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Arts & crafts materials
What arts and crafts materials do you supply for your mindees?
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Originally Posted by
mumofone
What arts and crafts materials do you supply for your mindees?
I've been picking some good stuff up from this seller: creationbox on eBay
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Crazy crocodiles are good and yellow moon. I try to get together with other people and put in one big order to save on postage. I love my craft, my cupboards are overflowing
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I went into Fred Aldous in Manchester yesterday and oh my word it was an Aladdin's cave of pure loveliness. I didn't know quite how many items I needed till I went there. Bit pricey though but pure indulgence.
FLORADORA I thought of you because 2 of my friends brought adult colouring books
When someone tells you nothing is impossible, tell them to go slam a revolving door
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Originally Posted by
mumofone
What arts and crafts materials do you supply for your mindees?
Now with this question did you mean which suppliers or the type of materials we provide in arts and craft for LO's ?
So far the interpretation is supplier, but I read it as supplying to the mindees?
Just looked at FA web site as Manchester is now a regular place for us to shop now youngest has emigrated there, it may be a place for me to actually avoid as also big on model making for DH too until we become richer! I am desperate to make a profit this year!
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When someone tells you nothing is impossible, tell them to go slam a revolving door
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Maza liked this post
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Originally Posted by
FloraDora
Now with this question did you mean which suppliers or the type of materials we provide in arts and craft for LO's ? So far the interpretation is supplier, but I read it as supplying to the mindees? Just looked at FA web site as Manchester is now a regular place for us to shop now youngest has emigrated there, it may be a place for me to actually avoid as also big on model making for DH too until we become richer! I am desperate to make a profit this year!
The types of materials flora :-)
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Ie. Egg boxes, paper plates, toilet roll tubes etc! I'm thinking of providing stuff like this that I usually shove in the recycling each week but that we could make stuff out of, I could do with some ideas of what we could make though! I'm clueless!!
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I had a flip top bin in our shed with junk stuff, with the idea that I would use them but...
When I have put them out it is purely the process that is the objective as I have never been a big fan of presenting parents with a load of junk cartons glued, taped, stapled into a shape, usually huge and certainly the interest in it rarely lasts longer than the initial presentation discussion to parents. The poor parents are then stuck with the monstrosity for an age!
So I don't provide this as a craft anymore...Ihave got a big box full of these cartons and the children use them to collect small things, for water or sand play or for landscapes in small settings which sometimes leads to adapting and adjusting in a craft like way.
My current dillema is storage of art and craft so that the children can access independently and in the absence of a playroom, set up in a portable way.
But my ' craft', not art - what difference? I interpret as ' making actual things, usually 3d out of a variety of materials i.e the difference between the high school D&T dept and art dept - Is: bits of wood to hammer and make, starting with pressing in Balsa. Creating with things around them, using everyday materials in a different way to create something to play in - a box as a car, or something to push the doll in, or with a piece of material on top a hiding place for favourite things etc.. I consider any den making to be craft/ construction, they both overlap I think. Tins or containers filled for shakers, wind socks from a curved piece of card...
Card making, hat making and cake making - all crafts, requiring skills to do.
I have a little sewing machine and my 4 year old just sews things together - then decides what to use it for.
I only have 4 and under really so all limited but if I have afterschoolers I would want Fussy's bead loom !! Bags would be my first thing to make!
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When someone tells you nothing is impossible, tell them to go slam a revolving door
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Paper and card of all shapes, sizes and colours. I recycle paper, cards, envelopes etc.
Paint ( poster, powder, water ), pens, chalk, crayons, pencils etc
Multitude of bits to stick ...stickers, card shapes, tissue paper, glitter, pompoms, lolly sticks, sequins buttons and all random collected bits etc
Glue, glue sticks, masking tape, sellotape etc
Scissors
And probably more I have forgotten!
I have some craft kits that we do. The older children love looking through the craft catalogues and sometimes we buy what they see, but usually we try to create it ourselves.
Oh and playdough, clay etc
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Originally Posted by
loocyloo
Paper and card of all shapes, sizes and colours. I recycle paper, cards, envelopes etc.
Paint ( poster, powder, water ), pens, chalk, crayons, pencils etc
Multitude of bits to stick ...stickers, card shapes, tissue paper, glitter, pompoms, lolly sticks, sequins buttons and all random collected bits etc
Glue, glue sticks, masking tape, sellotape etc
Scissors
And probably more I have forgotten!
I have some craft kits that we do. The older children love looking through the craft catalogues and sometimes we buy what they see, but usually we try to create it ourselves.
Oh and playdough, clay etc
All above plus ribbon, lace, material scraps, bubble wrap, boxes, cartons, tubes (kitchen roll, wrapping paper etc), sweet wrappers, cellophane, pipe cleaners, egg boxes, inserts from chocolate boxes, milk bottle tops, lids from various containers, stampers and inks.....
Just about anything really!
Miffy xx
Keep smiling!
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What do you guys actually make out of the stuff though?
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Originally Posted by
mumofone
What do you guys actually make out of the stuff though?
Pinterest !
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Originally Posted by
mumofone
What do you guys actually make out of the stuff though?
Sometimes what I plan the children to make and what the children themselves want to make are 2 entirely different things
When someone tells you nothing is impossible, tell them to go slam a revolving door
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Last edited by lollipop kid; 22-03-2015 at 09:33 AM.
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Originally Posted by
mumofone
Ie. Egg boxes, paper plates, toilet roll tubes etc! I'm thinking of providing stuff like this that I usually shove in the recycling each week but that we could make stuff out of, I could do with some ideas of what we could make though! I'm clueless!!
...but the children won't be clueless!
Let them free to make whatever their imagination tells them the end product is
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image-1528337778.jpg
This is what we made with yoghurt pots for Mother's Day. I did have to make a hole in the end. Each flower is a flower shaped petal, yoghurt pot, a bead on ed of half a pipe cleaner.
. Actimel bottles are great for making fireworks. Remove wrapper, stick flame colour tissue paper in the end, add some string and a stick, and you have a rocket, or a firework.
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The bin where this stuff still lingers in the shed is often just emptied...over the lawn, used for stones collections, leaf/petals/slate etc... Containers. like lollipop says, they explore the properties and how they interact with each other....that's the delight of under 3's , they get enthusiastic about most things in their discovery.
Like most threads so far have said, I think the most important aspect of use of junk cartons is independent exploration.....but about once a month I might show them something I have made and see if they want to make one, like the wind sock...because I wanted to run on the field and feel the wind and we have exhausted the wind ribbons for a while! I had two takers, but the third wasn't interested at all and just sat with the tissue paper and played with the strips, but enjoyed in a different way. Also good for following instructions...but I never say the children have made it, I emphasise the ' following' aspect and highlight the independent aspect ...one drew all over their wind sock, the other found stickers in the craft bin and covered theirs with these.
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