Spin Drum

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This great little craft will have little musicians marching and drumming all over your house. Perfect for a rainy day!

For the body of the drum, we used small papier-mache boxes that I purchased off Amazon, about 4 inches across. Remove the lid, and punch three holes in the box, at 3 o’clock, 6 o’clock, and 9 o’clock.

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This step might be tough for little fingers, so add your own muscle power to the hole puncher. We even enlisted daddy’s help after my hand got tired!

Place a dowel in the bottom hole, then string twine through the side holes, looping it around the dowel in the center as you go.

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Glue the dowel in place – I definitely recommend hot glue for this step.

While the glue briefly dried, Travis was in charge of decorating the lid with markers. He said his design was a mandolin! (Kids can decorate the side of the box, too).

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We hot glued on the decorated lid, and then tied wooden beads to the dangling ends of string, securing them with a double knot.

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Make sure your beads and strings are the right length to hit near the center of the box lid, before you tie off the knot. Our first try was too short, but a second drum was just right.

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Now spin and play!

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My impish boy soon decided his drum worked not only as an instrument but as a “spear”, too, which made for lots of imaginative play. Either way, I loved seeing him have fun!

Bucket + Tape = Drum

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If your child needs a toy drum to bang on and quick – no time for drying glue or paint here! – then this is the craft for you.

All you need is packing tape and any old bucket (we had the perfect tin one from a trip to feed animals at a sanctuary).

Travis was very intrigued as I started taping over the top of the bucket.

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And thrilled when the hole on top was completely covered (I recommend two layers of tape), and realized that the bucket now had a drum head.

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That’s it, a drum is born! Pencils make the perfect, no-crafting-required sticks, though if you want to get fancier, you might try rubber ball drum sticks.

Travis loved that he could start drumming right away. I took advantage of a later nap to glue on ribbon as embellishment.

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In no time at all, we had a drum circle!

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Music Crate

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I was thrilled when I spotted our latest Koala Crate – a music-themed kit awaited us! Music is Travis’s favorite thing in the world, so I knew this one was sure to be a hit.

As always with Koala Crate, you can recreate most of the crafts below after a trip to your local craft store.

The first project was a make-it-yourself xylophone, made from a cardboard box, elastics, and wooden slats. There were some interesting learning components to explore as we put together the xylophone; for example, first he had to arrange the wooden pieces from longest to shortest.

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Each wooden slat then needed to receive a color-coded dot from the provided dot stamps, which would become its “note.” This was a bit of a hard concept for a three-year-old, who simply wanted to dot his stamps all over the wooden pieces any which way. So it became a good lesson in restraint!

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Threading the four xylophone pieces through the rubber bands required grown up hands, but Travis loved the end result.

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“You sing and I play!” he instructed me, and was off and running with games pretending to be a music teacher. I was pleased with the sound, very similar to a marimba or other African wooden xylophone.

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Now it was time to compose our own song with the provided “musical composition” sheets. By filling in each circle on the sheet with a dot stamp, kids can play a tune in order on their xylophone. All this was a bit beyond Travis’s interest – he simply had fun composing a “song” that was nearly all blue…

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And testing out how the stamps looked on his arm…

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Luckily the kit came with two blank sheets, so I made one with a pattern Travis would later be able to play.

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In a neat twist, you can also remove the four wooden slats any time, reposition the elastics, and turn this toy into a “guitar.”

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Next up was a homemade tambourine. The kit came with a cardboard (koala-shaped, very cute) tambourine base, bells, and elastic thread. Travis easily did his best threading yet as we pulled the elastic through a hole, added a bell, then looped back down again.

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This one was quick and easy, and enjoyable to shake along to a beat.

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The final project gave Travis a chance to go wild with the dot stamps as he’d hoped to do on the wooden xylophone pieces. Simply dot all over the provided ribbon fabric, then let dry.

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Once the stamps were dry, I looped the ribbon onto a wooden mallet and it was now a musical prop to wave around.

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We had fun exploring tempo (fast and slow), wiggling the ribbon like a snake, holding it overhead like a rainbow, and more.

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We couldn’t stop there, of course. The kit came with a suggestion for one final DIY instrument – a drum upcycled from a soup can! We decided to make two sizes of drums, so painted both the soup can and an empty oatmeal container.

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Once the paint dries, snip the narrow necks from balloons, and stretch the wide part of a balloon over each container as the drum skin. Secure the balloon with masking tape. We covered a piece of construction paper with the dot stamps and added that to the middle of our drums as decoration.

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Now it was time for a drum circle!

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Or a drum stack?

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Needless to say, a huge hit – pun intended!

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As a final note, it’s fun to watch Travis’s brain grow with this subscription. This was the first month in which he was interested in the games in our Imagine magazine, following along maze trails with his finger and more. One storyline in the magazine even prompted us to test a water glass xylophone!

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I love watching this boy grow, and love the ways in which Koala helps us do it!

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