Posts Tagged ‘kid’s’

Parasol Party Lights


You will need: Low temperature, LED Christmas lights, cocktail umbrellas and small cable ties. Click here for full instructions (Pdf)


You might also like:

Mosaic Solar Lights

Solar Fairy House

Flashing Xmas Dress

Easter Egg Hot Chocolate Dippers







Click here for full instructions (Pdf)


More of my party foods:

Mini Party Cups

Party Spoons

Coconut Xmas Tree

funfrugalmommy


Easter Baskets

Easter seems to have crept up on me this year. Suddenly I have too many projects and too little time to post them. So here are 2 projects crammed into one.
The first is a basket made out of a plastic soft drink bottle. An adult will need to assist in this project as it requires some fairly heavy duty cutting and a burning candle flame. I used the flame to heat the petals of the flower basket in order to keep them in place. This isn’t as difficult or dangerous as it sounds! You simply bend back the petal and slowly bring the folded part closer to the flame until it slightly buckles and stays in place. I then covered the basket with tissue paper and PVA, but you could also spray paint it for a faster finish.
Click here for full instructions (Pdf)


The next project is a quick and easy Easter Bunny face that doubles as a treat bag to store your eggs.

To make this bag, you will need 3 x paper plates, ribbon or string, a stapler and items to decorate the face. Click here for full instructions

More of my Easter crafts:

Easter Suncatcher

Easter Foam Eggs

Paper Plate Basket

funfrugalmommy A++

Beaded Bookmarks

Here is a simple and inexpensive homemade gift to add to a birthday or Christmas card. These bookmarks are small, flat and lightweight, making them perfect for posting with cards. As our school year is almost finished we will be making them for our teacher appreciation gifts.

To make a Beaded Bookmark you will need an assortment of decorative beads, ribbon, needle nosed pliers and wire. The wire needs to be thin enough to fit through the holes but thick enough to hold it’s shape. I used 0.7mm (0.26″). The thin end of the bookmark is designed to slip inside the spine of the book. For this section I used small, tubular beads. If you cannot find tubular beads, try using small round beads. This will produce a slightly bulkier bookmark. Click here for full instructions (Pdf)





Or words to that effect...


More of my gift ideas:

Decorated Jar

Decorated Jar

Decorated Jar


Butterflies & Baubles

Things are looking decidedly pink at the centre. The month of October 2011 is ‘Pinktober’ for breast cancer awareness. Following Pinktober we will be raising funds for The Centre for Cerebral Palsy. As their poster features pink butterflies, we decided to combine the two themes. For the hanging centrepiece I made a giant pink butterfly from cardboard, cellophane and sequins. I also decorated some plain Christmas baubles to suspend underneath the butterfly. I used garden polypipe to make the frame to hang the objects from. The frame is held together with duct tape and wrapped in light pink crepe paper streamer.


Faber Castell Glass Markers work on glass, plastic and other non-porous surfaces. Simply draw on the surface and, as the ink dries, the colour brightens. Great for small children as they are non-toxic and very easy to use. They also snap together with novelty connector lids – a fact I find less interesting, but one that my children think is ‘awesome’. Local readers: I found these at Kmart, but you could also try arts/craft/stationery stores.
More of my pink crafts:

Peg Butterflies

Party Spoons

Wacky Wigs

Tropical Island Trifles

Here is my take on the classic trifle. The ingredients are essentially the same, just recomposed to create a little tropical island in the sea. The island is a small jam fancy cupcake, surrounded by a sea of blue jelly, sitting on an ocean floor of custard. I made the palm tree by piping melted chocolate into a tree shape and then scattered green sprinkles on the fronds. Lastly I dusted the island with a teaspoon of crushed sweet biscuits to look like beach sand.
Click here for full recipe and instructions



You might also like:

Flower Pot Cakes

Mini Party Cups

Party Spoons


Classified: Mom

Cardboard Chandelier

Here’s how to turn 2 cereal boxes, 1 cardboard roll, 1 soft drink bottle and a few paperclips into:
The instructions for making this chandelier are fairly detailed, but here’s an overview:

    • The centre of the chandelier is a kitchen towel cardboard roll.
    • The chandelier arms and embellishments are made from cereal box cardboard, painted with black acrylic.
    • The teardrop ‘jewels’ dangling from the base are cut from a clear soft drink bottle.
    • The chains are linked paperclips.
    • I didn’t use any glue or staples in this project. The whole thing is held together with interlocking cuts into the cardboard. The paperclips link together and hang from the chandelier via holes punched into each piece.
    • Printable cutting templates are available on the instruction sheets.
    • Younger children will find these shapes too difficult to cut, so I have also provided a simpler version of the chandelier template (See the pink chandelier pictured below)

Click here for full instructions (Pdf)






Above: Cardboard Chandelier #2 - Simple(r!) Version


*NB. I am sure this goes without saying, but I will anyway. I do not recommend you try combining this project with real light globes. It is cardboard – it will catch fire – your house will burn down….

More of my cardboard crafts:

Chinese Lantern

 

Easter Suncatcher

Caterpillar

 

 

Candace Creations

IhookedupwithHoHlamespice

Simple Play Kitchen Renovation

I found some rather uninspiring melamine bookshelves at Red Dot. (I think I keep that place in business!) The shelves may have been dreary but their low price was truly exhilarating. With the ‘help’ of my children, we transformed them from this:

To this:


To make the sink, I traced the outline of a plastic container onto the top of the shelf and cut it out with a jigsaw, then slipped the container into the space. The container had a lip to stop it from falling through.
 
 
 
 

To make the taps and faucet, I found some garden reticulation parts that vaguely resembled the bits I needed. I screwed the ‘taps’ in and attached the plastic white button thingos that conceal screws – not sure of the name, but I found them at the hardware.
 
 
 
 

The hotplates are simply 4 circles of black plastic with red craft foam circles in the centre. The knobs are milk bottle tops. Like the taps, I attached them with screws and stuck on white buttons to conceal the screw.
 
 
 
 

The doors are 3mm MDF. I chose this to keep the costs down, but if I had my time over I’d probably spend more to get the thicker board. The 3mm warped a little when we painted it. It was also difficult to attach the hinges to such a thin board. Rather than complicated latches, I used sticky-back velcro to keep the doors shut.
 
 
 
 

The 3 tier bookshelf became the fridge/freezer.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

I found some carboard boxes that fit perfectly into the bottom shelves for storage. We painted the front of the box to match the doors.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

I have 2 mini muffin trays. Goodness knows why. The chances of me baking even one mini muffin = zero. So I donated one to the play oven. I screwed 2 pieces of pine to the interior sides of the oven so the tray sits in the middle as a sliding shelf.
 
 
 
 
 
 

I made the kitchen to fit perfectly along one wall of our cubby house. The kids enjoy it immensly, hence it is already covered in sand, leaves and sticks – as it should be. It really wasn’t terribly difficult to make – and I’m certainly no woodworking expert. Altogether the whole kitchen cost me about $70 (including the shelves)
 
 
 
 
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Lovely Crafty Home

Confessions of a Stay At Home Mommy

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Sequined Mirror

This idea was inspired by a mirror I saw on the very wonderful MeiJo’s JOY Blogspot In her design PC glued sequins to cardboard rolls. Here I have tried the same technique but used plastic mini shot cups to glue the sequins to. The mirror is a cheap vanity version I found at the discount shop. Conveniently, it already had double side foam tape on the back to stick it to the wall. Some of the shapes pictured are actually metallic confetti rather than true sewing sequins. Click here for full instructions (Pdf)

The mirror above has glitter glued into the base of the cups.



Thank you to PC for her clever design!

Peacock Cake

I would typically begin each post with a little blurb about how simple and speedy my crafts are. This one is neither of those! Standby for the project that took every ounce of my time, patience and ability to conceive and construct. This is the cake I made for my daughter’s 6th birthday party:

Subscribe to Jellyfishjelly to get the full instructions on how to make the Peacock Cake!

Have you noticed my fancy new email subscription box on the left hand side bar? I am currently in the process of switching from Feedburner Email service to AWeber to handle my email content. My RSS Feed will continue to go through Feedburner.
If you currently subscribe to my email newsletter via Feedburner your subscription will automatically be imported to AWeber and you will receive an email asking you to confirm the subscription. Once you confirm, you will receive a link to the instructions on how to make my Peacock Cake. Unless you click on the activation link in that email, you will not be added to the new newsletter service. This is because the new newsletter has a double opt-in confirmation feature enabled.
To all non members, I invite you to join my email club by providing your first name and email address in the email sign-up bar.

Thank you to all those that have or will sign up,
Miya