Saturday, November 9, 2013

Make A Paper Christmas Tree Collage

 Christmas Eve

My childhood's Christmases each brought to me
The wondrous glory of a Christmas tree;
Now, every year, since I've to manhood grown,
I buy a tree for children of my own. 
And so to-night my mind looks back and sees
Life a long avenue of Christmas trees.    

This little tree collage could look like anything.
Here is just one example using the patterns below.

      Print color and cut these little old-fashioned ornaments onto a printed Christmas tree. Younger children can paste stickers to their tree to decorate it. Don't forget to add gems or sequins to the tree for a bit of bling!
Old-Fashioned Christmas Ornament Shapes for cutting and
pasting into pictures by Kathy Grimm

Download this jpg. into a Word Doc file and stretch it out to fit
your paper's size. Then print it on a pale green paper for
the kiddos to decorate!

Similar Christmas Tree Craft Projects:
More Children's Paper Ornament Crafts:

Craft a Christmas Themed "Time For Tea Place Mat"

      Parents and teachers can help little ones assemble this tea time placemat craft by tracing and cutting out the printable template below. I used some pretty Christmas patterned paper for my own sample shown on the right. I also layered the paper tea cups on top of a white doily and added two tea tags from some actual tea bags. I glued these as if they were steeping inside my tea cups. 
      Children can play simple math games will waiting for their lunch or tea + crumpets! Simply ad and subtract using the visual aid i.e. placemat and a few lumps of sugar thus:
  • Add the two together = counting all of the sugar cubes present in both tea cups.
  • Subtract the lower number of sugar cubes from the higher.
  • How many sugar cubes can you stack together within each tea cup?
  • How many lumps of sugar do you take in your tea? How about your companion?
More Tea Time Crafts:
Christmas Tea Gifts:
The downloadable, printable template of tea cups by Kathy Grimm
After photographing this Christmas tea placemat, I laminated it, minus the sugar cubes of course.


Polly gave a dollies' tea,
And many guests were there:
Kitty came in white fur coat
And Rover in curled hair.

Soldier Tim, with sword so bright,
And Miss Susanna Lee
Sat beside old Rover Dog
And Kitty at the tea.

Make a Marshmallow Math Placemat to Count On For Christmas!

If you don't have access to a laminating machine, you may purchase alternative kinds of
 materials from many hobby stores and office supply outlets. These stores do sell individual
 sheets and/or packs of transparent adhesive covers for this kind of project. Just describe
 to them what you need to make with the craft project. Contact paper can also be used to
 waterproof children's placemats.

      How about assembling a cute little Christmas placemat for your early learner for the holidays? Parents or teachers can pre-cut the shapes from fun printed papers in advance. Then your young children can assemble and paste the large mug of Christmas cocoa onto a festive sheet of paper before laminating the entire mat. I also added a few Christmas stickers to my cocoa mugs. 
       Count how many marshmallows can fit inside your cocoa cup, or how high you can stack them before they fall! Try rolling dice to count out equivalent numbers of marshmallows too. Be careful, marshmallow math is not always so very reliable; the props often disappear the moment a parent's back is turned!

Above is a template, mug for hot chocolate or cocoa, that I have designed for
this counting placemat project.

Make More Christmas Placemats with The Kids:

 "Trimming the Christmas Tree" Game

       Two tiny Christmas trees are placed on stands, one in front of each of the two lines the children have formed. Each child has been given some little ornament for the tree. When the signal is given, the first child in each row is led up to the tree, blindfolded, and told to hang his ornament on the tree in the most artistic place he can ''feel.'' As soon as he has done this he tales off the blindfold, runs back to his line and puts the blindfold on the next player. This player is then led to the tree and he, in turn, puts his ornament on the tree, and when he has finished, hurries back to give his blindfold to the next trimmer. This continues until they have all put their ornaments on the tree.
       However, all this while the children in the other line are doing the same thing, and it becomes a race to see which line can first trim its tree.
       It  can hardly be said that trees so trimmed are things of beauty. Neither can it be said that one's opponents always appreciate one's blind efforts at artistic effect!

Color a Nostalgic Portrait of Santa Claus for a Christmas Calendar

      Above is a photo of the Nostalgic Santa Calendar in progress. I used a black, felt tip, permanent ink marker to hand letter my calendar numbers. It is traditional to depict only the twenty-five days until December 25th on a calendar such as this. Use white glue and cotton balls to cover each day as it passes. Children will enjoy giving Santa a snowy, white beard by the time he comes to fill their stockings with treats and candy!
      Layer colored pencils in order to create depth in Santa's portrait. On the left, I first chose to emphasize the wrinkles in Santa's face with a dark brown. Then I selected a bright red to draw attention to his rosy cheeks and nose. Then I colored his entire face with a flesh toned pencil. These three color selections will help your colored drawings to look three dimensional. As you improve, you will add many more color combinations to your skin tones. But, these three should suffice for young students.
      Again, as you can see I have selected a lavender and then a ruby red to layer beneath the red of Santa's hat before coloring the entire hat with a fire engine red. You can try multiple color combinations to see how different the portrait will look if you'd like.
      Above is an example of layering color compliments. I chose to green and red for the holly. After cutting out the holly leaves, I pasted a thin strip of foam to the backside of each leaf in order to add extra dimension to the calendar. Glue on a red pom pom or two for the berries.
      Above is a free coloring page of Santa for little one to use when assembling
their December count down to Christmas calendar.

The Santa Claus Puzzle Game

       If gifts are to be distributed it adds a great deal to the fun to have a bit of mystery about it. Santa Claus comes in with his pack on his back. After the usual preliminaries he announces that he has a wonderful lot of gifts in his pack, but that the only way a guest can get one of his wonderful packages is to guess what is inside each one of them; you know what this element of mystery will do for children!
       Every package is identified to Santa of it's contents by a small label that only he can see clearly. But, the children are seated too far from the packages to read this small label.
       All the gifts are wrapped up in tissue paper in strange shapes, so that there is no clue as to what they actually are. Santa Claus takes out one gift at a time from his bag and holds it up in front of the guests. Then he asks them to guess what it is. The first one to call out that it is a book, when it may actually look like a windmill or a giraffe or a ball, receives the gift. The gift must then be held onto the child with the first correct guess and not opened until all of the children have received a present from Santa. Then and only then are the children allowed to open their gifts and no further entertainment is necessary!
       However, Santa Claus must be a very tactful and observant person. He may notice when one little child is too timid to speak up and say just what she thinks is in a package. So he picks out a gift, turns to her and says directly to her, ''Tell me, little girl, what do you think is in here?'' and then gives her easy clues to help her guess correctly, much to her delight. It may also be possible that other children may speak when it is inappropriate to do so, but Santa must act as though he has trouble hearing them if younger or shyer children are to be heard above the excitement.
       Also, if there are both girls and boys guessing during the game Santa may need to specify - ''This next gift is something in which only girls are interested in. Let a boy make a guess at his own peril!" - so that the toys distributed come to those who will delight the most in them.

Monday, November 4, 2013

Sculpt a Snow Scene With Clay

A young student chooses to sculpt something unpretentious.
      Children don't need much to inspire their imaginations. Give them a bit of clay and read to them a story or two about winter. Before you know it, they are creating their own little vignettes from whatever materials are made available to them. 
      In school, art teachers often let young students draw after they have completed their art assignments. We call this 'a free draw.' This little clay vignette on the left was made during a student's free time. He used a few simple stamping tools and bright glazes to enhance his beloved  characters, a snowman and a penguin. 
      Children are not inhibited about embracing the simpler activities in life, activities like building snowmen or reading stories about ice skating penguins. They suffer from no need to craft "high art." Although this does not mean that children shouldn't be taught about fine art, it does mean that teachers should feel free to also let young students live out their childlike fantasies in the making of art. This kind of latitude will indeed inspire them to create more sophisticated work later in life.
       Not every art project needs an elaborate agenda, alternate the way that you look at art making as much as the way you use art materials. Choose to give young people a chance to interpret ideas and/or develop alternative solutions for some of the ideas you suggest to them. And if they just want to sculpt a snowman, then by all means, let them make one without feeling guilty! After all, they are only children once.
"This is the wonderful penguin story, narrated by David Attenborough in Bringing Up Baby from BBC Natural World. The film is edited by Mark Fletcher and the music is composed by Jennie Muskett"