Showing posts with label puffy paint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label puffy paint. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

St. Patrick's Day Storytime

Happy St. Patrick's Day!  Our storytime fell on the actual holiday this year, which is always fun. Today we read, Hooray for St. Patrick's Day! by Joan Holub and The Night Before St. Patrick's Day by Natasha Wing.

                             

Since both of our books featured a lovely little red bearded leprechaun, I found a fun leprechaun craft for the group to do.  I mixed up a batch of orange puffy paint and we painted beards on to leprechaun printouts.

As you can see, some leprechauns had more "beard' than others!


Happy St. Patrick's Day!

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Snow Storytime

Today's storytime was themed around snow.  December is such a fun month for storytime because there are lots of great winter books and craft ideas.  Today we read, Clifford's First Snow Day by Norman Bridwell and Snow by Roy Mckie.



For today's craft made snow globe pictures.  I brought in a snow globe for the kids to see because I wasn't sure all of them would know what a snow globe is.

I cut out circles for the globe part and freehand drew a base for the globe.  Then I cut out little pine trees to go inside the snow globe pictures.

Once everyone had assembled their snow globes, I gave them some puffy paint to make the "snow."
I like to use the puffy paint whenever possible because it's really fun.  It is just a mixture of equal parts white glue and shaving cream.  If you want to color it, you can add food coloring or paint.  I left today's puffy paint white so it would resemble snow and added a little glitter.
Here are the finished results.
Here is the one I made
Here are a few made by the kids


Here is a view of the puffy paint from the side so you can see how puffy it dries.

Friday, October 24, 2014

Pumpkin Storytime

This week at storytime, we talked about pumpkins.  The pumpkin themed storytimes are some of my favorites and the kids always seem to like them.  This year we read It's Pumpkin Time by Zoe Hall and Big Pumpkin by Erica Silverman.




Before I set the kids loose on their craft for the day, I invited them to feel the insides of a pumpkin I'd brought in.  I showed them all the guts inside and let them stick their hand in to feel it.  The ooey gooey pumpkin guts went well with today's craft.
For our craft today we painted pumpkin pictures, but not just any ordinary painting.  I whipped up a batch of puffy paint.  The puffy paint is wonderful and it looks like frosting, but best of all it dries just as puffy as when you first put it on.  I've seen several recipes for puffy paint on the internet but the one I've found works best is 1 cup of white glue, 1 cup of shaving cream, and food coloring.  Basically you just need equal parts glue and shaving cream but one cup of each makes a surprising amount.  I colored our paint orange and it looked awesome on our pumpkin pictures.
Here is a plastic bag full of paint I had left over.  

This is one of the finished pumpkin paintings.  This one is dry and it is still as puffy as when it was wet.


This week we were also lucky to have the preschool kids come over for a special storytime.  I read the same books to them but I came up with a different craft for this group.  I brought another pumpkin in for them to explore.  I invited them to put a hand inside the pumpkin and feel the guts and we talked about what the pumpkin innards looked like and felt like.  We discussed the seeds in the pumpkin and how the guts were stringy.  This was a great way to introduce today's preschool craft.  
  
 I gave each child a paper pumpkin with the words "What is inside?" written on it.  I set out dried pumpkin seeds and orange and yellow yarn that they glued on the inside, just like the inside of our real pumpkin.


Here's a quick note on drying pumpkin seeds.  It was kind of hard to find a recipe for drying pumpkin seeds and not roasting them to eat.  So I figured I'd share what I did to just dry them out and not toast them.  I set my oven for 250 degrees and spread the seeds out on a tin foil lined cookie sheet.  I cooked my seeds for about an hour and a half, stirring them every half hour.