Archive for February 2010

Olympics Flag Craft

We are in Vancouver and loving the Olympic spirit and pride all countries have in their athletes and countries.  My son is luckier than most he has two countries and is being raised to love both. We made this Canadian flag craft to cheer my country on, and grabbed our American flag we made and kept ( one of the few crafts I have kept for a long time) to cheer Daddy’s country. No matter what flag you are making remember it doesn’t have to be perfect just have fun!

  1. Gather your materials. You will need some cardboard, red paint ( I had blue because I wasn’t sure if we’d make an American one too), white paper, a roller paint brush, glue,marker,  and scissors. Flag
  2. Make two lines to define the red and white sections of your flag. Flag
  3. Add your red paint and start rolling. My son likes to pretend to be a steam roller and loves any craft with this brush! Flag
  4. Keep going, don’t worry if you get some in the middle, you will be covering it with white paper anyway.Flag
  5. Roll your paint on your child’s hand.Flag
  6. Press. FlagFlag
  7. Give them some scrap paper to make more hand prints, this will get some excess off and it’s fun! Flag
  8. Fill your sink and let them play- it’s way easier to get your little one’s hands clean than scrubbing, and they have fun playing with the water while their hand print dries. Flag
  9. When the print is dry add glue. Flag
  10. Add your hand print and let dry.  Olympics Flag Craft

More Flag Crafts !!

American Flag

World Flags

You May Also Like :

Flag Cupcakes
American Flag Place Mat
Olympic Crafts

Thank you so much for all of you who took my reader survey. The Starbucks gift card giveaway is closed and the winner was :starbucks

Which was Cary with this comment :  “I took the survey. I love your site, and check in daily!” . I will be emailing you shortly for your address, enjoy your coffee !

Green is Good!

Letter of the week g

Thank you so much for all of you who completed the reader survey, something I am going to try to incorporate more often by request are crafts that can be done by a wide range of ages. This green g is simple, and a 18 month old just showing interest in letters could easily explore with paint, crayons and markers, but an older child could make work of it as well.  I was pleasantly surprised by how much my son loved this project. My husband and I made dinner while my little artist explored every green marker and paint we had!

  1. Gather your materials. You will need some white and green paper,glue, scissors,  a huge assortment of green markers, glitter glue, paint- everything you have ! If you are doing this with a younger child limit as you see fit! You can’t mess this project up.Letter of the week g
  2. Write a g on your white paper- we are doing lowercase but it will work great with an uppercase as well.Letter of the week g
  3. Start making it green! We started with do a dot art dobbers. Letter of the week G
  4. Next up roller paints. Letter of the week
  5. Marker time!Letter of the week
  6. Last but not least glitter ( my son’s nails still have it embedded on them despite a bath!). Letter of the week
  7. Let dry, cut out and glue onto the green paper. Letter of the week g

Color Books

Hello Red Fox

Hello, Red Fox by Eric Carle is a fun interactive book about colors and the color wheel. Kids will love the “trick” on each page. The trick being that if you stare at a color for long enough then stare at a blank page the complimentary color will appear! This book is great, but not for a group, a class will disintegrate into “Let me!!” and “My turn!” quickly so this is really is best read one on one!

Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? by Bill Martin Jr. and Eric Carle is a classic, it is genius in it’s simplicity. So often we think things have to have fancy bells and whistles to keep toddlers and preschoolers interested and this book proves us wrong yet again. I haven’t met a child who hasn’t responded well to this book about colors and animals!

Lemons Are Not Red by Laura Vaccaro Seeger is a clever book each page offers a sneak peek at what it next, which my son thought was genius and I have to agree. Soon my son was making his own predictions about what object would be revealed when we turned the page. The book offered so many chances for me to step in and ask my son questions about what we were reading without stalling the momentum of the book.

extraordinarymommyDanielle Smith is wonderful, some would say extraordinary, I would say genuine! Her blog Extraordinary Mommy is packed with vlogs ( video blogs) , vlogging tips and snippets from the everyday and extraordinary. I have waited to feature her and so glad I did because right now is the perfect week to showcase her amazing blog. See Danielle has been blogging from the 2010 Olympics! She is blogging for P&G, you know the company that is making you cry with every “Thank you Mom” commercial ( I know I am not the only one!). She is interviewing, recapping and using her background as a TV reporter to get the inside mom scoop ! I think this video sums Danielle up, professional, funny and down to earth, check her out!

We love Lois Lenski’s books. If you don’t recognize these books from your own childhood it’s because even though they were written in the 30′s- 60′s they have long been out of print . In the last decade they have been re released and thank goodness they were. The author was well loved in her lifetime and received both the Children’s Book Award and a Newbery Medal. My son knows where her books are on the bookshelf in the library and immediately finds them every time we go.

cowboy

Cowboy Small is a cute cowboy book for the younger set. We have the board book edition and it’s been loved for a long time at our house, although since our return from the Calgary Stampede it’s been read constantly. The text is simple, the drawings are charming and the book covers all the basics of what a cowboys does day and night. My son loves that Cowboy small has a guitar, and is pretty fond of the part when he gets bucked off a bronco as well.

policeman small

Policeman Small was first published in 1962 and is retro in all the awesome ways. Cute and cheery it’s like a little Rockwell painting in a book! Policeman Small is about a policeman in a simpler time, a time that is perfect for little readers not looking for the reality of what police work is, instead looking for something simple. A big hit with young toddlers, my son enjoyed this book well before he was 2 and still does years later.

little auto

The Little Auto Originally written in 1934 and although cars have changed the basics are the same and are all covered in this little book. The basic care and maintenance of a car to also what to do if you have a flat tire are all addressed. The pace of the book is slow but your child won’t loose interest instead the slow pace is perfect and leads to the a clam and happy story time. My son giggled at the part of the book where Mr. Small drives past a horse and buggy, he of course has little understanding of a horse as anything other than a farm animal!

the little airplane

The Little Airplane I have been around airplanes all my life and I learned more about them from this picture book than I have from anywhere else before. To say this book is detailed is an understatement , it goes step by step how a prop plane works, and what a pilot does during the flight. The retro pictures are both a favorite of mine and my son’s, they take you back and make you feel like you are in another place and time. This book will be too long for young toddlers, there is a lot of text.

The Little Fire Engine

The Little Fire Engine is a simple little book about a fire engine that goes to put out fires. Nothing special but every time my son sees it at the library he won’t let it go. In 6 months we’ve taken it out 4 times. I think the bright retro illustrations and the simple text is what makes it so appealing.

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