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Favorite Crafts To Do With Your Child

Do you have ideas for Us? Please tell us!

Activities usually don't have to be finished all at once. If your child gets bored, stop the activity and resume it later. Make sure your child stays well-hydrated, and try to not direct or correct everything he or she does. Set up the activities so that if there's a mess, it's not a big deal.

An old pillowcase is an inexpensive way to make a protective paint smock for your young child. Just cut slits on the sewn end for the head and arms.

bulletA string of thanks. Every Thanksgiving, we cut out thin strips of paper and we write down on each strip something we are thankful for. Then we make a chain with the strips, fitting each inside the other and stapling them to hold them. We drape our paper chain around the house to remind ourselves every day how lucky we are!
bullet Wool Dolls
bullet3-D paintings. We like to paint pictures, and then turn them into 3-D art by adding with white glue several strips of colorful fabric, pieces of wool, or leftover fabric used for weaving loops. The resulting artwork is pretty cool.
bulletMake picture frames using small branches that you tie together at four corners. Have the child decorate a piece of construction paper (pre-cut to fit the frame), using paint (perhaps for a handprint), beads, glitter, fabric, buttons, etc. Then glue the frame to the paper. The picture can be hung on the wall, or the child can write a family member's name at the bottom and use it as a place setting.
bulletMake a window collage with colored tissue paper and clear contact paper. Have your child arrange pieces of tissue paper on the sticky side of some contact paper, then cover the design with another sheet of contact paper. Tape the collage onto a sunny window.
bulletMake an ice sculpture (freeze water in an old milk carton and allow older children to chisel with hammer and screwdriver).
bulletMake paper chains -- or paper fans -- with construction paper, scissors and tape. Decorate the paper before cutting or folding.
bulletTie-dye shirts, shorts, underwear, socks or scarves.
bulletAllow your child to arrange fresh or fake flowers in a vase.
bulletStart a diary for your child. Even younger children can thrill to the idea that their words are being written down. You can make a special diary by gluing a picture of your child on the front of a blank book or binder.
bulletDecorate some hard-boiled eggs. When it's time to discard the eggs, you can take the shells off, smash them up, and glue them onto paper for a pretty picture. (Don't let your child eat raw eggs, or hard-boiled eggs that have been decorated with anything other than food coloring and vinegar -- or eggs that have been left out on the counter.)
bulletMake greeting cards for relatives, using construction paper, scissors, glue, sparkles, buttons, beads, markers -- whatever your child's heart desires.
bulletChristmas Balls
bulletModeling Dough
bulletPlacemats
bulletGraham Cracker House
bulletWind Chimes
bulletWhat to Do With All That Artwork
bulletFun in the Snow
bulletGelatin Jiggles
bulletMake sock snowmen (fill old socks with leftover material, sew together and decorate).
bulletMake bubble pictures (pour bubble solution into a bowl, add drops of paint and stir. Let your child blow bubbles onto paper to make a colorful bubble-splatter picture!).
bulletGlue candy hearts - or some other type of candy - all around a painted wooden picture frame. Place a photo of your child inside and send to relatives as a gift.
bulletMake necklaces or bracelets with stretch string and beads or colored pasta.
bulletPaint wooden recipe boxes and put your favorite recipes inside.
bulletOlder children can write a book. They can write poems or stories and draw illustrations on several pages, then make a front and back cover and bind the pages together. The book can have a theme, or just be a collection of favorite writings. The pages can be laminated, and the back can be bound, glued, hole punched and laced with ribbon, or bound with plastic comb binding.
bulletConsider allowing older children to take apart broken appliances and see if they can fix them (don't do this unless you're reconciled to never getting the appliance back in working shape. Also, make sure all dangerous parts, such as batteries, have been removed.).
bulletMake a life-size painting or self-portrait with butcher paper, newsprint, or two lengths of shelf paper taped together. Have the child lie down and draw around him or her. Or simply allow the child to paint as desired.
bulletMake a butterfly by folding a paper in half, placing your hand on the fold and drawing around the fingers. Cut out (leaving the fold intact) and decorate.
bulletKeep a special craft box handy for your children to dive into whenever they like. Keep it stocked with paper, scissors, glue, washable markers, crayons, paints, pencils, erasers, beads, stencils, or whatever else you can think of. You can keep an extra box of items that require adult supervision, such as glitter (children LOVE glitter), staplers, or hole punchers.
bulletFind large plastic needles at a craft store and allow your preschoolers to "sew." Punch all along the edge of construction paper, and show your child how to put yarn, ribbon, or string in the needle and then "sew" along the holes. You can make hearts or other designs, and you can use this activity to make all sorts of special gifts for relatives.
bulletFill a divided craft box with several types of household items for building pictures: raisins, crushed pecans, coconut, potpourri, beads, licorice, beans, chocolate chips (keep out of the hands of little ones to protect them from choking).
bullet Sparkly Picture Frames.

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