Sunday, 22 December 2013

Fun with cotton wool

This started off as an attempt to make decorations and just ended up as some extremely messy fun with cotton wool.  That kids loved it, however, but don't expect anything decorative to come out the other end. 

We assembled some cotton wool, a few empty pots, a variety of food colouring colours, a couple of pipettes from an old Make Your Own Bath Bombs set, and a jug of water.  We also later added a spray bottle of water.

My kids got these 'Messy Mats' from Father Christmas a couple of years ago, and they are amazing.  I highly recommend them!

We mixed a small amount of food colouring with some water in each of the tubs and then used the pipettes to drop small amounts of the colours onto the cotton wool.


This very quickly turned into a massive science experiment with lots of 'I wonder what would happen if ...'

I wonder what would happen if the cotton wool was dry

I wonder what would happen if the cotton wool had been dunked in water

I wonder what would happen if I wrapped a dry piece around a wet painted piece and then rolled it around

I wonder what would happen if I flattened out the cotton wool

I wonder what would happen if I made it REALLY wet

I wonder what would happen if I put a wet painty bit around a dry clean bit and rolled it around

I wonder what would happen if I splatted paint all over a big bit and then sprayed half of it with water

So this is the finished array of creations.  There is an attempt at some Mandarin characters in there somewhere, and a big blob which was being used for stamping yellow all over another piece at one point.  Anyway, it kept us occupied for an our or so!!


Monday, 16 December 2013

Drainpipes

Luckily for me (or unluckily depending on your point of view) I and my children get an extra week of the Christmas holidays to most so today we have been back to the holiday activities.  Today's was making ball runs out of pieces of old drainpipe.  First step was to collect pieces of old drainpipe from the garage.
Second step was to remove kitten from drainpipe ...

The children then found the highest thing in the lounge we could attach them to - we went for the clothes drier and some string

The string tying took a lot of attempts to get it right, drainpipes are not fond of attaching to driers!

Next thing was to attempt a corner - this was done with a LOT of parcel tape, and a chair balanced on a box to give the right height for it to rest on the other end

This is also possible in houses with clear and tidy sofas

After that we went on a mission to make the ball double back on itself, which was much easier said than done.  Another acre of parcel tape and 250m of string (plus a margarine tub) and this was sorted!

After a test run where the ball stuck to the parcel tape I had to put another piece on the inside of the end stop

And then finally a last pipe to take it back to the clothes drier, and (occasionally) into a cardboard box at the end of the run.


Then all that was left was to watch it work.  Sometimes.



The kids played with this for hours!  All the joints were repaired at least five or six times before I finally had to take it down to hang up some washing to dry

Thursday, 12 December 2013

Christmas Decorations part 4 - tree angels


Our Christmas trees went up a couple of weeks ago - one main one in the lounge which I am particularly precious about, and a slightly smaller and much cheaper one in the playroom that the children get to choose the decorations for and decorate themselves.  Both, however, needed an angel for the top of them, so this week we have been making them.

I got together a mass of general craft equipment, including shiny and coloured card.  Quick thank you to my cousin who threw out a lot of this stuff and passed it on to us.

Selection of craft material (aka a pile of rubbish)
 We also needed two toilet roll middles

In case you don't use toilets and therefore don't know what a toilet roll middle looks like
The kids chose the colours for their angels' dresses, and I cut out some U shapes, the width being the same as the length of the cardboard roll


So then, they wrapped the card around the tube to make a dress.  We stuck it with tape and put some PVA glue around the top to hold the tube to the 'dress'

It needed a slight trim to make the bottom even, but otherwise pretty good!
Next thing we needed a head, the kids chose some pink card we had (this was from my cousin's stuff, thank you Rachel!) and cut a circle for the head, with a 'neck' the same width as the inside of the cardboard tube. 


Once the head was decorated with a face etc, we put it in the top of the tube and stuffed either side with cotton wool to hold it upright



After that we needed to think about wings.  The kids chose gold and a ridged silver which I cut into semi circles (sort of) for them 

It's easiest to hold them against the back of the angel to get an idea of what size you want
Once the kids were happy with where they were positioned they stapled them in place and ta da!  Finished angels!

A finished angel.
 Lastly, we needed to put them on the Christmas trees, so this is angel one on the children's tree:



And this is angel 2 on the main Christmas tree:



Sunday, 8 December 2013

Christmas Decorations part 3

Regular readers will remember (maybe) that we made a playhouse out of a large cardboard box a few months ago, and this week we've decided to make it part of our Christmas decorations.  Although this is an enormous cardboard house, I don't see why it couldn't be adapted to work just as well with smaller cereal box houses.

The finished Christmassed house
 The first thing we did was to make a wreath to hang on the front door.  I did have trouble taking this picture since our kittens keep pulling it off the door and fighting over it, but I managed to get it hung up for long enough to at least get this picture.  All this is is a few pipe cleaners twisted together, with green strips of paper wrapped around and a few blobs of red glitter glue.

Then we spent some time sticking gems on around the top of the house like coloured lights (sort of).  I drew a stringy lights shape around the top with chalk to stick them on so that they didn't end up all over the place.


I bought a couple of rolls of cotton wool to cover the roof and bottom of the window panes for snow.  Once it had been stretched out to stick down we didn't actually need as much as I had feared.

Make sure you buy cotton wool rolls, not balls, otherwise you'll be there all year and it will cost you a fortune!
We put some snow on the top of the chimney and cut some boots out of a sheet of black plastic from a cake packaging and glued them in the top.


 Then we decided that if Santa was on his way down the chimney,  his sleigh and reindeer should be nearby waiting for him.

Only four reindeer since there was limited space on the top of the house
The sleigh was made from a sheet of polystyrene from some packaging (I seriously never throw packaging away, you never know when it might come in useful!) decorated with glitter glue, then slotted together to hold it up.

I'm not 100% sure where Santa is going to sit, but I guess that's the least of his problems all the time he's stuck in the chimney with his boots in the air!!
The reindeers were made out of toilet roll middles (I know some people are concerned about the hygiene aspect of using them, so I guess kitchen roll middles cut in half would work just as well).
We stuck some googly eyes on the sides, cut out some antlers from some gold card and attached cardboard legs by poking them through slits cut in the sides of the roll and folding the ends over to hold them in place.  Then we used a big red pompom stuck to the front of one of them for Rudolph.