Snack and Craft
Click on an image to read more about that project!
Christmas-Themed Projects
Jesus Spelling Activity
- cookie cutter letters: J, E, S, U
- 1 sheet of cardstock, red or green for a Christmas theme
- scratch paper, decorative or plain, enough for the 5 letters
- glue stick and scissors
My part: I used the cookie cutter letters needed to spell Jesus. Then I pressed them in an ink pad and “stamped’ them in order on a piece of cardstock. Then I stamped the letters again on pieces of scratch decorative paper I had. I cut out the letters from the scrap papers.
Sammi’s part: She used a glue stick to put glue on the back of each letter. Then she glued the letters to the cardstock matching each letter to it’s shape. I let her choose the letters in whichever order she wanted; she, of course, started with “S” since it’s her favorite.
Penguin
This penguin is one of the crafts found in my new eBook: Laptime Songs for Mommies. Sammi had fun putting this cute guy together then adding her own touches.
Go ahead, make the purchase that will help you bond with your little one through music, books and snuggling. Purchasing today, at the limited-time, introductory offer of $10, you’ll get a full-color, interactive version of Laptime Songs for Mommies, a black-and-white printable version and the 6 songs in MP3 form that you can burn onto a CD. This purchase will benefit you and your little one for years to come. —Laptime Songs for Mommies
Treasure Pouches
I made these for Sammi’s friends for Christmas gifts. Each one has the initial of the child it belongs to. I filled each pouch with a bag or two of fruit snacks. The idea is they can hold any little “treasures” your little one may be attached to and want to take everywhere.
Materials:
- felt sheets in different colors
- scissors, fabric glue, sewing maching
- ribbon
I folded a sheet of felt in half longways then cut off a third. This makes the pouch. Before sewing the sides up on the pouch, attach your letter and shapes using fabric glue and stitches. Some I stitched by hand and some I used the sewing machine. then sew up the sides, fold over the top edge and sew to make a hem for the ribbon. Cut a slit in the front middle of the hem then thread the ribbon through the hem. Voila, an easy, personalized gift for the little ones in your life.
Visiting Santa
I had to share this picture of the girls’ first encounter with Santa this year. Sammi was excited to see him and visit with him. She asked for toys and didn’t get any more specific than that. Elli was not the least bit interested in Santa. Poor thing. But she has enjoyed wearing a Santa hat and a bell on a necklace. The girls saw Santa at the Tree Lighting Ceremony on campus at Lincoln Memorial University. They had a great program that I thought was the perfect blend of the religious significance of Christmas and the holly, jolly side of the holiday. Afterward we were treated to a stellar performance by the Knoxville Symphony Chamber Orchestra. We had to leave early because the girls were desperate for their beds, but what we experienced of the orchestra was energetic and full of holiday spirit.
I thought I’d get these up yesterday, but Brent has a test this week so I’ve been extra exhausted at the end of each day. Ah, the test is tomorrow and I’m looking forward to a relaxing evening. Back to turkey crafts!
This turkey handprint craft we made at the library. The template can be downloaded from Family Fun.
Supplies:
- colorful feathers
- googly eyes
- orange beak from foam sheet
- red gobbler from foam sheet
- crayon or marker for tracing child’s hand
- glue dots for quick and easy attachment
The idea for this turkey craft came from Make and Takes Turkey Countdown. We modified the face a bit by using foam sheets for depth and googly eyes for fun. Sammi loves BIG googly eyes! Here’s another one of her posing with her babies by her turkey.
Happy Halloween!
Here’s one last Halloween craft you can do with all that candy you’ll get Trick-or-Treating!
We have enjoyed Make and Takes Monster Mania eBook. It is full of fun ideas that inspire creativity and problem solving skills. I love the projects because most of them use things I have on hand anyway. It makes it easy to pick and project and do it right away. For the Spooky Monster House, though, I spent some time preparing. I thought the prepping was half the fun and definitely worth it. I used the frosting recipe I found here.

Sammi's Spooky Monster House

Mommy's Spooky Monster House

Daddy's Spooky Monster House
We had fun this week making ghost craft projects. We also worked on a big project inspired by this I saw on a blog I love. But we’ll share that next week, after the Halloween hype is over. Here are our ghosts!
Cotton Ball Ghost

How do you color a ghost white? With cotton balls, of course!
Sammi and Elli both had fun with this project. I downloaded this cute ghost here then printed it in two sizes. For Sammi I gave her the bigger ghost. I let her put the glue on her ghost picture and then put the cotton balls on the picture. Sammi finished hers off with googly eyes. She also dumped some glue on Elli’s ghost and then spread it around.
For Elli I handed her cotton balls one at a time and told her to put them on the ghost. I tapped my finger on different places on the ghost to help her spread them out. She giggled and smiled the whole time. It was a fun activity.
Ghost Trick-or-Treater
We finally made it to the preschool storytime program at the Middlesboro Library (where I do the laptime program) and were treated to this treasure of a craft. This was such a fun project and Sammi was able to do it all on her own, which makes it a success in her eyes
We used thin glue dots to attach the arms and legs to the back side of the ghost. Those glue dots also worked wonderfully to accessorize the legs with shoes, the ghost with eyes and add the word “BOO.” I loved the glue dots so much I ran out and bought some for our projects at home.
Happy Halloween tomorrow! What’s your little one going to be?
After making the Pumpkin Patch craft, we had lots of extra pumpkins so we continued the pumpkin theme in our crafts. In this post we’ll be showing you
- Five Little Pumpkins
- Make Your Own Pumpkins Faces
- Pumpkin Ring Toss Game
- Pick the Pumpkins Quiet Book
Five Little Pumpkins
This is my favorite Halloween finger play. I love the board book illustrated by Dan Yaccarino, who’s got to be one of my favorite children’s book illustrators. I finally bought the book this year since our library here doesn’t have it. We used the pumpkins while we read the book. The first time through we took away a pumpkin for each pumpkin in the book and then the next time we put one pumpkin back as we read about each one. Sammi loved this and we read the book several times with the pumpkins. The pumpkins are fun all on their own with out the book.
Five little pumpkins sitting on a gate
The first one says, “Oh my, it’s getting late.”
The second one says, “There are witches in the air.”
The third one says, “But we don’t care.”
The fourth one says, “Let’s run and run and run.”
The fifth one says, “I’m ready for some fun.”
Oooo went the wind and out went the light.
And five little pumpkins rolled out of sight.
Make Your Own Pumpkin Faces

Sammi's faces are on the left. My example faces are on the right.
With another set of pumpkins we added cut out shapes to make faces. I cut out triangles, squares, ovals and different mouth shapes. Then I arranged them on the pumpkins to show Sammi what a pumpkin face looked like. Then I took the shapes off and helped her build her own pumpkin faces. We’ve been working a lot on emotions: happy, sad, angry and afraid; so we made a face for each emotion (2 for happy, of course!) Then Sammi glued the pieces on all by herself. I really had to let go of the finished product and let her do it how she wanted. She did a good job, I thought.
Pumpkin Ring Toss Game

We did a Fall Festival Trick or Treat at Brent’s school this last weekend. We decided instead of just having candy, we wanted to have games for the little ones to play so that it was more fun for them. Admittedly, there aren’t an awful lot of medical students with children so we wanted the few who came to have a lot to do! And we wanted it to be interesting for the students themselves who came. So we made this ring toss game. I saw this idea on an old school Reading Rainbow episode. (I sure miss that show.)
We covered a box with orange construction paper. Then I printed off the face from here and colored it in with yellow and black. On the other side, my crafting buddy, Holly, painted vines and leaves. She also painted the craft sticks green, with a shade of green we mixed ourselves for the occasion. When the sticks were dry we taped them with purple duct tape inside the box. Then we cut out rings from sour cream lids. The kids, and even adults, had fun tossing the rings onto the sticks. They were then able to reach into the box and grab their candy.
Pick the Pumpkins Quiet Book

This last activity I’m really happy with. It turned out better than I imagined it would. It sort of developed as I started to put it together. The pumpkins are sitting in the pumpkin patch. You pull the pumpkin out of its pocket and place it on a hay bale on the opposite side to decorate them for fall.
- I used an old cereal box for the pages. I duct taped the two pieces together to form the book. I covered up the duct tape in the inside with brown construction paper.
- I used the smallest size pumpkins that we had.
- I first created the pumpkin patch on a piece of brown construction paper. I used a brown marker to draw the patch and the lines where the pumpkins would slide into their pockets.
- To create the pockets I painted glue on the back side leaving boxes with no glue under the lines that allow half the pumpkin to slide into the pocket.
- Then I put a piece of tape over the line and used an exacto-knife to cut just the construction paper along the line. This created the opening of the pocket.
- On the opposite page I wrote out the instructions then glued six rectangles of brown felt for the hay bales.
- I finished decorating the pages with stickers of leaves and other fall things.
- Then I glued smaller squares of felt onto the backs of the pumpkins so they would stick to the hay.
I was thrilled that Sammi enjoyed it. She loved pulling out the pumpkins and putting them on the hay. She even got that each hay bale got one pumpkin. She could even put the pumpkins back into their pumpkin patch pockets all by herself. Yippee! I was hesitant to let Elli touch it since I didn’t get any of it laminated and I was worried she’d do a number on those little pumpkins. But I decided to be brave and let her give it a go. She loved it too. And she was fairly gentle with the pumpkins. A double success! And it made for a nice activity at church yesterday.
We had lots of fun with pumpkins this week. Now it’s on to bats and ghosts. I have some fun ideas we’ll show you all about once we’ve tried them out. Happy Halloween (uh, in about two weeks!)
Update: Click for more pumpkin crafts, activities and our favorite book!
Sammi’s Pumpkin Patch
We had so much fun with our last pumpkin activity that we were anxious to make another pumpkin patch craft. I downloaded the pumpkin from Family Crafts and then printed it in different sizes. We then painted the pumpkins with our own version of orange and hung them to dry.
After they dried, we cut them out.
- I took a brown piece of construction paper and used a brown marker to draw a pumpkin patch (a box with rows).
- Then Sammi used a glue stick to glue her pumpkins into the patch.
- We used a green marker to draw vines connecting the pumpkins. I added the little curlies.
- Then I found some cute Halloween stickers to complete the picture.
We kicked it up a notch
We couldn’t use just any orange to paint the pumpkins! No, we had to mix out own. Sammi loves mixing colors. I added red and yellow to a plastic plate and let her mix them together. She said it looked like ketchup and mustard. I printed the pumpkins on cardstock so they’d hold up a little better to Sammi’s vigorous painting.
She loved painting and mixing so much that when the pumpkins were done, she mixed a few more colors and made a lovely brown. Then, while I was rinsing brushes, she proceeded to paint her hand and make handprints on the butcher paper protecting the table. Thank goodness for butcher paper!
I’m working on another idea for the rest of the pumpkins. It involves the poem Five Little Pumpkins which is a favorite around here along with a few other ideas. Once we wrap up the pumpkins, I think it’s on to bats.
What Halloween crafts do you love?
Fall is not officially here for me until I’ve made and devoured pumpkin bread. The very thought of pumpkin bread makes my mouth water and I usually have to drop everything to make some. That’s why I made some right before writing this post so I wouldn’t get interrupted!
While we were waiting for the bread to cool, Sammi wanted to play with play dough. My mom, who’s visiting, is very creative and always has the patience and energy to pull out all the stops when it comes to “projects” with Sammi. So she pulled out the play dough and found that Sammi has swirled the red and yellow together. She took this opportunity to teach Sammi about making new colors.
She squished the yellow and red together until there made a perfect pumpkin orange color. Then, to solidify the concept, she mixed the blue and (now) orange together to make a green color for the stem. Sammi loved making new colors. Now we were ready to make the pumpkins.
We made balls of orange play dough then used a play dough knife to make the stripes on the pumpkin. We showed Sammi how and let her do her own. I was sure she’d demolish the ball but it actually remained fairly round. I was very impressed. Then we rolled out a little of the green and added it to the top for a stem.
We put all our pumpkins together and had a little pumpkin patch. I pulled out a Cinderella book from the shelf and showed Sammi the page where the Fairy Godmother changed the pumpkin into a carriage. Sammi loved that and made a magic wand to go with the pumpkins.
We sliced our pumpkin bread and devoured it while admiring our pumpkin patch. Fall is officially here!
Pumpkin Bread Recipe
- 2 1/2 cups flour
- 2 cups sugar
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
- 1/2 teaspoon clover
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1/2 teaspoon vanilla
- 1/2 c oil
- 16 oz canned pumpkin
- 1 cup mini chocolate chips
Mix ingredients together. Pour into 2 greased and floured bread pans. Cook in preheated oven at 325° for 65-75 minutes.
Cows Love Pumpkins
We recently came across this little poem in one of our Babybug magazines. It’s grown on me over the months since we first read it. I hope you enjoy it with your little ones, too.
Cows love pumpkins
Pigs love squash
I love you
I do, by gosh!
This post is part of the Fall Fling Blog Carnival. Go here to read more about the Fall Fling and enter to win some of the great prizes. Check out all the ways to participate in the Fall Fling.
I’ve noticed lots of people searching for crafts to do with Twinkle Twinkle Little Star and thought today would be a perfect day to share the ones that have been a huge success at our house.
Star on a Stick Craft
Cut out 2 star shapes from heavy paper.
Have little one decorate the stars: color, glitter, buttons.
Glue one star on each side of a craft stick.
Starry Night Craft
Cut out bits of yellow construction paper. These are the “stars.”
Put drops of glue on a piece of dark blue construction paper. Have little one place yellow “stars” on top of the drops of glue.
Or swipe bits on a glue stick. Then place the “stars” on the paper.
Star Mobile Craft
Cut out various sizes of stars from heavy paper.
Have little one decorate stars in different ways.
Punch a hole in the top of each star.
Use plastic department store-style hanger that spins and tie stars to the arms of the hanger.
What are your favorite crafts that accompany Twinkle Twinkle Little Star?














