One of my biggest problems when painting with my children is the paints either spilling or getting mixed up.
We recently started using egg cartons to divide the paints up and it has been quite effective. I put a squirt of each colour in to the bottom of the cups and then the kids can use the paints. I make sure that there is a container of water. So far we have avoided mixing the colours up, and this is after the children had been painting for almost 40 minutes uninterrupted.
At home with little people all day gives me the chance to explore different activities. We have a craft cupboard full of shoe boxes of useful items to inspire craft. This blog is dedicated to the adventures we have with our magical cupboard of fun and the renewal of my ability to see a cardboard roll morph into a tree, binoculars or bracelets.
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Hand Print Art
Time to make another set of canvas art. This time, since I found 4 small canvases in my cupboard, it is going to be 4 hand prints. One for each child.
We painted the canvases in 4 different colours and then used hands to put a print in the middle of it. All that is left is to sign a name down the bottom of each canvas and put a date on it. Maybe one day my children will look back at these prints and be able to compare how much they have changed/grown.
We painted the canvases in 4 different colours and then used hands to put a print in the middle of it. All that is left is to sign a name down the bottom of each canvas and put a date on it. Maybe one day my children will look back at these prints and be able to compare how much they have changed/grown.
Magnetic Peg Planes
In our house our fridge is our noticeboard. We stick notes, invitations and artwork up on the fridge because this is the central location here. We all congregate around the kitchen while I am cooking. We come and go through the kitchen multiple times a day, so it is really the ideal place to display information. I finally decided to re-make our tacky magnets from our local MP.
We made some peg planes to stick on magnets and use to hold our artwork up in style. I did discover that my boys don't know what bi-planes are. We did have to go and visit the War Memorial to confirm that there really are planes with two main wings, one on top of the other.
Gingerbread houses 2012
This year we decided to change the recipe we used to make our gingerbread houses and make the gingerbread houses much smaller. We found that the bigger ones look prettier and can fit more decorations on them, but that the children just east all the lollies instead of eating the gingerbread. This recipe is one that the children like eating, so I was hopeful it would be more successful.
125g margarine
1/2 cup of Caster Sugar
1 egg yolk
2 cups of plain flour
3 teaspoons of ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon white pepper
1 teaspoon of bi-carb soda
1/4 cup of golden syrup warmed for 20 seconds in the microwave
-beat butter and sugar until creamy
-add egg yolk and mix thoroughly
- sift flour, ginger, pepper and bi-carb soda together and then add to the butter mixture along with the golden syrup. This should bring the dough together into a thick stick ball of dough
- knead dough on lightly floured surface and roll out to a 1/2cm thickness
-cut the house pattern out of the dough and bake in the oven for 10-15 minutes or until golden brown.
Makes 1 house and a few tiny biscuits to taste test.
I used the computer to make house shapes to print out so I could use them as templates for cutting out my gingerbread house pieces.
It is a good thing that royal icing can make up for our wonky house pieces!
The children had a lovely time decorating the houses and then eating them.
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