Monday, September 20, 2010

Eclipse Party


*sigh* I wish these books had never been made. However, if it gets teens to read, I suppose I can't complain about them too loudly. We had a Twilight party last year in celebration of Edward's birthday (June 20th) - apparently I didn't write about it here. Brief overview of last year then: he had a birthday cake, werewolf kibble, drinks, played a matching quotes game, a trivia game, and a game of chance. We had a ton of prizes, and everyone walked away with something. Fast forward to this year. We had to come up with bigger and better things for this party.

First: We made buttons that said Team Edward and Team Jacob (with corresponding pics, of course), and the teens picked out of a hat and were sorted into the 2 teams.
They could only trade teams if there was someone else on the other team that wanted to trade.

Then: The first game we played was a Bella tug-of-war. (Get it? Because Jacob and Edward fight over her...) Played like a regular game of tug-of war, but we had Bella's pic taped to the middle of the rope. Whichever team pulled her across their line on the floor first won the game. The
winning team each received a New Moon door-hanger. (All of our stuff was New Moon themed b/c it was on clearance at Hot Topic).

Next: We had the teens do a word search. The first to find all of them the fastest won. The winner got to choose from our table of prizes.

Next: Trivia game! The teams had to pick one person to represent them (unfortunately, that person was the only one who could win a prize). The person was pretty much on their own except for they could use a lifeline and ask for help from their team.
Next: Eating contest! The teens competed against members of their own teams! Team Jacob had to eat Reese's Puff cereal out of dog food bowls and Team Edward had to eat cherry Jell-o out of plastic cups - all with their hands behind their backs! I felt a bit bad for Team Jacob - I should've either put less cereal in or at least given them some milk. Team Edward had a hard time, but once they figured out they could tip the cup over and slurp it off the table, that one ended in no time.

Finally: The chance game. This one is called Vampires and Victims, and basically all you have to do is make up a bunch of slips of paper with the words vampire and victim written on them. Count out an even # of each for the # of teens you have, and
then have them go in a circle each pulling out a slip of paper. Anyone who has a slip with "Vampire" moves on, anyone with "Victim" is out. Totally random. Keep going until you end up with only 1 vampire left, and there's your winner.

We still had prizes after all that, so we just started drawing names and giving out prizes until they were all gone. We didn't have enough for everyone to have a prize this time, but I think they all had a good time regardless.

Boat Building Competiton


This was the project we used to kick-off our summer teen programming. It's a great one if you need something to just throw together because all you have to do is gather a bit of odds and ends and see what they can make out of it. Items we used included:

water bottles
egg cartons
aluminum foil
Ivory soap
cork
paper clips
balloons
duct tape
straws
pint fruit baskets

They had half an hour to make a boat (we also provided Goldfish
and blue Hawaiian Punch during that time), after which we tested it's buoyancy by submerging it in a large plastic container filled with water. We judged boats on looks, buoyancy, and motility and then awarded certificates to the winners. I think the teens had a good time with this, though I didn't see too many of the boys after this one. Weird.

Cupcake Decorating

You may remember that awhile back I did a post on the cake decorating we did last summer. Big hit. Big mess. Tons o'fun - for the teens at least. Well we did it again (sort of) this summer.

Originally, the idea had been brought to me by my literacy coordinator. A couple of the women on the Friends board are cake decorators and wanted to do a program with the teens. I was given the impression this would be a program every week, and I said ok. Well, come to find out later they wanted it to only be a one-time deal, and they wanted to limit the # of kids.
Again, I was ok with this - limiting the # totally made sense. So I made a sign up sheet, limited it to 15 and made up some signs as well as put it on the fliers we sent to the schools. The response was incredible! We were filled up in no time, but I had people write down the names of anyone interested so that perhaps I could persuade the women to at the very least do a second class for anyone on the list.

The day of the class got closer, the women had everything planned out, and then the day before (or possibly the day of - I don't remember) - both women fell ill. I completely understood - we set the date for the next Tuesday, and I called all the teens and told them of the change in days. Well later that day, she called me back saying she'd have to move it because her partner would be out of town that day. I told her that I had already called all the teens and so she agreed to still have it that day after I assured her she'd have plenty of help from our children's staff and our volunteers.

The day before the program rolled around again, and she had to call and cancel because she'd been in the hospital that weekend. Apparently I wasn't caring enough, because I found out later that she was upset with me, but I assured her everything was ok, and I understood that she had been in the hospital, but I was already trying to problem-solve in my brain, so maybe th
at's why I came off cold. I talked to the director, and decided to do the cupcake decorating program myself . There was no way I was calling those teens back to cancel a second time without being able to give them a definite date for the future!

So I called Publix, and they were willing to sell me unfrosted cupcakes by the pound. I grabbed the two awesome cupcake books we had on our shelves, Hello Cupcake and What's New, Cupcake? by Karen Tack and Alan Richardson and went shopping for supplies. We decided to make koi fish out of circus peanuts and roses out of orange slices (both of which are in the books), because they seemed the simplest. I called all the teens on the list (about 30) and invited them all to come - after all, these were relatively simple, I was going to have a lot of help, so why not do them all at once? The teens had a great time (all girls, I believe), and some even got to do a few extras because we had some no-shows. It was a little last minute, but a great success and something I would recommend to any library that has those books!

Bath Jellies and Bombs


So - now that I've gotten back into the swing of things, it's time to catch up on summer.

Bath jelly!
I had never heard of that stuff until a couple of years ago, when I went into a LUSH store for the first time. Never heard of it either? It's basically a gelatin soap. Well at some point in time this summer, I was in a scramble for something to do with my teens, when I stumbled across a recipe for bath jelly. (I was actually looking for a craft to do with school age - they were my test subjects) The recipe is as follows:

1 pkg unflavored gelatin
1/2 c liquid soap
3/4 c hot water
food coloring
scented essential oils

Empty gelatin packet in bowl and add hot water. Stir until gelatin is dissolved and add the liquid soap. Also add any food coloring and essential oil (if desired). Stir gently (so you don't create too many bubbles) and then pour into a container. In the stores it looks like the jelly's been made in large pans and cut into chunks. In this recipe you can just pour it straight into a baby food jar or a plastic container. As long as it's kept cool, it should last for awhile. (I think I've had the one sitting in my office for well over 2 months now). If you see any mould, you should obviously throw it away. I used a pink grapefruit scented grapeseed oil that was leftover from the bath bombs we made at Christmas, which was great because there are a number of grapefruit scented soaps on the market.

But we didn't stop there, no! We also made bath bombs. As I just mentioned, we had actually done this craft before at Christmas. The bath jellies hardly took any time to make, and we had a lot of the supplies leftover from the last time, so I decided to add this to the lot. This craft is a little harder, and takes some supplies that needed to be specially ordered. Here is a basic recipe:

2 parts baking soda
1 part citric acid
1 part cornstarch
essential oil
food coloring
water

The whole process of making a bath bomb is very much dependent on how things feel. Basically, you mix the dry ingredients (set a bit aside for an emergency stash), then add just a couple of drops of food coloring. The mixture will fizz but just mix it in as best you can. Add a teaspoon of oil for scent and continue mixing. Then to add the water. You want to add the most minute amounts that you can b/c if you add too much, the bomb won't set correctly. As you add water, you'll want to mix with your fingers, and you'll know it's perfect when you can squeeze your mixture and it will hold it's shape. Pack it into a mold, turn the mold out onto some cardboard and leave it to dry for 24 hrs. If your mixture was too dry, the mold will fall apart (but you can always add water and remold) - too wet, and it will grow - the bomb will be soft and bubbly and bigger than when you first turned it out (add the emergency dry mix and re-mold). There are guides you can find online that are a lot more detailed than this, but I figured this is a good overview.

The teens LOVED this. It's a bit precise, so you really have to watch out and help them, but it's cool because they can personalize it with the scents and colors they want. We did it at Christmas the first time because they make great gifts, but it's also a great craft to do anytime.

Recycled Picture Frames

Sorry about the hiatus folks, the summer was pretty hectic and I honestly forgot about this blog until just yesterday. However - I am excited to be writing again and sharing the cool stuff we've done with other people. Our first teen programs of the school year were this week, and we started them off by making picture frames out of recycled library cards. Why we have all these cards from other libraries, I'm not sure. We got new cards awhile back, so these must have been sent as samples, but I won't look a gift horse in the mouth. It's always nice to do recycled crafts - so cheap!

All you have to do is cut the cards up and glue them on to a frame. We have a frame die for our Accucut machine and we get mat board donated from a nearby
framery, so that was no cost to us either. I'm sure other picture frames would work well, we were just going with what we've got. The first one I did, I tried to do even sized squares (top right pic), but I think I like having all the different sizes better. The few kids that showed up really liked it (this first one wasn't really well advertised), and I think I'll use it again in the future.

Stay tuned - I'm going to try to catch up on the last few months that I missed!