Showing posts with label owls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label owls. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Fall Craft, part 2: Electric Boogaloo

I was going through all my program photos on Facebook, when I found more of my fall crafts (most of these from last year). I don't know when the ones I showed you before were from.  Doesn't really matter.  Anywho, part 2.

Apples. We gave the kids paint (which is always scary) and loofahs to do the leafy parts of the trees.  Then we gave then toilet paper/paper towel tubes and those were the rings for the apples.  Anything else they wanted in the picture, we gave them crayons to draw in, and encouraged them to do that BEFORE painting.


Leaves. This was a totally crazy idea when I thought of it. Did I see it somewhere or did I modify something? I don't know.  We decided to give the kids different kinds of popcorn to glue to the trees to represent leaves. We tried getting the puffed corn pieces rather than popcorn, thinking it would stick better. It didn't. We used cheddar, regular, and caramel, so we'd have yellow, orange, and brown. It didn't turn out too badly.



Fall. This was a fall craft I did AGES ago. I have this small picture-frame die-cut, and I used to use it ALL. THE. TIME. I've calmed down a bit since then. I had made tamales with my friend recently, I think, so I knew they sold the corn husks at the grocery store.  I think the other things are Corn Nuts, and then there's scrapbooking paper that's popcorn print. The corn husks REALLY did not want to be glued down. And gluing the Corn Nuts on top? Not my best plan.  But this looks kinda cute, right?



Owls. Another paper towel/toilet paper roll craft! You just wrap it in paper (which you glue on, of course) and fold in the head.  We gave them stickers to make the eyes and let them draw in pupils. Glue on a beak and some feathers for wings, and you're done!


Pumpkins. This next craft was SO easy and it looks SO good. All you have to so is cut out the pumpkin shape in the paper, and then cut strips of scrapbook paper in whatever colors you want. We stuck with golds/oranges because duh, pumpkins. The kids may have been a bit confused as to which way the strips had to be facing, but it just took a second to show them and they got it. (Or they had a parent helping them).


Halloween/Bats. I can't remember which this was for last year. Could have been either. We've done some iteration of this craft many times. For polar animals, for Christmas, and now for Halloween. Pretty much you take your bat cut-out, color it with chalk, then place it on the paper, and smudge the chalk off the cutout and onto the paper, so you wind up with the outline.  Or you can do like this girl and take your cutout and make and outline around it, and then smudge that.  Either works. Coloring your cutout means that you don't have any hard lines.




Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Fall Crafts

I said I'd go back and add crafts to the themed posts, but instead I just decided to go ahead and make them their own post.  All of the ones shown are what's been salvaged from years past.  I still have yet to make what we're doing this year, so there may be another post coming up.


Apples.  This one was truly pulled out of thin air.  In the past, we'd done things like a wreath made of paper apple cut-outs, but I wanted something different.  I know the kids don't care, and I have different ones from year to year, but still. So I found this or came up with it at the last minute. We pre-cut the holes in the plates as well as cut out the leaves.  All the kids had to do was glue on the tissue paper to color the apple and glue on the leaves.


Owls. In NO WAY do I ever expect anyone else to be able to do this craft during a regular week, but we had the stuff sitting around, so we did.  I had all these pairs of kids sunglasses from something the department was going to do years ago. So popped out the lenses and then hot-glued cardstock in the shape of these giant owl eyebrows onto the top of the frames. The kids glued feathers onto the cardstock, and voila! Owl glasses. I love them, and my adult friends all wanted a pair. 


Pumpkins. Since we try to avoid Halloween and jack o'lanterns with this week, it's a little hard to do crafts with it sometimes. I love doing mosaics, so we've done that a couple years, giving them split peas, barley, and of course pumpkin seeds to use. A LOT of the pumpkin seeds never make it to the paper. Heck, a lot of the pumpkin seeds never make it to the kids. I have to buy an extra pack just for me to eat.


Halloween!  As stated before, I LOVE Halloween! So I'm giving you a two-fer.  First, the ghost.  I think it's pretty straightforward, but if you need directions, you can find them here. We simplified them a bit because we didn't want to cut out as many things, so the eyes aren't layered.


Cotton Swab Skeleton.  Again, to me this looks very self-explanatory.  If you'd like a guide to help you, click here. We did this with our elementary school kids because we felt it was a bit more difficult than the ghost.



Thanksgiving! Luckily, we have die-cuts to help us with this feat! :D A couple of years we've done a banner made of paper turkeys and fall leaves, and the kids wrote things they were thankful for on each.  Last year we decided to make a turkey hat.  Easy with our cut-outs. If you don't have one, ask around. We let people use ours as long as they bring their own paper.





HALLOWEEN DECORATIONS!!!

Last year we decided to switch up our decorations a bit. We used to have these giant Martha Stewart fans hanging in our picture book section. (See below) In junior fiction, we had gigantic spiders and spiderwebs everywhere, and in young adult we had huge scary bat wall clings. So we decided to make everything a bit nicer and prettier and not so scary. (Though I love the scary, trust me)



In our YA area, I decided to do a Dia de los Muertos banner.  I made all these little skull cut-outs, and then my coworker and I had a blast decorating them!


For the picture book section, I found a couple of banner tutorials to try out. The "Happy Halloween" banner I did based on this tutorial I found about using coffee filters. The one in the back (which is hard to see, I know) is mainly using our cutouts of a cat, owl, and jack o'lantern against different backgrounds.  If you want a tutorial, I found one here, but that person gets REALLY in-depth on the process.  I think I may have used it just for the measurements.


Finally, in our junior fiction section, we decided to keep it simple and just went with a ton of hanging bats.  Also - some bats taped to the windows for depth of field or something.  Who is it by?  Martha Stewart, of course.  Though if you look at the bats on her page, and the ones on ours, you can see a noticeable size difference.  I don't know why you'd want them as big as she has them.


Hope you enjoy and maybe use some!  I plan on posting more crafts soon! 

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Owls

Honestly?  If I could, we'd do Halloween all month long.  Buuuut I have a few parents who wouldn't appreciate that.  And so?  We do owls.

Owl Babies by Martin Waddell. This is my ABSOLUTE FAVORITE book to do for this theme.  I love screaming/crying/whining Bill's line of "I WANT MY MOMMY!" - which happens often enough, that by the end of the book, the kids are doing it too.  



This is one of the newer books we've added to this theme.  It's a cute book about an owl that stays up during the day and gets to see all sorts of colors he doesn't normally.  This past year was the first year that we really used it, and I don't really remember the response.


Ok.  I might have lied.  This one is at least tied for my favorite for this theme.  I LOVE doing the temper tantrum that Baby Owl does at the end of the book.  The kids all laugh and it's super-cute.


Good-Night, Owl by Pat Hutchins.  This is one that I like to do with older kids, assigning them different noises to make during the story.  This *sometimes* works with younger kids - esp. our in-house story times where the parents will do it.


I actually have a fingerplay for this one!

5 Little Hoot Owls
(which is confusing because it starts with one)

1 little hoot owl looking at you, 
1 flew up, and then there were 2
Hoot, hoot, hoot, what a scaaary sight
Hoot, hoot, hoot on Halloween night*

2 little hoot owls high in a tree, 
1 flew up, and then there were 3
Hoot, hoot, hoot, what a scaaaary sight
Hoot, hoot, hoot on Halloween night

3 little hoot owls on a barn door, 
1 flew up, and then there were 4
Hoot, hoot, hoot, what a scaaary sight
Hoot, hoot, hoot on Halloween night

4 little hoot owls by a beehive, 
1 flew up, and then there were 5
Hoot, hoot, hoot, what a scaaaary sight
Hoot, hoot, hoot, on Halloween night

5 little hoot owls sleeping all day, 
along came a cat, and scared them away!
Hoot, hoot, hoot, what a scaaary sight
Hoot, hoot, hoot on Halloween night.

*I have recently started changing this to Hoot, hoot, hoot on such a dark night because I've had quite a few families who don't celebrate Halloween and I've tried to not alienate them as much as possible.

There is a tune I use for this little fingerplay, but it's not the one traditionally used with it, and I have no idea how to write that out for you, and I am NOT recording myself doing it - at least not yet.  It doesn't have to be sung.