After reading to your child daily the best advice is to surround your child with a print-rich environment. Point out the letters all around you, read recipes, read food boxes, read the letters you see around you, and show them to your child and play with letters. There is no need for flashcards when you are learning all the time. These alphabet peg dolls were made because my daughter loves babies so I made her some babies with letters to play with. This is the 4th part in our series Alphabet For Starters activities- easy and fun ways to introduce letters to your little learner.
- Gather your materials. I am using leftover Martha Stewart Craft Paint from my Mother’s Day Bag I made. However, you can use any paint made for wood. Read the instructions to see if it requires a sealant etc… Ours didn’t which is good because I didn’t have any. Also make sure it’s nontoxic because even though I am not suggesting these dolls go in any mouths, you still want to be as safe as possible. I also used painter’s tape, wood peg clothespins, and a few brushes.
- Start by taping off a section of the doll. This will be where you paint the letter later.
- Next start painting. I painted in batches. You can paint however you want but I started with the mouths.
- Then I added hair, and a body color. I am clearly not an artist but my daughter doesn’t care at all.
- When dry peel off the tape.
- Paint the letters on and let dry.
- Play !
Some ways we have played with these dolls :
- Put them in a bag and discover them one at a time.
- Play with them in the doll house.
- Hide them in the family room and go on a hunt to find them.
- Count them.
- Make them kiss . My daughter grabs them , makes them kiss then I ask which two are kissing and she tells me. Not a bad game !
Alphabet for Starters Activity Board Books
ABC, Baby Me! by Susan B. Katz is a great Alphabet book for babies and toddlers. My daughter grabbed it from the board book cart at the library today and started chanting ” ead, ead, ead!” right away. I was so delighted and so was she as we flipped all the pages to see babies and parents in every day situations from A to Z. The illustrations are sweet and soft and inviting for little readers.
Flora McDonnell’s ABC by Flora McDonnell is a great board book for babies through the toddler years. It couldn’t be a simpler book but the vivid illustrations and the very deliberate limited number of objects per page is perfect for our youngest readers. Each page has two items for each letter and that was the perfect amount to point out with my daughter who is 20 months. It kept her attention but didn’t overwhelm her.
Winnie-The-Pooh’s ABC Book Inspired by A.A. Milne is a simple book that will be a hit with Winnie-the-Pooh fan in your house. There is nothing extra special about the writing in this book but it’s cute, simple, and filled with illustrations from the original Winnie-the-Pooh.
Tara says
What a wonderful idea! I am pinning this to my preschool board to make for my daughter this summer. Thanks!
Gina says
What a cute and easy craft for letter recognition! Sharing on my facebook page! Love it!
Cathy @ NurtureStore says
Love these Allie – what a great idea.
Isil says
These are just beautiful and a very creative way to learn the ABCs.
Jennifer says
Cute! Where did you get those wooden clothespins with the blunt ends?
admin says
Micheal’s
Mel says
Wal-mart has them too! 🙂 Love this idea! Plan on making these for my classroom and my grand daughter for Christmas! Thanks for the wonderful idea!
Allison McDonald says
You are welcome!
Christine Watt says
I love this idea, but I’m having trouble finding the clothes pins like the ones shown here. Where did you find these? I can’t find any that are flat on the bottom.
Thanks!
admin says
Got them at Micheal’s – do you have one close by?
Natasha says
This is another fantastic creative post from you. I love all of your ideas. Thank you for your creativity and your passion to share. I am truly a grateful new mom!
admin says
Thanks Natasha !
Sleeping Mom says
I totally agree that filling your home with print-rich materials is key to encouraging literacy. I still credit our alphabet magnetic letters on the fridge for really encouraging my toddler to learn his alphabet. He started off by identifying the sounds each letter makes, until he was able to say the letters themselves. We also have an alphabet rug, alphabet magnetic links, alphabet blocks…
He is now into identifying certain words like “stop” that we see on stop signs, and it’s amazing to see him continue to “get it” when it comes to literacy.
inès says
je viens de découvrir votre blog , elle est superbe !!! bravo!!
vos idées sont épatantes!! vous m’avez découvert de vos superbes activités merci a vous!!
admin says
Merci Ines!
Je ne suis pas un très bon écrivain en français mais je peux le lire et comprendre. J’espère que vous continuer à trouver mes idées utiles. Merci!!
maryanne @ mama smiles says
I love these! Think I’ll make a set for my daughter’s third birthday 🙂
Megan @ CoffeeCupsandCrayons says
I love these as much as the handwriting stencil! Such a perfect alphabet manipulative for little ones. This is great project for my oldest to make for her little sister. I am definitely seeing a trip to the craft store in my future this weekend. 🙂
Keitha says
Love those peg dolls!
Anna @ The Imagination Tree says
CUTENESS!!!
Heidi19 says
I love the idea and it look so cute! This is a great way to get your kids attention to read the alphabet. That is why i’m so excited to try this for my son! Thanks for sharing this to us.
Ande Pena says
We made these over the weekend and they are a HIT!! We incorporated the add’l letters in the Spanish alphabet. When I posted the pics to my page, I added the link back to here. This is such a great idea-THANK YOU!
I don’t know how to post pics directly on to here but I would love to share 🙂 so I am going to try and add the link to my photo album under website…
Mallory says
These are great! My daughter would love them! Now… can you make an extra set or two and post them on etsy for me? 🙂 I’ll buy!!!
admin says
That’s not a bad idea – hmm if only I had a few extra hours or a house elf ;P
Sheila says
I will use this in my preschool class and share with the other teachers. Thanks for the idea
Jess says
Great idea! Thanks for sharing…
Kellie says
I love this idea!! I might even have clothes pins stashed somewhere in my craft bins. Score! 🙂 Thanks for sharing.