Showing posts with label Story Telling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Story Telling. Show all posts

Monday, October 21, 2013

Spooky Tube People

This spontaneous Halloween activity was invented on the spot one day when Bean took out the black paint and some tubes and began to paint. "What can we make with this Mama?"...ummmmmmmmmm...I know - Spooky tube people!


These are easy peasy for little hands to make, and make great props for story telling play. To make you will need:

Black poster paint
Paint brush
Cardboard tubes (from toilet rolls)
Google eyes
PVA glue
Glue stick 
Pipe cleaners 
Scissors
Coloured paper
Sticky tape

First paint the tubes with a good coat of black poster paint and leave to dry. 


Use PVA glue to stick on google eyes, cut mouth shapes out of Coloured paper and glue in place to complete the face. 



Cut some pipe cleaners in half, and use a strip of sticky tape to attach to the inside of the tube above the face to create the hair. 


Once the glue is all dry you're ready to play! We told lots of stories with our new characters, mixed in with other people and animals from beans collection.


I find children love any activity which involves making something that they can then use in play, because it gives the project an extra sense of fulfillment for them, which is always a joy to see. 

Happy Playing! 


Thursday, October 17, 2013

Halloween Egg Carton Bats

I'm always happy to discover new uses for egg cartons! They're such a versatile craft material and we have SO many of them constantly piling up in our cardboard cupboard. So for our next Halloween themed craft we made some cute hanging egg carton bats!


For this you will need...

Egg carton
Scissors
Black paint
Paintbrush
Black paper
Google eyes
PVA glue
Black string/wool/ribbon
Plastic beads

The 'How To'...

Use scissors or cut the egg carton into two lots of three egg cups. Trim the excess and cut fang shapes into the middle cup in each bat.


Paint the bats with black paint until completely covered, then leave to dry.


Cut two sets of bat ears from black paper and use PVA glue to attach each pair of ears to the top of the bats head. 


Glue the google eyes in place, then leave to dry again. 


Finally use scissors or a skewer to punch a hole in the top of the bats head behind the ears. Then thread a length of string, wool, or ribbon through the hole and secure by tying the inside end around a plastic bead.


The finished bats look scary in a delightfully cute way! Bean was ecstatic with her "Bouncy Bats" (the name she came up with for them), and although I had originally intended them as decorations for the kitchen it wasn't until the following day that she allowed me to hang them up!


She had great fun flying them around, telling stories, and playing scary chasey games...definitely a success!


Happy Playing! :-)

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Dinosaur Jungle

We've had a wooden box full of dirt sitting in the corner of our patio play area for months now, and every so often I look at it and think "I must do something with that...". Sometimes it's just been used for digging for bugs or the occasional mud pie, but mostly it's just sat there looking a rather shabby...until now!


I've been seeing a lots of ideas for outside small worlds on Pinterest lately (yes, I do ocassionally get lost in Pinterest land) and also wanting to find a more permanent home for Beans dinosaurs, so one sunny afternoon we turned our box of dirt into a Dinosaur Jungle! 


Together Bean and I gathered small branches from bushes and trees around the garden and pushed them into the dirt to make trees for the jungle.


Bean found a big rock, some flowers, leaves, and bugs for the dinosaurs to eat...yum! ;-)

It's turned into a peaceful little place for her to play and story tell, and has got me thinking about some more small worlds we could create outside for summer...

Happy Playing! 

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Nursery Rhyme Puppet Show

I cannot begin to tell you just how much we have played with this simple puppet show over the last couple of months. It was something I came up with for Bean one winters day when we were stuck inside and at a bit of a loose end! Bean LOVES anything involving story telling and imaginary play, so this was a total hit with her. Its a perfect rainy day activity for children 2.5 years and older as they can choose the stories and help make the scenery and puppets as well.


To make this we used:
  • Old cardboard box (thick cardboard)
  • Small sturdy cardboard box
  • Cereal box (or other thin cardboard)
  • Scissors
  • Sticky Tape
  • Small googly eyes
  • Coloured pens
  • A4 coloured paper
  • Lollipop sticks
  • Blue tack


The 'stage' to hold the background scenery was made by cutting a thick price of cardboard from an old box into a rectangle (must be at least A4 size), and then attaching another small box to the back to hold it upright, using a strip of cardboard and sticky tape. 

The backgrounds are simply A4 peices of coloured paper, stuck to the stage with blue tack, and decorated with coloured pen, pastels, and cut out paper to make the scenery for the story. 


The puppets were cut out from thinner cardboard (we used empty cereal boxes) to make the body shapes, decorated with coloured pens and googly eyes, and then stuck to lollipop sticks with sticky tape. Bean was able to help with decorating the backgrounds and puppets, sticky taping things together, and of course chose which stories we would make. 


It's so incredibly simple to do, and you can make as many puppets and as many backgrounds as you like! We ended up making quite a few over a number of days, and even now we will add on a new story from time to time. We started off doing nursery rhymes, Baa Baa Black Sheep pictured above...


...Little Bo Peep...


...Incy Wincy Spider...


...Jack Be Nimble...


...Jack and Jill...


...Little Miss Muffet...


...Hickory Dickory Dock (made using a paper plate, cereal box clock hands, and a split pin to hold them in place and allow them to turn)...


For this one the mouse and cat were made using small and large coloured pom poms glued together using a hot glue gun, with googly eyes and kitchen string for whiskers...


...and then we moved on to some of Bean's favourite movies, above is The Lonely Goatherd from The Sound of Music (As yet unfinished, few more characters to make!)...


...But the one which has been by far Bean's favourite and most used...The Wizard of Oz!

As you can probably see this puppet show has been well loved, and therefore has seen a bit of wear and tear. If I had pre-planned this activity I might have decided to laminate the backgrounds and even the puppet bodies after decorating to make them a bit more durable long term. It would be particularly recommendable if you have multiple children playing or children younger than 2, and i've already thought of re-making this puppet show with the other Little Beans when we start day care and laminating it to be an ongoing resource. 

I really hope you try this one at home!

Happy Playing!