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Archive for June, 2011

3D Paper Lizard {Craft Camp}

I am excited to be offering 30 days of fun crafts to keep kids active and entertained this summer! You won't want to miss a day of these fun crafts for kids from some amazing bloggers! Please be sure to pay them a visit!

Larissa, from mmmcrafts

Hey, you Craft Campers! I'm Larissa Holland at mmmcrafts, and I love to make stuff. You can find all kinds of coffee-fueled patterns and tutorials here on my blog, and also creative stuff for sale in my etsy shop.

I'm so happy that Cindy invited me to be a part of Craft Camp again this year. I'm doing another paper craft this time, a cool 3D Lizard Gift Tag, tailor-made for older, scissor savvy kids. It combines the card and gift tag all in one! If you have some birthday parties to attend this summer, this is a sure fire way to make your gift a stand-out on the gift table, plus have some crafty fun to boot. As a bonus, the lizard makes a fun paper toy for after the party.

Here's what you'll need to make one:

  • This PDF template printed at full size on an 8.5 x 11 inch piece of colored card stock (template is shown already cut out in the photo above)
  • Scraps of white and various colors of card stock for the details
  • Scissors or craft knife
  • Gel glue and a toothpick
  • Circle punches of various sizes.  I used a standard hole punch, a one inch starburst, a 5/8 inch circle and a 1/2 inch circle.
  • Gel pen or marker for greeting

Plus the following items that are optional but certainly add pizazz:

  • Pinking scissors
  • Pop dots

1) Cut out the lizard with scissors or a craft knife (if you use a craft knife, BE CAREFUL, and be sure to cut it on a protective mat. You might want to get Mom or Dad involved in this step). Once your lizard has been liberated from the page, turn your craft knife blade* to the wrong side (not the sharp side) and score along the line that runs down the middle of the lizard, all the way from the nose to the tip of the tail. Then score across the neck, and across where each leg meets the body. Did I say BE CAREFUL? I did? I'm glad you are being careful, because that blade is sharp.

*No craft knife for scoring? Use the tip of a straight pin instead.

Score with the dull side, not the sharp. You don't want to do lizard surgery.

2) You are ready to embellish your lizard! Grab a scrap piece of paper from the recycle pile and squeeze a blob of gel glue on it. You will use a toothpick that is dipped in the glue to apply the glue to the small pieces for the next steps. You don't need to cover the entire piece with glue for it to stick just fine. Less is better, because you don't want glue squishing out from under your pieces. Ew.

Hmm. You can't see the blob of glue on the scrap very well. But trust me, it's there.

3) Make the eyes. Punch out two larger circles and two smaller circles. I used the 5/8 inch punch for the larger, and the 1/2 inch punch for the smaller. Glue them together like so:

Punch two one-inch circles. I used a starburst, but a plain circle works too.  Use a pop dot or a dab of glue to add the smaller eyes to the larger circles like so:

4) Now add the eyes to the lizard's head with either pop dots or dabs of glue.

5) Punch out different sized circles in various colors and glue them on (using the toothpick method) to decorate your lizard. Be sure to leave some room on the tail to write your greeting:

6) If you have some pinking scissors, cut out a shape like this for teeth and glue it underneath the lizard's head so that the pointy parts just peek out, then repeat for the other side:

7) Cut out a small rectangle and snip out a triangle from the end to form a lizard tongue and glue it under the head, like this:

8) Summon up your A-Game penmanship and write a birthday greeting along the tail. Be sure to tell them who it is from! There's room on the other side of the lizard if you'd like to write a note.

9) Now comes the fun, bendy part. Gently crease your lizard all along the curved score line. Start from one end and work your way to the other. If it is too hard to bend or it keeps bending in the wrong places, you may need to lay it flat and score it again. Bend the neck and legs along their scores. That's it! You are done.

10) Now all you have to do is hook the lizard's top leg over the edge of the gift bag. You can secure the leg inside the bag with a piece of tape if you are worried about it getting knocked off:

Show off your work. I'd love to see your lizard tags in my flickr group!

What, you don't need a lizard gift tag? You can still make a 3D pet lizard and place him/her in a terrarium. Have fun making an environment for your lizard to enjoy by adding moss and rocks. Print the template at different sizes to assemble a whole family of lizards!

Mom and Dad: You can young this craft down for little kids by doing the following:

  • Cut out and score the lizard for them, or skip the scoring and keep it flat.
  • Let them use markers or crayons to color on eyes and dots/stripes instead of using punched paper.
  • Skip the tongue and teeth.

I hope you enjoy the tutorial! If you are ready for a more challenging paper project, check out my 3D project from last year. Cindy, thanks for another great summer crafting series!

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Sewing with kids {Craft Camp}

Be prepared for a creative summer with these wonderful crafts for children. Just click the button in the left sidebar for ideas to make your summer fun and full of  crafty memories!


Hello, I'm Mel from One Crafty Mumma (in Tasmania) and with the lovely assistance from my daughter (Bella) I'm going to share a children's sewing project with you today.  Both of my children have been stitching from a very early age and although my 15 year old boy has moved onto other hobbies, Bella is still a very keen stitcher/creator and really enjoys designing her own patterns for simple softies and projects.

How to make a simple softie

a perfect first sewing project for children

The softie below is her very first pattern that she created from a sketch - I've included the instructions and also a PDF for the pattern, but your own child might enjoy creating their own design.  It's a simple process of drawing up a design on paper and then breaking down the elements to pattern pieces so it can be stitched up.  Felt is a great medium for children to work with because it doesn't fray.

Material list for a simple softie

♥ Felt

♥ Needle

♥ Embroidery cotton

♥ Scissors

♥ Buttons

♥ Stuffing

♥ Printable PDF - 

Free Softie pattern download

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If you're creating Bella's softie, simply print out the PDF file (found in the material list above) and follow the cutting instructions listed on the PDF. Next you'll need to stitch on the buttons, lips and scales, using a simple running stitch.

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Stitch the softie together, catching the legs as you go and then stuff.  Sew a family of them by upsizing and/or downsizing the pattern :)

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A very big thank you to Cindy for letting us join in the with the craft camp fun! Happy stitching everyone. xox

Paper Cone People {Craft Camp}

I am excited to be offering 30 days of fun crafts to keep kids active and entertained this summer! You won't want to miss a day of these fun crafts for kids from some amazing bloggers! Please be sure to pay them a visit!

Blair, from Wise Craft writes........

Easy Paper Cone People

(or animals, aliens, drones, or mythical creatures)

Supplies for Cone Paper Craft

- Paper (we used plain printer paper, but you could use construction paper or fancy scrapbooking paper.
- Something round to trace circles (I round coaster, or a coffee mug bottom would be a good size)
- Pens, Markers, Pencils
- Scissors
- Any interesting trim from around the house. We rummaged around and found all sorts of things... pipe cleaners, ribbons, small round stickers, decorative tape.

How to make Paper Cone People

1. Trace around your round shape to make circles on your white (or chosen) paper. Cut out.

2. Now you're going to cut out a radius, any size you want, into each circle (cut more away to make taller, skinnier cones, and less away to make shorter, fatter cones). Fold each into a cone shape and secure with a piece of tape, or glue with a glue stick.

3. And from this point onward, your imagination takes over! We did a princess (with a piece of ribbon coming out of the top of the cone), a king (cut the top of the cone into a pointy crown), a fire-breathing dragon ("fire" is actually orange pipecleaners poked through the paper from inside the cone), and a knight (we covered a piece of scrap paper and covered it with tape for a shield).

Made By You Monday

Get  prepared for creative summer with these wonderful crafts for children. Just click the button in the left sidebar for ideas to make your summer fun and full of memories!

Now it is time to link up your crafty goodness! Show us what you have been making. Please don't forget to link back! --- a text link at the bottom of your post, or link somewhere on your blog is okay!

Please link up only your own projects, and link to the specific post, not your blog home page. No Etsy shops or giveaways, please!

If you would like to participate you will need to paste the code below at the top or bottom of your post or you may simply place a link back to Skip to my Lou at the bottom of your post like this: Skip to my Lou to show you are participating in Made By You Mondays!

    If you are placing a Skip to my Lou button, copy the code below in the box and paste where you can edit the html in your blog post.


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Kaleidoscope Tutorial {Craft Camp}

I am excited to be offering 30 days of fun crafts to keep kids active and entertained this summer! You won't want to miss a day of these fun crafts for kids from some amazing bloggers! Please be sure to pay them a visit!


This is Mandy from Little Birdie Secrets, and we're so excited to be a part of Skip To My Lou's craft camp again this year! Our kids are still in school another week, but I can already hear that familiar summer refrain, "I'm bored, Mom!" Craft Camp is definitely my go-to list for summer boredom busters!

My boys are very curious, so this is a cool craft that can also be a physics lesson.

Make Your Own Kaleidoscope


Supplies for DIY Kaleidoscope:

*Plastic report cover (mine came in a pack of 6, which will make at least 12 kaleidoscopes!)
*Empty paper towel tube (toilet paper rolls are too short!)
*Plastic wrap
*Wax paper
*Shiny objects (transparent are best--beads, plastic confetti, etc.)
*Paper cutter
*1/4" hole punch
*Rubber band
*Pencil, scissors, tape
*Patterned paper or construction paper

How to make a kaleidoscope

1. Cut a piece of report cover 11" x 5". Measure and score a line at 1 3/8". I used my paper cutter to make a perfect score line.

Score another line 1 3/8" from the first line, and another at 1 3/8" from that line. Then cut the end off 1/2" from that line. Your plastic should look like this.

2. Fold your plastic into a triangular shape, using the 1/2" section to overlap. Tape down the flap to secure your triangular tube.

3. Trace one end of your paper towel tube on your patterned paper or card stock. Cut it out.

Punch a hole in the middle of it.

Tape it onto one end of your paper towel roll.

4. Insert your triangle into your paper towel roll.

5. Cover the other end with a square of plastic wrap. Push the plastic wrap inside the triangle to create a shallow cup.

6. Collect shiny beads, shapes, buttons, etc.  Transparent objects work best.

Fill your cup with shiny objects.

7. Cover the end with a square of wax paper. Secure with a rubber band.

8. Cover the tube with patterned paper or colored construction paper. Secure with tape.

Hold your kaleidoscope up to the light and turn to see different shapes and colors dance before your eyes! Then have a good talk about how light reflects off the sides of the triangle and they'll be learning, too. Enjoy!


© 2009 Skip To My Lou