Thursday, March 24, 2011

Fairy Dust



























I looked up a recipe for homemade glitter at http://www.theideabox.com/Homemade_Glitter.html. It turns out you can add a few drops of food coloring to salt, and then bake at 350 degrees for about ten minutes. The glitter doesn't smell very good, but it is pretty (just not as shiny as real glitter). I gave each of my girls a small container of glitter and sent them outside to play with it like fairy dust. My three year old loved sprinkling it on grass, flower beds, trees, and even herself. She loved being a "fairy," and the older girls enjoyed it too. The salt dissolves, so it doesn't matter where it gets sprinkled. It also vaccuums up well, which we discovered after my three year old fairy used it to spruce up a bit of her room. :o) The world can never have too many little girls with fairy dust!

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Spring Nest



Here's an idea that I got from Country Living Magazine. To make the nest, simply turn a bowl upside down and cover it with plastic wrap. Cover the bowl with shredded paper (a great way to reuse shredded documents)that has been dipped in paper mache paste. You can make the paste by mixing school glue with water, or you can mix flour and water (and you can throw in some glue for good measure with that mixture if you want to). You can look up exact measurements for the paste online, or you can do what I did, simply mix until you like the consistency. Allow the paper to dry overnight, then remove the nest and plastic wrap from the bowl. Carefully peel the plastic wrap away from the nest. Tadah! A homemade nest! My girls loved making these nests with me. They liked the squishy paste. You can put candy, plastic grass, plastic eggs, etc. in the nests. Emily came up with the idea to paint real egg shells for ours. She carefully cracked the shells at the top for our scrambled eggs. We then rinsed the shells, allowed them to dry, and painted them with acrylic paints. I positioned them upside down in my nest so they look whole, but you could also leave them with the cracked side up and make a little bird to put in it. There's lots of potential with this fun craft!

Monday, March 21, 2011

More Spring Crafts



I made these wall hangings by using a dry brush technique (putting a small amount of paint on your dry brush, then getting almost all of that paint off before painting your surface) on a piece of old cardboard. The creases in the cardboard make the board look old and worn, and the dry brush technique makes the cardboard look like a distressed piece of wood. I then put a variety of things in the center of my boards, and added stickers to spell Spring. I used wire coiled on the top for one hanger, and just used ribbon in the other three. You could glue a big flower in the center of one, real or dried. You could add anything springy that you have laying around your house! This is a simple "free" craft to make. Just use things lying around!

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Spring Wreath


I've been in a crafting mood since last week, so I decided to make some simple and inexpensive crafts to celebrate SPRING!!! Today's craft--a super fun foam flower wreath. I bought the foam flowers at Dollar Tree. They had the same type of foam flowers at Micheal's for five or six dollars (there may have been more flowers in the pack, but not five times more!). I also bought the foam flower/leaf stickers at Dollar Tree. The foam letters were in my craft drawer, but I'm sure you can buy them at Dollar Tree as well. I simply folded a piece of paper and stapled it to hold the SPRING letters. I stapled the wreath together, put flower stickers over the staples, and then used school glue to put Spring on. It took about ten minutes to throw together, and it was super fun. This would be a great kid craft too. It's light enough to hang with wall tack or tape (you may notice my tacky tape job on my wreath, which I'll be hiding in the back of the wreath soon... What was I thinking?) Foamy and fun! Cheap to boot! I have some other fun spring crafts coming soon...