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Archive for June, 2010

Wooden Peg Dolls from Dollar Store Crafts

The thrifty and clever Heather from Dollar Store Crafts shows us how to make adorable wooden peg dolls.

Heather writes...

How to Make a Peg Doll Family

Peg people are cute, but they're so much cuter when they look like people you know! Make peg dolls that look like your family members, and your kids will have hours of fun pretending with them. Be sure to pick up an extra set, because they're so adorable you'll want to have a family all to yourself.

You can use old-fashioned wooden clothespins (find them in the craft or laundry section at your local dollar store), or buy peg doll blanks from your local craft store or on Etsy. . There are different shapes and sizes for males and females, adults, children, toddlers, and babies. I just used the male shape because that's all my craft store had. If you want more selection, definitely go the Etsy route.

Don't worry if your drawing/painting skills aren't as refined as you wish they were. Your children can recognize family members with just the barest suggestion of reality.

You Need:

  • A blank peg doll for each family member
  • Acrylic craft paint
  • Fine paintbrushes (at least one super fine brush is helpful)
  • Clear acrylic spray sealant
  • (optional) Primer

To Make:

1. Prime: If desired, paint pegs with primer before you begin. Allow to dry.

2. Sketch: If you want, while you are waiting for your primer to dry, you can sketch out ideas for how you will dress your people. I decided to paint clothes that we wear regularly. My sons were really excited when they saw little peg versions of themselves wearing clothes they recognized. You can sketch features lightly with pencil on the pegs.

3. Paint skin: Paint the heads and necks with skin colored paint. (Tip: It can be tricky to mix up a good skin color, so you might want to buy a bottle of paint that most closely resembles your skin color. Or not, if you don't care!)

4. Paint clothing: Paint bottom half of dolls (pants, shorts, skirts, etc.). Allow to dry, then paint shirts. To get a t-shirt collar look, paint all the way up to where the neck narrows. Allow to dry.

5. Paint hair. Paint hair base color and then allow to dry. Add highlights, parts, curls, etc. if desired.

6. Paint eyes: paint white dots for eyes. Allow to dry, then using the appropriate eye color, dot a teeny bit of paint on the white dots to make irises. When that is dry, dot an even smaller black dot in the middle of the iris. When the eyes are completely dry, add a white highlight dot (the smallest one yet) near the top of the irises.

7. Add detail: Now you can add detail to the clothing, hair, and faces. I added an upside-down 'V' on the front for pant legs in white, sleeves and arms on the sides of the body, and glasses on the people who wear them. I also painted a tractor on one boy-peg's shirt, and jammies for the other boy-peg's shirt. Oh, and don't forget the mouths!

Don't worry, if it doesn't come out the way you want, you can always re-paint it!

8. Seal it: When you're happy with your peg, spray it with clear acrylic sealer to keep the paint from rubbing off (as it inevitably will when kids play with it). You might want to skip this step if your kids are still young enough to put things in their mouths. Oh, and these are small enough that they could be choking hazards for those kids, too, so better just keep them away from the really-littles.

Alternately: Instead of paint, you can use fine-tipped markers to draw on your pegs. This is a great option for kids, since it's not quite as messy as paint.

Additional Resources:

Heather Mann is the mom of three boys under 4, and is the founder of DollarStoreCrafts.com, a daily blog about crafting on the cheap, and CraftFail.com, a community blog devoted to sharing our own crafting blunders.

for more summer crafts visit here.

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Friendship Bracelets from Scrumdilly-do!

Jessica from Scrumdilly-do! is here to share a wonderful tutorial on how to make friendship bracelets, the perfect summer craft! Don't forget to watch her video for extra help.

Jessica writes...

How to Make a Friendship Bracelet

Back in the 80s I was a summer camp counselor at the Los Angeles Zoo. We taught the kids all about the environment and how everything is connected. We taught them about all the odd animals that at the time people weren't super familiar with like meerkats and cassowaries. With all the zoo learning we also managed to throw in songs, fun and games. One of my favorite projects (since I never got to go to camp as a kid) was making friendship bracelets. So easy to make and quite addicting. I think I enjoyed making them more than the kids!

Since the 80s are back (again) and handicrafts are also back, let's make some friendship bracelets a la dilly-do! I've tweaked this tutorial only slightly so that smaller tots and can knot away. All you need is a good fat yarn!

Materials
*chunky yarn, a variegated color is perfect
*large safety pin
*scissors

You will need three strands of yarn to make this simple bracelet. Two of the strands will be long enough to tie around your wee one's wrist with an inch or two extra to make tying easier. The third piece will be two and a half to three times longer. Cut your strings.

Knot them together at one end and poke your safety pin through the knot. Attach the safety pin to your wee one's pant leg or the back of the sofa. Wherever it will be easier for your tot to work. You will want to attach it to something stable as it makes it easier and aids in providing tension to that your kidlet can make the knots without too much trouble.

To make this friendship bracelet, you will need to learn is one knot and only one knot. It is really super easy once you get the hang of it, but kinda hard to show you without me being there but I'll try. To start, grasp the two strands of equal length in one hand and pull them taught towards your tot so that they are perpendicular to your tot's belly, like a line pointing up and down.

The remaining strand of yarn (the long one) is going to be the single string you knot over and over again to create the bracelet. To begin, single the string at a diagonal away from the up and down string. You can angle it to either side, depending on how it feels in your tot's hands to wrap (right handed vs. left handed). From the diagonal line, about three or four inches out, bend the string so that it heads towards to other two. This will look like a pointed number four or backwards four if you're me.

Next, push the tail of the long string (the one that crosses over the other two) UNDER the other two strands at a diagonal that almost crosses the first diagonal. Look at all the pictures I hope they help. If they don't, I made a video as well.

Now that you have the weird four shape and two strands of yarn pointing at your tot (or you) and one extra long string out, over then under the whole mess, you are ready for the knot. To make the knot, grasp thee two shorter strands in one hand and pull taut towards your body. With the ither hand, grasp the looped, longer thread and pull up away from your body. You will then have a little not somewhere up near the top of the whole shebang. Continue with the process...make the number four, weave over under and then pull. When you get the hang of it, your knots will form quickly and create a neat twisty pattern that spirals around the two base strands. When you have enough bracelet to go around the wrist, stop making knots and tie of the whole thing. If you're feeling creative you can go for a loop top by looping the yarn into a noose-shape and then tying the other strands around it. If you want to go more traditional, you tie the bracelet onto your friend's wrist and hope it lasts forever! Happy knotting!

For more children's crafts visit Scrumdilly-do!

Find all the kid's crafts in the craft camp series by clicking on the Craft Camp button on my left sidebar.

How to make puffy paint from One Crafty Mumma

The craftiest mum out there, Melissa, from One Crafty Mumma is sharing her amazing recipe for puffy paint! Too cool!

Melissa writes...

How To Make Homemade Puffy Paint

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This is really cool and super quick/easy.  Combine the following in a little bowl:

  • 1 tablespoon self-raising flour
  • a few little drops of food colouring
  • 1 tablespoon salt
  • Then add some water to make a nice smooth paste.

    Paint away on a nice thick sheet of cardboard (if you don't have enough paint brushes use cotton buds - they work really well).

    Microwave the design on high for 10 - 30 seconds until the paint puffs and it's all nice and dry.  We did ours for 30 seconds.

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    Painting with chocolate for National Candy Month!

    June is National Candy Month and we are celebrating this yummy month by painting with chocolate! Please join me at AlphaMom to see how.

    Mom I’m Bored Jar from Somewhat Simple

    The fabulously talented blogger Steph from Somewhat Simple is here to save the day with a, "Mom I'm Bored Jar."

    Steph writes...

    By about the second week of summer, moms all over the world have one thing in common- we are all sick and tired of the age-old phrase, "Mom, I'm bored!"
    Last summer, my friend told me that every time her son said he was bored, she would give him a baby wipe and pick a room of the house and have him dust all the baseboards in that room! It didn't take him too long to find something else to do and stop telling his mom he was bored!
    I loved this idea and decided I needed to make my own go-to jar with lots of ideas on how to keep my kids busy. Some of the ideas are fun, some of the ideas are not, so before my kids decide to have me entertain them, they really need to decide if its worth it or not! They might get "Make cookies with Mom", or they might get "Pull weeds." They could get "Play in the sprinklers", or they could get "Do a chore of Mom's choice!"
    Here is how I made it:
    • I simply took a plain cookie jar- you could even recycle something from a spaghetti sauce jar or something you already have.

    • I filled the jar with strips of paper with printed "activities" on each of them. Here are the activities I used. Feel free to print them out and use them if you'd like! (click on the photos to enlarge)

    • I tied some ribbon around the neck of the jar for some added color. (Tip: You'll notice in the picture below, I tied only 1 thin ribbon around the entire neck of the jar so that the lid will still close and the ribbon won't be in the way. Then I tied other ribbon onto that 1 ribbon just at the top.)

    • Lastly, I added this image to the top of the lid.

    And that's it!
    The perfect Summer Boredom Buster!
    For more great ideas please visit Somewhat Simple. You also don't want to miss Steph's new blog, Crazy Domestic!
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    Find all the kid's crafts in the craft camp series by clicking on the Craft Camp button on my left sidebar.

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