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Showing posts with label kid stuff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kid stuff. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Just for Fun

 

Jay and I made this video for the kids yesterday. There’s a stop-action display at the children’s museum in Bangor and I’ve been wanting to do my own since we went there last week!! The kids directed the story and hubby and I did all the work, ahem, the rest. I should have taken the time to download some kid music, but the children were getting impatient to see their work. I hope you enjoy!  By the way, the story is that Rainbow Dash discovers a treasure map, brings it back to her friends and they go and find the treasure. Then the evil pirates swoop in and take it away from them at swordpoint. I have a feeling there is going to be a sequel. These ponies don’t take crap like that lying down!

P.S. Amelia was adamant that the ponies be properly dressed for their video debut. She’s so cute :)

 

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Flower Fairies

Fairy collage 

First I have to apologize for the tutorial photos. It was a rainy day, Jilly had just woken up from a nap and I was rushing to make the fairy before she started crying. So the pictures are badly lit and somewhat blurry, but you can still see what I’m doing, so I’m just going to go with it!

supplies

Pipe cleaners, faux flowers, embroidery floss, scissors (My scissors are from Cutco so they’re really sturdy. You may want to grab some wire snips if you don’t think your scissors are up to the job.), tulle, thread, fine-tip sharpie marker, wood beads (mine came in an assortment pack from Walmart and had just the perfect bead for the head!) bells (optional), hot glue gun, and embellishments. I used buttons, sequins, multi-colored rhinestones and some little papery flowers that came in a scrapbook kit.

cut pipe cleaner

Choose a pipe cleaner for the body. Cut a third of it off the end. (that will be the arms) Bend the remaining piece in half, that will be the body and legs.

wrap embroidery floss

Wrap a length of embroidery floss around your fingers and snip the end off. Six or seven times should do it. I really loved how the variegated thread looks.

tulle and thread

Take a length of tulle (mine were in strips from another project and worked just right for this.) about 2 inches wide and 20 inches long. Fold it in half, then in half again.

double up and stitch through

Thread your needle and tie a knot in the end of the thread. Run it through the middle of the folded tulle.Pull the thread tight, run the needle back through the other way, and tie a knot to secure.

trim up

Trim the excess off the ends and pull the layers apart a bit. Wings!

bent pipe cleaner, seperated flower petals

Strip the petals off a faux flower.

all the bits and pieces

Assemble all your bits and pieces for the fairy.

insert thread

Place the loops of embroidery floss in the fold of the body portion of pipe cleaner.

add a bead

Push a wooden bead up the legs so it is up pinching the hair into place. It’s fine if the hair stands straight up, we’ll ‘style’ it later. If your bead is a tad too big just use a bit of hot glue to hold it in place under the hair.

 add arms

Place the arms behind the body and twist each side 360 degrees around the body.

twist arms together and bend in hands

Pinch the ends up, then fold them in again to make hands that don’t have a sharp edge.

push petals on and up

Thread the petals of the flower up onto the fairy. Make sure to alternate the petal spacing a bit so your fairy is decently clothed.

thread on bells

Thread two small bells, or 1 big one, up the fairy’s legs right up to the petals. This will help hold the petals in place, otherwise they have a tendency to fall back down. I also used some of the other wooden beads in my assortment when I ran out of bells. Then fold her feet up the same way you did the hands. No sharp edges, please!

dab hot glue on back of fairy

Pinch the petals of the skirt down and out of the way and put a dab of glue on her back to attach the wings to.

add wings and sequin

After you attach the wings you can add a little embellishment, I used a sequin.

glue jewel to front

Flip your fairy over and add some embellishment to her ‘bodice’, I used a large rhinestone.

trim hair

Use your scissors to snip the loops of her hair in half.

glue around back of head

Hold her wings out of the way and run some hot glue around the base of her hair. Carefully push her hair down over the glue to secure.

push down hair

Repeat with the sides of her head.

draw on face

Use your sharpie to give her some eyes and a mouth. Be careful not to touch her face after this. The sharpie will set after about an hour, but I’d wait at least 24 before giving her to a small child who might be heartbroken if her fairy’s face gets smudged!

add hat 

Use some embellishments to create a little hat. I used a paper flower, button and a sequin.

 bend up feet

Fluff her wings back up and adjust her skirt if you need to, and voila! A beautiful, little flower fairy!

      flower fairies             

Then go crazy and create a flock of fairies! I really loved the ones made from hydrangea petals! They look like little blue tutus! And don’t forget to make use of the greenery that comes on the stem, and the plastic whatchamacallit at the base of the flower petals. (I’m sure it has a name, I just don’t know what it is and am too lazy to go look it up.)

For our Fairy fun headquarters, click here!

Fairy Favors!

fairy play dough

I made this Fairy Play Dough for Amelia’s Fairy birthday party. It turned out so well! It’s hard to tell by the picture, but the play dough is completely sparkly! I found the recipe from Homemade by Jill via Skip to my Lou. (Pop over for a great tutorial!) This is such a great recipe, the play dough stays nice for weeks! The batch I made three weeks ago is still soft and supple!

 

Fairy Play Dough

Adapted from Homemade by Jill

1 cup flour

1 cup water

2 teaspoons cream of tartar

1 teaspoon oil

1/4 CUP of salt

food coloring

3/4 cup of glitter

Combine flour, water, cream of tartar, oil and salt. in a medium pan over medium heat.

Stir continuously until the mixture forms a ball around the spoon.

Remove from heat and dump dough onto a clean surface.

When it’s cool enough to handle, shape into a ball and cut the ball into quarters.

Use the food coloring to color the dough. Tip: if you rub a bit of shortening into your hands before you start kneading the coloring into the dough, it will decrease the likeliness of you staining your hands! Cool, huh!

Once it’s colored roll the dough flat and sprinkle the glitter over it.

Fold the dough over itself, sealing the glitter inside.

Continue kneading until all the glitter is incorporated.

Store in airtight containers.

 

favor bags

I rounded out the rest of the favor bag with glittery fun foam stickers, a ring pop, and a few items scored from the Dollar Spot at Tarjay: candy buttons and stickers, Tinkerbell socks, and a glittery pencil.

For our Fairy fun headquarters, click here!

Fun and Games

fairyland sign

Amelia was turning four and I decided to go with games and activities that didn’t necessarily have a ‘winner’. It seems like with kids this age that, even if every kid wins a game, someone is broken-hearted at some point. So we planned things accordingly. (And only ended up with one meltdown! My overexcited five year old! Ah well.)

IMG_5572(2)

I learned from the mistakes I made at my son's party and made a little itinerary for Amelia’s party so I would have it clear in my mind what was happening next. I printed them out so that I could get a little assistance from the other parents in herding the 14 children we had attending the party in the right direction. Worked like a charm!

I did run into a little traffic jam right at the beginning of the party when all the kids were arriving and needing attention and help with their costumes all at once. I need to plan a little better for that next time!

So the kids arrived and got all dressed up in Fairy gear. While they were getting ready they got to dig in a sandbox for beads to make necklaces with. I wanted to use a kiddie swimming pool but the only ones they had at the store were just way too big. So I just used an under-the-bed storage tote. I tucked a bedsheet in it and under the edges and just poured the sand into that.

fairy sand box

When everyone was ready we followed a trail of fairy dust (glitter) into the Enchanted Fields.

Amelia Fairy

We have a large field next to our house.

Finding the fairy trail

Jay spend hours out there mowing a path all through it. It had loops and swirls and dead ends.

starting the trail

The grass is SO TALL that you absolutely can’t cheat!

following the leader

I was so excited for this part of the party! The kids loved it!!

fairies

Amelia rounding up her straggling troops.

entering the grotto

The trail let to the Fairy Grotto, which was decorated with 40+ paper fairies and some pretty bunting.

reading the note

They found this note, and had a fun scavenger hunt!

scavenger note

     found a stick!  

Amelia found one of the sticks. All the scavenger hunt items were glittered within an inch of their little lives!

fairy freeze tag

Then we came back to the yard for a game of Fairy Freeze Tag. I gave one fairy a soft wand (so we wouldn’t have any accidental injuries!) and another fairy a bottle of pixie dust. The fairy with the wand tagged someone and then that child had to hold still until they were sprinkled with pixie dust by the rescue fairy!

   IMG_5593 

Then we went inside and the fairies made their own bottles of pixie dust. (Colored sand with glitter mixed in)

IMG_5618 

This gave me time to get the Feast Table ready!

food table (2)

For our Fairy fun headquarters, click here!

Costume Party

As all the children arrived for Amelia’s birthday party we got the dressed up in their fairy gear! I had it set out and ready to go on the ‘costume table’, later to be known as the ‘Fairy Feast Table’.

costume table (3)

I loved how this table turned out! I borrowed the garland idea from Prudent Baby. I used all different sized butterflies (I just cut them out freehand), but next time I would stick with the smaller ones. The big ones sorta flopped around more than I’d have liked. But I thought it looked pretty! I covered the table with brown craft paper like I always do, but I trimmed it close around the edges before taping it down with packing tape. Then I looped lengths of crepe paper all the way around and covered the edge with another piece. I love the skirty look it has! And it was cheap and easy, always a big plus in my book! Next time instead of individually taping each piece of crepe paper on I am just going to run lengths of double sided tape around the edge and stick the crepe paper to that. I figured that out halfway through and it made it go a LOT faster! (Made the post-party cleanup easier too!)

streamer door2

The girls each got a tutu. (Lengths of multi-colored tulle knotted around a long ribbon. It tied in the back so I didn’t have to worry about waist measurements.)

headbands

And pixie ears on a flower crown.(I found the pattern for the ears at Make and Take. But my kids had a hard time keeping them on so I just cut two little slits in them and threaded them onto the headbands.)

Fairy wands

A sparkly wand! (Tutorial coming soon, I promise!!!)

wings2

And fairy wings! I ordered these from Oriental Trading Company and painted them with acrylic paint. Of course, the birthday girl’s got an extra splash of glitter!

IMG_5569

Here’s the Birthday Girl!

Amelia in costume 

And a few of her fairy friends!

elf ears

We had almost as many boys attending the party as girls, so of course they needed costumes too! They received their wands and wings, and they also got pixie ears. . . .

Elf hats (2)

Pixie hats. . . .

elf pouches

And elf pouches!

IMG_5582(2)

Aren’t they cute!

For our Fairy fun headquarters, click here!