Thursday, March 26, 2020

Disney School Day 5 - Dumbo


So today we focused our attention onto the circus!  Yes, it was Dumbo Day here at our house.  I think the kids had a lot of fun with this one.

We started as usual with math sheets from school.  There are so many fun activities that you can come up with though. I would definitely suggest addition problems with jugglers, division with magicians, and any number of counting exercises with animals and acts.

Our video for today was a documentary of the circus.  I wanted to watch something on the history of the circus, but I wasn't having much luck on Youtube.  The documentary we watched was okay, but nothing really great, so I'm not going to leave a link today.  I think you'd be better off just watching videos of the circus.  The kids would like it much more. 

We were all ready to do something fun, so we changed to science.  Of course, with a circus theme, we tested the science behind tight rope walkers in this fun center of gravity experiment. 

https://www.rookieparenting.com/can-you-balance-a-craft-stick-on-a-chopstick-science-experiment/

It really does work well.  The kids were very quick to understand why the craft stick was able to balance after the weights were attached.  We didn't get a chance to follow it up, but if you have the means, have your kids try to walk across a board or line with weights in each hand and see if they can feel the difference. 

Our craft today was to make a circus car.  I got the idea from this site.

https://www.firstpalette.com/craft/circus-train.html

Both cars came out really cute.  The kids had a great time decorating their cars and their animals.

We took a break for lunch and then watched the movie.  We followed this up with some spelling and English pages from our workbooks.

Our last activity was creative writing.  Today's prompt was, "Describe what act you would perform in the circus, and explain why you would want to do that act."  My son came up with walking a tightrope over top a cage of lions.  My daughter wanted to do a dolphin act.  I think creative writing has become my favorite activity.  I love reading what they think. 

Well, this sums up our Dumbo day!  I hope you had fun following along.  Tune in tomorrow as we dive into the world of Cinderella.

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Disney School Day 4 - Fantasia


So today was our fourth day of Disney School.  We focused today on Fantasia.  I personally love this movie, but I have to mention a few things before I recommend it to all of you.  First and most importantly, this is an art film.  It was meant for a more adult audience.  That being said, there are several places where female nudity is on display.  The fairies in the nutcracker suite are all without clothes.  For the most part, it isn't that noticeable, but it is there.  Secondly, the girl centaurs in the pastoral symphony are seen topless while they are getting ready.  The cherubs are also naked, but they don't really have genitalia, just bare bottoms. The last segment has demons dancing at the top of Bald Mountain, and Chernabog, the main demon, conjour nude women from the flames and they dance for him.  Also, it is all classical music and some children might be bored.  If these sound like worrisome issues for you, feel free to skip the movie. You can always do our activities and just claim it's a music day.  Or, just watch the sorcerer's apprentice segment.  It's the best one anyway.  ;)

We started our day as usual with math sheets.  For anyone who is interested, this is a perfect time to introduce music notes into your math.  You can teach your kids the difference between whole, half, quarter, eighth, and sixteenth notes and get them to do math problems with them.

Next was our usual social studies video.  Today I had them watch a video on the worlds best opera houses, since that's where many of the songs from fantasia were originally performed. We also watched a tour of the Paris opera house since my daughter loves Phantom of the Opera.

World's best opera houses:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poCRVNEhJ7E

Paris Opera House:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i2hSAZIDwbE

My daughter really wanted to watch the movie, since it is one of her favorites.  So we changed the order of our activities and watched the movie.

We decided to do our science experiment next.  We talked about sound waves and how they traveled.  To illustrate this, we made telephones.  All I did was grab two styrofoam cups and some natural twine.  I poked a hole in each of the cups and fed the twine through, then tied a knot.   Stretch the cord tight and try talking.  The tighter the cord, the easier it is to hear the other person.

After lunch, the kids did their spelling from school, then we started our writing assignment.  Today, I asked them to sit and listen to Claire de Lune.  As they were listening to it, I asked them to think of a story that would go along with the music.  I had each of them write their story for me.  When they had finished, I gave them some watercolors and explained that when they made fantasia, each segment started with concept sketches that would give the overall mood and color schemes of the piece.  I asked them to create a concept painting for their story.  Both of them had a great time with this project.

Finally we read the original poem of the sorcerer's apprentice.  I found it online translated from the original German.  You can find the poem here.

https://www.poemofquotes.com/johannwolfganggoethe/the-sorcerers-apprentice.php

I hope you enjoyed this segment of Disney School.  Tomorrow we will be focusing on Dumbo.  Have a great day!




Monday, March 23, 2020

Disney School Day 3 - Bambi


Hi everyone!! Happy Monday.  Today our little Disney school studied aspects of Bambi.

We started our day as we usually do with breakfast and math sheets from school.  There are a lot of possibilities for counting with leaves, animals, and other natural elements.

We followed this up with our social studies video.  Today we took a look at the national forests.  We watched this video of the top 25 national parks.  The kids were asked to name which park they would like to visit and why.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zTBmv-Gzf2w

So after the video, the kids needed something a little more active, so we tried our science experiment.  One of my favorite parts of the bambi movie was the drip drip drop little April showers song, so we learned about rain.  Ours didn't turn out exactly like it was supposed to, but eventually the colors started to rain down.  The kids fully understood how the water loads up the clouds until they were too heavy and made rain.  Here is the website to our experiment.

https://www.aliceandlois.com/kids-cloud-science-project/

We finished our morning work with spelling and English with papers from school.  We are starting to run low on them, so I'll have to start finding age appropriate activities for these as well.

We took a break for recess and lunch, then watched Bambi.  It really is a cute movie, even if it has its intense moments.  My son loves the baby animals.

We tried writing next.  I told them that through the whole movie, Bambi had two best friends who did everything with him.  I then asked them to write about their two best friends.  I wanted to know who they were and why they were friends.  I also asked my daughter if she thought her friendships would last and why.

Finally we made deer masks for our crafts.  I decided just to make them out of cardstock since the kids probably wouldn't be interested in them after today.  If you think your kids would want to keep using their masks for more than a week, I suggest making them out of foam or felt.  This is the original post I got the idea from.  I found the pattern when I did a google search for bambi masks.  I tried to find the direct link, but it looks like the webpage no longer exists, and I don't want to post an image that isn't mine, so to find the template, do a search for bambi masks.  look in the images tab and you will find the template.

https://family.disney.com/craft/diy-bambi-and-thumper-masks/

I hope you guys enjoy these ideas for your Bambi day.  Tomorrow we will be working on Fantasia projects.  See you then.

Friday, March 20, 2020

Disney School - Pinocchio


It is day 3 of our home school and day 2 of our Disney school.  Today we focused on the movie Pinocchio.  I will admit, this is not one of my favorite movies.  When I was little I couldn't understand why the boys were so naughty, and I was terrified of the whale.  But it did offer some good inspiration for school today.

We started, as usual, with math sheets from school.  If you are looking for inspiration that is more on theme, maybe make some word problems with how many fish monstro will eat, how many of Gipetto's clocks are working or not working, or how many boys were turned into donkeys.

We then watched videos about Italy.  I will be honest, the history ones we watched were a little boring.  I finished it up with a Ultra HD tour of Florence.

Animated history of Italy part 1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y16QLJOVP6s

Tour of Florence
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DfW-Tn231Sk

Next we moved to science.  I took my inspiration off of Monstro the whale.  We did this whale blubber experiment to show how animals can keep warm even in freezing water.

https://sciencekiddo.com/how-arctic-animals-stay-warm/

I thought that I had some crisco at home, however I was mistaken.  Instead we used some play-doh.  It worked pretty well, except my daughter's nails kept ripping a hole in her play-doh.  My son's however, worked perfectly.  He went from holding his finger in the water for 18 seconds to holding it in the water for over a minute.

My daughter really wanted to work on our craft next, so instead of spelling we did art.  Of course we made marionettes.

https://www.doodlecraftblog.com/2013/04/easy-silly-bird-marionette-diy-tutorial.html



My daughter chose a pink body and head with white feet.








My son went with all yellow. 

This was a fun craft, even though there was a lot they couldn't do in terms of the gluing.   But once they were done, the kids loved playing with them.

By this time we all needed a break, so they had recess in the basement, followed by lunch.  We started watching the movie Pinocchio on Disney +.

After lunch, the kids did their assigned spelling and English work.  My daughter is able to do her work on the computer, and my son enjoys the cutting and pasting project he got from school.

Writing was next.  My son was asked if he could have an animal conscience, what would his be and why.  He chose a dragon because it could protect him and they could play together.  My daughter was given the choice between this assignment or writing a short puppet show.  She chose a puppet show and wrote a fun show involving frogs and candy.   We finished the day by reading a bit of the original Pinocchio story.

I hope you enjoyed this installment of our Disney School. We will be taking the weekend off, but will start back up with Bambi on Monday.  Thank you for following along!

Thursday, March 19, 2020

Disney School - Snow White

So just like everyone else, my kids are home for the next few weeks.  We are huge Disney fans, so we've decided to go to Disney school.  What does this mean, you may ask?  Well, each day, or activities are based on a different Disney movie.  Today was day 1, so we are doing Snow White.

We started our day with math.  The kids already have math sheets that the school sent home, so I have them do one a day.  If you are looking for ideas, do some counting with apples, dwarves, diamond shapes, basically anything that has a snow white vibe.  My daughter is currently working on units of measure, so we could have done some interesting conversions of weight for the jewels, or distances to get to the mine.

We followed this up by watching a few videos on YouTube about the black forest.  We enjoyed this one that follows a family around the black forest area.  It doesn't cover the importance of the fairy tales, but it still made my kids want to visit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h5HE94YtjBU


Next was our craft time.  We made caramel apples in honor of the poisoned apples of the evil queen.  We melted caramels on the stove.  I removed the stems and put a stick in each apple.  The kids then rolled the apples around in the caramel.  We tried adding chocolate, but it didn't work that well.  Finally the kids added M&Ms to the outsides.  We let them cool and then ate them for our lunch dessert.  They may not have been very pretty, but they were very yummy.

We went back to school sanctioned work and had the kids do their assigned English and spelling work.

We then took our recess and lunch break.  The kids got to eat their apples.  As I said, they were very yummy. During lunch we watched the movie Snow White and the Seven Dwarves.  We've seen it a ton of times, but since we were dedicating the day to it, I thought it was important to watch the movie.

Science was next on our list. I took inspiration off of the queen making her poison.  We followed this web page to make our own baking soda potions. My son really liked this one.

https://www.messylittlemonster.com/2018/09/baking-soda-magic-potion-science-experiment-kids.html

Next was creative writing.  This is one of my favorite lessons.  My children are in kindergarten and fourth grade, so they each have different needs.  For my son, I had him write about his favorite dwarf, and what his favorite things were.  My daughter got the harder, but more fun assignment of writing the story from the evil queen's point of view.

Our last activity of the day was reading.  We read the original Brothers Grimm version of Snow White.  It's a little darker than the cartoon, but I honestly believe the kids need to see where the movies originated.

Overall, the day went pretty well.  I am planning on doing a movie a day as long as the kids are in lock down.  Feel free to follow along on our adventures and hopefully get inspired for your own "Disney school."

Saturday, August 17, 2019

First Week of School

So this week, both of my darling children went off to school.  Yes, my youngest started kindergarten this week.  As a Mom, I wanted to take my darling child to class the first day.  Of course, my child decided to ride the bus with his sister.  I tried to be a supportive mom and allowed him this new level of independence, but I got to tell you, I was dying inside. Not only did I send my youngest to Kindergarten, I sent him on a bus! 

After a few little tears, I went home.  I had decided to get my house in order.  For the last 10 years, it had gotten wildly out of control, and I gladly allowed the chaos to take over.  NO MORE!  I was going to tackle the clutter and the dust.  I had already done a decent job cleaning up the main areas of the living room and the kitchen, but I had a few areas that were still disasters. 

Of course, as soon as I came into the house, planning on tackling the beast areas, my pets realized the kids were no longer in the house and demanded attention.  My dog climbed into my lap and chose to camp out for a while.  If I stopped rubbing his ears, he would pick up his head and look at me as if to say, hey, you aren't done yet.  He finally had enough after about 10 minutes and moved over so he could take a real nap.  As soon as he left, one of the cats decided it was his turn.  He first climbed in my lap, then decided that nuzzling my leg was better.  He clamped one leg on the top of my leg and another around the bottom and hugged me for probably another 15 minutes.  Definitely not how I planned to start my day, but not the worst way either. 

So I finally have satisfied pets, and can continue to clean.  My family has acquired many buckets over the years.  Most of them have accumulated in one area, and almost all of them have small toys in them.  I had no less than 10 buckets filled with stuff that needed to be put away on top of any other clutter and junk that gathered around them.  Most people would ask, why do I have so much stuff?  I asked myself, why do we have this many buckets?  After contemplating the bucket takeover, I started clearing the entire place out.  I planned to vacuum the space, however as soon as I turned my back a cat had settled in the new, fun spot and fell asleep. 

So since I couldn't vacuum, I decided to put all the junk away, bucket by bucket. I completed this daunting task in way more time than I had planned.  Then I threw out all the buckets that were broken or missing handles.  This ended up being 2 regular buckets and 5 Halloween pumpkin buckets .  Why do I keep these things?  I really don't know.  I still have a pumpkin bucket running around, and about 6 more stacked neatly in an out-of-the-way location.  To finish off, I scared away the cat and vacuumed.  I felt a huge sense of accomplishment.  One beast down. 

The kids came home that night, and they had a great time.  Everyone was happy to be back at school, and to be honest, I think we are all better for having some time away from each other.  It makes our time together so much more fulfilling.  We'll see how next week goes!

Saturday, September 1, 2018

Enchanted creatures birthday party

My daughter just turned 9. Of course she wanted a unique theme. She chose enchanted creatures so she could have unicorns, dragons, mermaids, and fairies.  Needless to say, you can't find all these at party city.

I started with the invitation. I recently got a new tablet with the airflow app, and I love it. I was able to draw up the invitation, then dropped it into photoshop to add the text.

Then it was time to decide on decorations. We decided that each area of the house would represent a different creature. Our living room was for unicorns, our kitchen was the fairy forest, the outside was a mermaid grotto, and her room would be for dragons.

Unfortunately I ran out of time to do all that I wanted. I made a simple forest background for the cake table and had unicorn balloons in front. We hung unicorn dangles in the hallway. I would have liked to have done some other unicorns in the windows but I ran out of time. We also got the giant unicorn balloon from party city. The kids loved it.



The fairy table turned out great. I made a fairy house for the kitchen table centerpiece.  I started with a milk carton and cut it the way I wanted. Next I hot glued aluminum foil to the milk carton, and once it looked the way I wanted,  I covered it in paperclay. I let it dry then painted it. I also made a bendy doll fairy.







Our kitchen table sits in a bay window. I covered the edges in crumpled brown paper to look like trees, and added green tablecloths to the top for the leaves. I used my cricut to cut out butterflies that spelled out happy birthday. I laminated them and hung them under the trees with fishing line.



The other two areas also suffered from too many ideas and not enough time. We did hang clear balloons to resemble bubbles, but it got so hot we didn't go out there much. I also wanted a beware of dragon on my daughter's door, but ran out of time.

The girls invited to the party each chose a creature to be. Once they arrived, they got accessories that helped them get into character. The unicorns got horn headbands, the fairies got wings, and the mermaids got sea shell headbands (they wore their own tails from target.)  No one wanted to be a dragon.


Our first activity was to use "mermaid waters" to make shirts. For each child I had cut a silhouette of their creature out of freezer paper and ironed it onto a plain white shirt. Then we mixed the tie die colors and put them in spray bottles. I bought a kit with blue, pink, teal, purple, and black. The girls then squirted the colors onto their shirts. There was a little color bleeding, but overall they really came out great.


Next we came in and got our faces painted, then made unicorn dreamcatchers. I bought 5 inch hoops and wrapped them in white cord. I cut a large length of rainbow cord and taught the girls how to weave a dreamcatcher. Finally we added touches such as the tail, horns, and ears.

Our final activity was a dragon egg pinata. It was made by paper macheing a 12 inch balloon then painting it with metallic paint. The gift bags contained a unicorn horn lollipop and a rock candy lollipop.  Then they had all their candy from the pinata and their crafts.

The party was a lot of fun, and everyone really seemed to enjoy themselves. This week I get back to work on some murals and I'll be starting Halloween preparations. See ya soon.

Tuesday, February 14, 2017

Valentine's Day boxes

So today is Valentine's day.  Luckily, my son is too young to need a handmade box yet, however, my daughter had very clear instructions on hers.  As a crafty mom, I go overboard on these kind of things for my kids because I feel it is the one thing I can really do right.  My kids seem to see my weakness and love to exploit it.   So this year, my daughter comes to me with her sketches of what she wants to see on her box, and we brainstormed until we came up with the perfect idea.


She is currently obsessed with Moana, so of course this was our theme.  She wanted Moana and Maui on one side, and Tomatoa and the Kakamora on the other (we had a mailbox)  She also wanted Hai Hai and Pua on the back.  She knew that she wanted Te Ka, but wasn't sure where, so we made the front of the mailbox Te Ka, and when you opened it, Te Fiti was on the inside.  Once we had the design, I got to work.


I started with the sides.  I painted an island background, then printed out Moana and Maui.  I cut them out and mod podged them over the background.  I had thought about painting them, but I was afraid I couldn't get Maui's tattoos perfect, so I took the easy way out.

Next was Tamatoa and the Kakamoras.  I painted this side, then added gold glitter to Tomatoa to make him look authentic.  I put a layer of mod podge over everything when I was done to hold in the glitter.





My next step was to make Te Ka and Te Fiti.   Both were painted since I couldn't find a picture that fit well on the box.







Finally I printed out my daughter's favorite picture of Pua and Hai Hai, cut it out, and mod podged it on the back, and I was finished.
She really loved her box, and since her party was last week, she is now using her box to hold small things on her desk.






I also have a habit of making a few extra boxes each year for students who may forget to bring one.  This year I made three of them:  a mickey and friends one, a princess one, and a batman one.  These are very simple to make.  I simply pick out a decorative scrapbooking paper, mod podge it on the bottom half, and then mod podge a matching paper to the top.  Finally I add stickers to the top.  They look really cute, but don't take a lot of time or effort.  I hope you like the pictures!

Thursday, January 19, 2017

Teacher Survival Kit Christmas Gifts

So now that the holidays are out of the way, and I have had some time to get everything back to normal, it's time to get back into blogging!

Today I thought I would share my favorite teacher Christmas gift.  Every year, I make each of our teachers a personalized teacher survival kit.  I start with a jar and I paint it with something personal for that teacher, then I paint their name.  Finally I fill the jar with winter necessities. This year I added a pack of travel Kleenex, a tube of chap-stick, a pair of Christmas socks, a travel sized hand sanitizer, an individual pack of hot cocoa, and a wooden hot chocolate spoon covered in chocolate, peppermint flakes, and marshmallows. It is always a hit with the teachers.





This year we had 6 teachers to gift.  I started with my daughter's teacher.  Her class is known as the bookworms, so I painted the jar with a bookworm on one side and the teacher's name on the other.






The other jars were for my son's school.  We started with his class teachers.  He is in the duck class, so I painted a cute little duck on both of their jars.


Then I worked on the presents for the principal and vice principal.  I painted the school logo on their jars.


Finally I made a jar for his music teacher.  I painted a few music notes on hers.

Everyone seemed to love their gifts, and they can be reused as candy jars for the rest of the year.  I bought these jars at hobby lobby, and the paint is folk art enamel.  I followed the directions on the paint bottle for curing them in the oven, and now they are top rack dishwasher safe.

This is a fun project that doesn't take very long but always has a positive impact.  Hopefully this gives you a few new ideas around Christmas time.  Thanks for reading!

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

My Nursery Mural

I've decided I need to give this another try.  I wrote a few posts in the beginning, then life got in the way.  I never stop working on some kind of art or project, but I have not been good about taking pictures or posting about them.  I'm going to try and do better.  I am going to try and post at least once a week, both on current and past projects.

This past week was Thanksgiving.  I really enjoyed the family time, and the turkey, but I spent most of my time painting a mural in my niece's room.  I realized that I had never shown off any of my work on here.  So I thought I would start by showing you some of my early work, in particular, my daughter's nursery.

I have painted a few murals before this, but I don't have many pictures.  My first mural was based on Fantasia, and was painted in my dorm hallway.   Several of the people living on my floor submitted mural designs.  We spent an entire semester painting.  We had Fantasia, Simpsons, Toy Story, and Gummy Bears.  We were all very proud of ourselves.  Two years later, we moved out of the dorm.  When we came back for a visit, we found out the university had painted over all of them.  Suddenly they were worried about copyright infringement.

My second mural wasn't much, and hardly anyone saw it.  I was working at Walmart and they wanted me to paint a scroll with our pledge on it.  It took me a few days, and it stayed there until the building was torn down about 4 years later.  I was quickly learning that my works don't seem to last long.

Next was my daughter's nursery.  I made a cross stitch blanket that had a teddy bear laying on the moon.  This became my inspiration.  I found a bedding set that had a similar design, then painted the nursery to match.  My husband helped paint the other walls, the border trim, and helped with the sky.



I started with a mural on the main wall. We then added a border along the other walls.  I painted the characters of the mural into the border of the longest wall and stars on the shorter walls.  The room took a couple of weeks to finish.  Both kids have really loved it though.  When they were babies, they would talk to the characters right above the changing table.




We got a valance in our bedding set, and I made a set of curtains from blackout fabric.  We also hung up a net for stuffed animals.




We painted two constellations in the sky, Gemini and Canus Major, to include our dogs Gemini and Sirius. 










The bunnies and the sheep came from our bedding set.  They rounded out the picture perfectly and added some character.


  This room will always be a turning point for me, and I have always been proud of it.  This was a large project that I was able to complete and that made me feel like I might actually be a bit of an artist.  The colors were perfect for a nursery, and both of my kids have loved the animals around the room.  We taught them about the constellations and why they were important to us.  I hope the next person who lives in this house loves it as much as we do.











Monday, September 15, 2014

Frozen Birthday Party

So recently my daughter celebrated her 5th birthday.  Needless to say, it was a frozen birthday party.  We knew the theme since last year.  So after we came back from our vacation, I started planning the party.  I searched the internet for ideas and found some good starting points to create our own frozen extravaganza.  Unfortunately, I didn't get very many pictures.  I still wanted to share our ideas though, in case someone reading was like me a month ago and desperately trying to come up with something original for their party.

So the biggest thing for our parties is the decorations.  We always set tables up in our garage for our guests who would rather stay out of the bustle of the house, or for the kids who want to play in the yard.  We decided that  the garage would be Anna's area.  The tables got either a pink or a blue tablecloth.  I bought some cheap snowflake ornaments at Michael's and hung them from the (opened) garage door.  Party City had some Frozen wall hangings for $6 that had a 5 foot poster of Anna, a 5 foot poster of Elsa, two small Anna and Elsa posters and a Happy Birthday banner.  We taped the Anna poster next to the door leading into the house, and taped up the Happy Birthday banner so that it was visible to our guests as they walked up. We placed a stuffed Olaf on one table and a stuffed Anna doll on the other table.  My husband wrapped my daughter's play house in white paper to make it an "ice palace."

I made this Happy Birthday banner on the computer.
Once you came into the house, Elsa took over.  The kitchen table and the dessert table both had a light blue tablecloth topped by a white tablecloth that was cut to look like icicles. I made a Happy Birthday banner that hung above our bay window.  We put the 5 foot Elsa poster over our sliding glass door.  I bought table decorations from Party City for the dessert table as well as a balloon bouquet.  Our dessert table sat in front of our 6 foot shelving unit, and I wanted something prettier than black bins for the background, so I bought a 62x42 Frozen poster from Walmart and put it over the shelves.

I made the kitchen table our snack center.  I put out bowls of snack foods with a Frozen theme.  I had baby carrots as Olaf noses, pretzel sticks as Olaf arms, Blue Jello cubes as Kristoff's ice, combined blue and pink M & M's as Anna's chocolates, another bowl of mini york peppermint patties as Elsa's chocolates, and a bowl of white sixlets as Marshmallow's snowballs.  I doubled these as treat bag snacks by telling the kids at the end of the party to fill their bags with whatever they wanted to take home.  We also made a frozen punch by filling a punch bowl half full with blue hawaiian punch, and the rest with Sprite.  We finished it off by scooping in vanilla ice cream on top.

Elsa crowns for the girls.

For the party favors, I made sparkly blue crowns for the girls and brown antlers for the boys.  I drew up a template for each in AutoCAD then cut them out of foam.  I punched a hole on each side and tied an 18 inch ribbon. Inside each treat bag, there was a rock candy wand and a few frozen tattoos. 


Antlers for the boys


 Finally, I made white, brown, orange, and black play doh and assembled them into Do You Want to Build a Snowman kits.  Here is the link for the white and orange play doh.  I mixed some fine white glitter into the white play doh to make it look more like snow.  To dye the play doh orange, I stuck my white play doh into a sandwich bag, then added food coloring.  I then closed the bag and squished the play doh around until the food coloring was completely absorbed.  It keeps your hands from getting all messy.  I used a chocolate play doh recipe for the brown play doh.  Here is the link to that recipe.  It smells like brownie batter, but don't eat it.  It won't hurt you, it just tastes awful.  I then dyed some of it black using the same technique I used for the orange play doh. 

I assembled my kits by buying small, round containers from Michael's in their wedding section.  I made one full container of white. I then split the other container into 3 compartments for the other playdoh; half brown, 1/4 black, and 1/4 orange.  These containers came with white labels that you can print at home, but I ran out of time.  I just stuck the containers in the treat bags, but you could easily put them into a sandwich bag and make a topper saying "Do you want to build a snowman?"

My daughter loved her party.  I had other ideas but I ran out of time.  Here are a few other things you may want to consider:

  • I wanted to put a picture of Oaken's sauna on the door leading out to the garage.  It was 99 degrees that day.  

  • I wanted more snowflakes especially on the windows.  You can buy a paper punch and then punch them out of vinyl shelf liner and stick them up. 
  • We didn't do any games, but pin the nose on Olaf was popular at my daughter's school.
  • You can also build snowmen out of marshmallows, pretzel sticks, fruit by the foot for the scarf, half of an orange mike and ike or a candy corn for the nose, and a miniature reese's peanut butter cup for the hat. I also used edible ink pens to make the face and buttons, but mini chocolate chips could probably be used.
Like I said, we had a great time at our Frozen birthday party.  I hope you can use these ideas to plan your own perfect party!





Friday, September 12, 2014

Light Switch Cover

My daughter is obsessed with Frozen.  We saw it the first week it was out, and she fell in love with Elsa right away.  We were about to move her to a new room, and she decided she wanted a frozen room.  Due to time constraints and other factors I wasn't able to do a large mural, so I tried to find other ways to make her a frozen room.

My daughter's favorite part of Frozen is Elsa.  She loves her look, dress, powers, and most importantly, her ice palace.  So I tried to focus on snowflakes in our decorating.  I am still not done, but we've managed to give her a great room.  I've made her some snowflake curtains and her Daddy found a great curtain rod that looks like Elsa's wind gusts.  I'm working on a small border of snowflakes on the wall above her bed, and this past weekend, I made her an Elsa light switch cover.

I'll start off saying that I was feeling torn on this project.  I decided to try mod podging a printed image instead of painting it.  I'm not always that great at painting people, and I wanted a good looking product.  I felt like I was cheating, but I am glad I did.  The project came out great, and of course, she loves it.

For this project you will need your decorative paper or image, Mod Podge, Scissors, an exacto knife, a light switch cover, and sandpaper. A hole punch and high gloss acrylic sealer are optional, but recommended.

You can do this with any printed image or decorative paper.  I found the image I liked and cropped it down to a rectangle that was a quarter inch larger than my light switch cover.  I printed it and cut it out leaving about 1/8 of an inch of white around the image to wrap around the back.


Next I took a plastic light switch cover and sanded it with 220 grit sandpaper.  You are just trying to rough up the surface so that the adhesive sticks.  I sanded it once horizontally and again vertically.  Don't forget the very edge of the back since you will be wrapping the paper back there.




I positioned my image over the light switch cover, getting it centered. You should not be able to see any of the white border.  Once I positioned it exactly as I wanted it, I flipped it over and marked where the cover and holes were located on the paper. I created an X in the center hole.  I also mark the corners from where the plate starts to curve up to the corner of the cover.  The image on the right shows how the back of your image should look when the cover is removed.  Using an exacto knife, cut along the X lines.  Do not cut along the rectangle. Cut out the holes as well, or use a hole punch. Also cut along the corner lines from the outside edge of the paper to where the mark starts. 



 Next comes the gluing.  I apply Mod Podge to the back of my image as well as the front of the light switch cover.  I laid the paper image side down, and position my light switch cover onto it by lining up the center holes that were marked earlier.  Turn the cover over and make sure there are no bubbles.  If there are any, gently smooth them out.  Turn your cover over and apply Modge Podge to the edges of the light switch cover and around the center hole.  Carefully wrap around your paper to the back.  The cuts I made to the corners allow me to wrap the image around easily without any bubbles or wrinkles. I then carefully push the triangles in the center hole through to the back and wrap them around.  Apply more Mod Podge over your edges to hold them down.  When I am done, the back of my plate looks like this.
Finally I seal my light switch cover.  I apply at least 3 coats of Mod Podge to the front of my cover.  I usually alternate between apply coats horizontally and vertically.  I do not know how to make this less streaky.  No matter what I have tried, it always gets that way. So to try and combat the streaks, I have been spraying a layer of high gloss acrylic sealer over the top.  I apply a few coats until the streaks are less noticeable. And with that, your cover is completed.  Let it cure for 24 hours before installing.  Be careful not to over tighten the screws or you will start to rip up the layer of sealer. 


Here are a few other covers that I have done.



I hope you find this tutorial helpful.  Have fun creating!