Showing posts with label TP roll craft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TP roll craft. Show all posts

5.4.20

Stay Home and Easter Craft!

kids easter crafts

These are such strange and uncertain times.  Life for everyone has changed beyond measure, but the one thing we do have is time. For many of us that means an abundance of time at home with kids. Now obviously this can be both a blessing and a major challenge.. keeping little ones busy and doing something worthwhile isn't always easy, and that's where craft comes in.

Cutting, gluing, creating, painting and getting messy can be such a fulfilling way to spend time together. And you don't need shop bought craft supplies - some of the best stuff to craft with you probably have at home already, like cardboard tubes, boxes and egg cartons. Transforming everyday objects is when the magic happens!

And it's not just the kids who're occupied and using their imaginations. Getting a little lost in a craft project can be a perfect distraction for us too. A bit of craft therapy is a good thing at the moment.

It also helps to have a theme and a focus, with days stuck at home stretching ahead of us - so with Easter racing up, I've put together a collection of Easter crafts you might want to try - birds, trees, bunnies, fish, butterflies and flowers! Just click on the title for the full project.

Egg Carton bluebirds in an Easter tree

The little egg carton birds are a big favourite here, and these blue birds are a really simple to make version. Change the colour and size if you want, it's totally up to you. The same goes for the tree top - why not try a different shape?






Well, it doesn't have to be an egg holder, but any opportunity to sneak in some chocolate! This would make a lovely table place setting for Easter day. Make one per child, pop their name on a piece of paper and prop it in front of the ears. Hide a little treat inside.




REMEMBER TO HOLD ONTO YOUR EASTER EGG FOIL!!  I know that's sometimes tricky with eager, impatient little chocolate egg hunters, but there's plenty you can do with it, even the small bits!! The great thing about using foil to cover cardboard shapes is you can easily wrap the bits that go over the edge, underneath. This gives a really neat finish.






This is a good way to use up those smaller pieces of foil. Great for a picture collage or a shiny mobile.





easter craft


Such a bright and cheery craft - egg cartons are brilliant for making flowers. They make lovely gifts too.




5.2.18

Pop Hearts - crafts for kids



These pop hearts make a lovely gift and they're really easy to make, all you need is a toilet paper roll or some other kind of cardboard tube. We've left ours plain, but you could personalise them with a short message below the heart.

You will need:
TP roll
Pencil
Ruler
Scissors
Paint
Craft glue (optional)
Glitter (optional)
Coloured foil (optional)

1. Flatten the cardboard tube with your hand - press down along the sides, so you can see the creases.


2. Squeeze the tube back into shape, then line up the two creases you've just made, in the middle, and flatten again, pressing down on the sides.


3. While the tube is flat, use a ruler and pencil to draw a line across the tube, about 2cm from the bottom.


4. Use the scissors to cut down the two side creases to the pencil line.


5. Squeeze the tube back into shape, then line up the cuts you've just made in the middle, and press the tube flat again.


6. Draw half a heart on one side of the tube and take it right down to the pencil line, but don't bring it into a point here (or your heart will fall off..), leave about a cm.

7. Cut around your heart (younger makers may need some help cutting through the double card). To make it easier to cut out the strip at the side of the heart, once you've cut to the pencil line, bend the card out and snip it off. Repeat on the other side. Then squeeze your tube back into shape.


8. Paint the inside of the tube and everywhere else too, except for the heart. When the paint's dry, use the pencil to draw in the bottom tip of the heart.


9. You could go with the norm, and paint your heart red, (or any colour) - or cover it in a thin layer of glue, and sprinkle glitter over it. Or do both!


9. We decorated one of our hearts with some colourful tin foil kept from Christmas chocolates.


Cover the heart in a thin layer of glue and line up a corner of the foil with the pointy tip of the heart. Then carefully smooth the foil over the card. Cut away most of the excess, leaving some to tuck around the back.


Put some glue on the edges at the back, and mould the tin foil around the heart. If you don't have a big enough piece of foil, it would look good with a patchwork of different coloured pieces too.
Maybe keep some aside this Easter, though care and patience may be needed to get the foil off in one piece!





19.4.17

Curly wurly snakes!


Wrap them wherever you like!


These spirally snakes are sssssssimple to make and they're really good for scissor practice too.

You'll need:
2 toilet paper tubes (or a kitchen paper tube cut in half)
Paint
Paper
Craft glue
Glue stick
Plain paper
Yellow felt-tip or highlighter

1.  Paint stripes up one tube using any colours you like. It looks good if you keep to a set pattern, so if you paint yellow, green then blue do the same around the rest of the tube. Try to keep the stripes a similar size.
On the second tube, paint the same colour pattern around the tube, leaving a space near one end. Make the stripes a little thinner this time. Paint the bit you've left black, or whatever colour you'd like for your snakes tongue! Paint the inside of this end black too.



2. When the paint's dry, carefully cut the tube to make a spiral. Take your time and make small snips with the tips of the scissors. Don't make the angle too steep at the beginning - just a gentle rise. When you've been round once, the important thing is to keep the width of the spiral (your snake's body) the same all the way up. Keep checking to see if it looks right. This can be tricky and needs concentration but it's great scissor practice. If it helps, you could try drawing a spiral on first with a pencil, or, for younger makers, start it off for them, as this is really the trickiest part. Let them have a go at cutting the rest of the spiral. It doesn't matter if it's a bit wiggly!



3. Snip the end off so you have a nice straight bit to stick the head to.


4. Use a pencil to draw a diamond shaped head on your other tube ( make sure it's not too small)


5. Use sticky tape to attach it to the twisty body.



6. Cut out an eye shape from the spare tube. We tried two different shapes. Draw around it twice on some plain paper and colour in with a yellow felt-tip pen or a highlighter. Add a black pen line down the middle. Cut them out and use a glue stick to glue them to the head.




7. Cut a thin strip from the black end of the tube for your snake's tongue. Straighten off both ends and cut a 'V' in one of them.



8. Use sticky tape or glue to stick the tongue to the back of the head. Add two black nostrils and any other detail you like. Now your snake is ready to explore!