Winter Easy Craft

Paper snowflakes  

These look great on your window or little ones hanging on branches in a pot on your seasonal table. A little note, make a special one on your child’s birthday, lay over the cake, sprinkle icing sugar over the top, lift it off and there will be a lovely sugar pattern on top of the cake (to your child’s delight!).

How to make a snowflake 

Get a piece of A4 paper, use a side plate to draw a circle on the paper and then cut out.

Fold the paper in half, then again into quarters (pizza shape) and again (ice cream cone shape).

With scissors cut small shapes from all of the edges of the ice cream cone, little cut out squares and triangles, when all sides including the top are finished, open up and take a look at your individual snowflake.

No two will ever be the same, like snowflakes in real life!

Click to view picture of Jessica (my daughter’s) heart snowflake.

Bulb planting is magical

Now is the time to plant bulbs (a child’s delight!). Visit your local garden centre or plant department of a hardware store and purchase a bag of spring time bulbs, my favourites are daffodils. Plant one in a special inside pot, your child can decorate with a flower picture to wraparound. Keep in a prominent place, your dinner table and/or kitchen window shelf, water once a week and watch the green shoots grow and flowers appear (magical!). Also plant bulbs in the garden or in outside pots, they will surprise your child and appear every year.   

Pinecone bird feeder (what fun!)

Do you have a pinecone at home, if you find some lying around in nature from now on keep them for this special winter craft activity (for children without nut allergies). You will need: a pine cone, jar of peanut butter (smooth), butter knife, bird seed, and a bowl or tray.

Let your child have fun spreading the peanut butter all over the pine cone, then roll in the birdseed (kept in bowl or tray) to cover the pine cone in seed. Tie with wool or string on to a garden tree branch or fence (preferably one you can see out of the window). The birds eat their winter treat, and when pecked clean, you can repeat this craft activity again!

Wonderful seasonal craft ideas in the book ‘Earthwise: environmental crafts and activities with young children’ Carol Petrash (Floris Books). Available from www.honeybeetoys.com.au

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