When
the kids get home from school, make some of these fun and
inexpensive crafts! Not ready to spend a fortune on supplies?
We've come up with some fun projects you can make with recycled
materials from around the house. Here are some ideas to get you
started!
1 - Milk
Jug Bird Feeders
Rinse out an empty plastic gallon milk jug with lid. Cut a window
in the front of the jug, and make two small poke holes for the
perches. Insert pencils for perches and fill the bottom of the jug
with bird seed.
2 - Juice Carton Crayon Box
Wash and dry an empty cardboard juice carton and cut off the top.
Using bits and pieces of masking tape, have the children tape up
the entire carton, covering all sides, the more tape the better.
Use crayons to color the masking tape box. The tape makes the box
sturdier and will make a great crayon holder for their desk or
dresser.
3 - Aluminum Can Crafts
Paint an empty and rinsed
out tuna can with spray or acrylic paint. Decorate with glitter
and glue, pom poms, buttons, lace, or stickers. These make cute
holders for barrettes, pony tail holders, paper clips, rubber
bands, keys, jewelry, or other small items. Using the same ideas,
paint a soup or vegetable can to make a pen or pencil holder.
4 - Coffee Can Wish Bank
Have the kids cut
pictures from old magazines or draw pictures of something they
want. Decorate the cans with glitter, the pictures, stickers or
anything else you have around. Cut a hole in the plastic top of
the can for the kids to deposit money. Each time they add money to
the can, they are contributing a little bit more to the
"wish" item. A great way to teach kids to save money!
5 - Coffee Can Stilts
Using two 1-pound coffee
cans, turn each can upside down so that the plastic lid is on the
bottom. Using a screwdriver, poke two holes, one on each side of
the can. Using several strands of yarn braided or twisted
together, or some rope, thread through holes in cans. Tie off
inside the can. Cans can be decorated if you like.
6 - Jar Candles
Save the stubs of
candles. When you have several saved, melt them together in a
double boiler. Color the wax by adding bits of crayon to the
mixture. Pour the wax into glass jelly or mason jars or metal
cans. Use cotton yarn for wicks, or you can purchase a roll of
wick at a craft store. Decorate the outside of the candle holder
with acrylic paints.
7 - Magazine House
Using an old catalog or
magazine, cut out pictures of chairs, tables, curtains, bathroom
fixtures and other furnishings. Spread out a newspaper or large
sheet of drawing paper. Sketch an "open sided" house.
Have children place the pictures of the furnishings in the rooms
of their choice. They can cut out more pictures to redecorate
their house, cut out pictures of people, toys, pets, anything they
like!
8 - Alphabet Catalog
Collage
Using old toys, clothing,
and plant catalogs, have the kids cut out colorful pictures that
begin with a specific letter of the alphabet. Assign different
letters to each child. Have them glue the pictures onto a piece of
construction paper. Discuss the pictures afterward.
9 - Paper Towel Rain Makers
Young kids love noise
makers. Color, paint, and decorate paper towel rolls. Cover one
end of a paper towel roll with waxed paper and close it off with a
rubber band. Pour a handful or two of dried beans (split peas work
well) in the open end, close open end the same as the other. Poke
toothpicks through the rolls at different intervals to add a
"rain shaker" sound.
10 - Paper Towel Tube
Holders
Decorate a paper towel
tube with paint, markers, glitter, stickers, construction paper
and crayons. This becomes a colorful carrying tube. Roll their
pictures up and put inside to take to their teacher, grandparents,
friends, or relatives. Some special pictures could be for their
Grandparents, a special aunt or uncle, or even for a brother or
sister.
11 - Paper Plate Holders
Using two paper plates,
cut one plate in half and place on top of the other plate (turn
the half plate to form a pocket over the whole plate). Use a paper
punch to make holes going around the outside of the plate. Use
scraps of yarn and "sew" through the holes of the plate.
Start and end at the top of the plate so that it can be extended
about six inches and tied. Have your children color, paint or
decorate their plates. Now they have their very own place to put
prized possessions, notes from Mom and dad, special pictures and
more.
12 - Paper Plate Aquarium
Color an underwater scene
on the "eating" side of a paper plate. Glue goldfish
crackers to the scene, a couple pieces of plastic plant for
seaweed, and using glue and a little sand or soft dirt, make the
sea floor. Using a second paper plate, cut a circle in the middle.
Cut a circle of blue plastic wrap 1 inch in diameter larger than
your hole in the plate. On the "eating" side of this
plate, glue the blue plastic wrap so that it covers and overlaps
the hole on the plate. Glue or staple both plates together with
"eating" side toward the inside. Punch a hole in the top
and string a piece of yarn through the hole to hang your aquarium
from the ceiling.
13 - Treasure Shoe Box
Decorate an old shoe box
and lid with construction paper, markers, paint, glue and glitter,
crayons, googly eyes, stickers, lace, doilies, or whatever else
you can find. Be sure to put the child's name inside the lid. This
box make a great box for treasures found out in the yard, on the
way home from school, or anywhere else your children
"hunt".
14 - Shadowboxes
Paint the inside of a
shoebox with black or dark blue poster or acrylic paint.
Alternatively, you can glue black construction paper inside the
box. Using white crayons or stickers, make a night scene with
stars and the moon on the black background. Get creative, use
small plastic toys to create a scene inside your shadowbox, or
make your own with construction paper and glue. Cut out small
pictures from coloring books and color and adhere to your scene.
Hang a spaceship or shooting star with a piece of string and glue.
15 - Cartoon Strip
Make your very own
cartoon adventure with crayons and a pad of paper. At the bottom
of a pad, on each sheet, draw a figure (i.e., a dog). The first
frame will be on the first page, second frame on the second page,
and so on. Change the movement with each page. When you are
finished, fan the pages with your thumb to see the show!
16 - Create a Story
If you have several
children together, this can be great fun. Give each child two or
three pieces of paper. Have them each drawer a picture and write a
sentence. When finished, see if they can put it together to form a
story. New pages can be created as you go along. A book cover can
be made from two pieces of construction paper, a hole punch, and
yarn.
17 - Number Fun
Pick a number from one to
ten. Write it on a piece of paper. Ask the children to draw sets
of things in that number. If the child get number four, have them
draw four apples, four trees, four dogs, and so on. Have them
color their pictures with crayons and markers.
18 - Animal Jumble
Using construction or
white paper, ask each child to drawn a different body part of an
animal, but to have their animal be a secret. For example, have
one child draw the head, another draw the tail, another the legs
and so on. let the children pick the animal they want to draw.
When they are done have then put the animal together with tape or
glue. Have fun coming up with a name for the animal
(monk-dog-lion-potamus).
19 - Pet Rocks
Find smooth, flat or
round rocks. Be sure to clean off any dirt or sand and dry
completely before starting. Paint with acrylic paints. Decorate
faces by using google eyes, yarn for hair, markers, glitter, and
any other tidbits you like.
20 -
Bookmarks
Great
for back to school or as a gift to someone you love. Make fun
bookmarks with construction paper, markers, paints, and stickers.
You can also use glitter, sequins, lace, doilies, buttons, and any
other little bric-a-brac you have laying about. Cut strips from
construction paper, painting the construction paper will make it
sturdier, or you can visit the local library or office supply to
have them laminated for longer lasting use. To complete the
bookmark, attach a tassle make from strands of yarn.