Flower Making with Corks

Flower Making (4)Travis always loves to play with the leftover stems and leaves after I bring home a bouquet of flowers, snip off the ends, and arrange the rest in a vase. This project was a cute way to upcycle the stems!

First, glue down your stem and a few leaves on white paper. Travis loved deciding where his leaves should go!

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We’ve been exploring different ways to stamp this week, so to make the flower petals, we dipped old corks into paint, and stamped on top of the stem (and sometimes to the side etc.)

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Very simple and perfect for spring!

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Phoneme Week 1: OW

OWFirst things first, Travis traced O and W on his Usborne Wipe-Clean Alphabet cards so that I could establish these two as our focus for the coming days. I introduced the two letters together, teaching him that o + w says “ow”. This is a fun one, since of course it is also the word we say for an owie!

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Phonics Book of the Week: Cow Takes a Bow. Start off your week by reading this book, underlining everywhere your child spots the o-w pair next to each other. Travis loved it right away. This silly story features a cOW who goes off to the circus and finds herself playing the part of the clOWn. The book includes a nice variety of other OW words such as brOWn, tOWn, dOWn, nOW, frOWn, hOW, wOW, and of course bOW. We re-read the story every third night or so, at which point Travis was sight-reading many of our words of the week.

Guiding Theme: flOWer

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We started off in the simplest way possible, with flowers in a vase, making the OW phoneme just right for these first few weeks of spring! Travis loved helping to arrange the flowers, and then adored playing with leftover stems and leaves, so it turned into a fantastic nature lesson, too.

  • We Read:
  • We Made:
    • A Flower Collage, to get him excited about the word! I’m sure I confused my checkout clerk at the craft store when I told her no one was getting married, but that I was buying a wedding flower magazine for a craft with my son. Believe it or not, Travis loved going through and finding the best bouquets to cut out, which was great safety scissors practice too! Flower (1)Once we had a huge pile of flower pictures, we used a glue stick to craft a gorgeous “Flower Show” on green construction paper. Travis loved deciding where each picture should go, and was very into mixing colors and big flower/small flowers!Flower (2)
    • A Word Flower Garden. Adults, cut flower shapes from construction paper and glue to a separate piece of construction paper as the background. Each petal contains a word “family”, which we filled in as the week went on… although some of our families were loosely defined, in order to fit every key word onto a petal.OW (16)
    • Newspaper FlowersNewspaper Flowers (9)
    • Paper Towel FlowersPaper Towel Flowers (9)
    • Cupcake Wrapper FlowersCupcake Flower (7)
  • We Learned:
    • For science of the week, we learned about the property of transpiration, through which color travels from the stem of a flower to its petals.OW science (6)
    • For math of the week, we simply did lovely spring flower counting! Set out flower pots or other containers with labels numbered 1 through 5 (go higher depending on your child’s age or ability). Next, count out flowers correctly into the proper bin. It’s a simple exercise, but you’ll have a lovely spring flower display at the end.OW math (4)
  • We Visited:
    • The Macy’s FlOWer Show! As soon as I saw the ad in the paper for the show this week, I knew I had chosen the right phoneme. The show featured lavish bouquets on carousel horses, and Travis was thrilled since we’d just completed so many flower projects at home.Macys (9).jpg
  • We Ate:

Other Words of the Week:

  • Cow: We played with all our barn and cow toys at home, and in addition visited cows at a local farmed animal sanctuary. OW (28)In addition to our phonics title, we read the silly book Click Clack Moo: Cows that Type by Doreen Cronin. If you’re lucky, you might even see a plOW while you visit the cows!OW (30)
  • Down: Cow falls down in our phonics story… So we further played with the word by rolling things down tubes and cushions. Get creative – what else will roll? Maybe even your toddler!OW (6)
  • Shower: Another perfectly timed word, since we are having many April shOWers this time of year! We listened to the song of the same name all week, and looked outside every time we had another lovely April rain shower. As another fun idea, see if you can entice your little one into his or her first shower. Travis was never brave enough to get in, but loved playing on the side with a bucket and toys.OW (3)
  • Towel: Speaking of showers, you’re going to need to dry off after, so what a nice coincidence that towel fits the theme of the week. I left our towels out a few days for fun “indoor beach” play, which is always a hit.OW (26)
  • Owl: We read Owl Babies by Martin Waddell, and also visited the owls at a local nature preserve that rescues injured animals. If your child is a bit older, consider a neat science project like dissecting (sterilized) owl pellets, which you can purchase online. Usborne’s Beginners Non-Fiction series contains an Owls volume, which is a great read for kids 5 and up; younger kids adore That’s Not My Owl.OW (8)
  • Frown: A felt circle and face shapes from a recent Koala Crate were the perfect way to talk about the word frown, as well as the emotion behind it.OW (2)
  • Brown: We read Dr. Seuss’s silly Mr. Brown Can Moo, and colored and painted in the color brown this week. OW (14)
  • Town: Consider a cute project like the Press-Out Paper Town from Usborne. Consisting of a Town Hall, flower shop, grocer, and cafe, the project filled a fun hour, assembling the buildings and talking about the other structures and people that make up a town. OW (12)You can also emphasize the word this week as you drive around town!OW (10)
  • Bow: With cow taking a bow in our main title from the week, we needed to put on a show of course! Pull out costumes and use props, and when it’s over, be sure you take a bow.OW (21)
  • Crown: Wondering what costume to wear before you take your bow? We put together this simple heart crown and had a kingly performance!Heart Crowns (4)
  • Gown: If you have a child who likes to play dress-up, pull out any of the gowns in mommy’s closet for your costumed play, too. (I use the term “gown” loosely here – any fancy dress will do!). Travis liked using mine as props and scenery!OW (22)
  • Clown: Kids love clowns, even if I find them creepy! The videos from Bimbi the Funny Clown got huge belly laughs.
  • Vowel: Finally, I touched briefly on the fact that 5 letters get a special name: vowels. Travis thought the concept was neat, which hopefully serves us well in phoneme weeks to come…OW (32)

Carnations + Food Color

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Here’s a fantastic nature and science lesson… the science of which was new even to me as an adult!

Have you ever heard the term “transpiration”? It’s the process through which moisture is carried in a plant from the stem to the leaves and petals. Well, if you add color to that moisture, what happens to the petals?

All you need to find out are white carnations (or a similar white flower; we used what I think were daisies to start) and food coloring. It helps to have kid-safe (i.e. plastic) test tubes with a holder, so you can set up the project without unsafe glass vases. Travis helped place one white flower in each of four test tubes.

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We added food coloring to three of the tubes – be generous with the amount you use, about 10 to 12 drops! – and left the fourth one empty as a “control.”

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Imagine our surprise when a mere hour later, the color was starting to creep into our petals. Blue was the most immediate, for whatever reason, with a truly stunning effect.

 

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Green and red were a bit slower, but by morning, we had gorgeously tinged flowers. I will have to keep this in mind for holidays like St. Patrick’s Day!

If you have enough food coloring, consider setting up a full rainbow from red through purple… Alas, we were missing a few colors, and I was also too nervous to leave the rainbow assortment on a window sill where cat or toddler could knock them over. But we did like the results so much that we purchased a second batch of white flowers (Are these ones carnations, anyone?) and added orange into the mix.

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We also had a more vibrant green the second time around. All in all, great fun!

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Cupcake Wrapper Flowers

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This is one of those crafts that was really a mommy project, while Travis played with all of the materials alongside me. Children in pre-school on up will love to help you put the flowers together though! When our flowers were finished, Travis loved “planting” them – more on that below!

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To start, I shaped bright cupcake liners into various flower shapes – some with rounded edges and some with points. The cupcake liners were by far Travis’s favorite part of this craft, and he stacked them and filled them with pom poms while I worked.

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For older children, you can trace the shape of the flower to cut, and have them practice with safety scissors.

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Once you have enough flowers, trace a leaf shape on green construction paper and cut out. Kids will love helping to use a hole punch on each leaf.

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Fold a green pipe cleaner in half, and thread one or two leaves onto each. Carefully poke the pipe cleaner “stem” through two or three cupcake wrappers, folding over the end to secure in place.

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We tried gluing pom poms to the center of a few of our flowers, but they didn’t stay on very well. Oh well, they looked pretty even without the embellishment!

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You can display your spring flowers in pretty vases…

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Or plant them in dirt, as we did with an old prop from a Koala Crate.

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Newspaper Flowers

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Here’s another pretty addition to our spring flower play! This time we used a rather interesting concoction of homemade paint to make flowers from newspaper.

Travis loved the painting process. In cups, combine equal parts white glue and water, then add a few drops of liquid watercolor to each. The mixture is best applied with a foam brush.

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Travis was very deliberate deciding which color should go where!

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Our goopy newspaper then needed to dry overnight in the bathroom.

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The next morning the paper is very stiff – a bit like papier-mache. I cut it into flower petals, while Travis got in great cutting practice alongside me, using his safety scissors.

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Glue 5 or 6 petals together in a spiral. Travis had sort of lost interest, so I did this step solo.

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Once the glue dried, we attached a green pipe cleaner stem to the back of each flower with tape.

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Play with the flowers any way your like…

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Or they even make a fantastic addition to a real flower display!

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Paper Towel Flowers

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Be prepared for several crafty flower posts in the next week or so. I have a case of spring fever, plus another flower-based theme I’m working on (stay tuned for more on that!…). So for starters, here is a lovely and easy flower craft that toddlers will adore.

Watercolor and paper towels makes for an innovative painting experience, because with just a light touch of the paint brush, the color will bleed across the paper towel. Travis had fun testing the limits of this for a little while.

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We were using liquid watercolors for the first time, but you might consider sticking with regular watercolors. I confess, it was this mama who knocked over our yellow for the first spill, and Travis later decided to pour the watercolors back and forth to mix them, which resulted in a spilled cup of blue. So… User discretion advised!

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Despite the silly mess, we ended up with three covered pieces of paper towel to turn into flowers.

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Let dry completely, then invite your toddler to rip the paper towel into pieces – this part is sure to be a big hit!

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I arranged the pieces into three piles, each stacked in order from largest to smallest. Fold up into a flower shape, and secure with a clothespin stem.

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To add a dose of reality to our flowers, we then scented them with perfume! Travis was astounded that our flowers had a real smell, and soon was running all about the house waving them. A great spring craft.

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Planting Flowers

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I have no green thumb – so bad in fact that I often joke I have a brown thumb; plants tend to wither under my care.

But Travis received a cute set of flower seeds embedded in paper flowers in a goodie bag recently. Hoping to start him off with a better knack for gardening than I have, I decided we’d give the project a try!

First, the paper flowers needed to soak overnight in water. Travis was intrigued already, even having no idea what came next!

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Next we needed dirt, so I filled three containers on our balcony. Travis had great fun ripping up the paper flowers and planting them under a thin layer of soil, wondering where the colors had disappeared to.

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Every morning thereafter, we diligently headed outside with a watering can, and we were rewarded with small shoots within a week!

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Although we still have no flowers, just green stems and leaves, Travis loves taking care of his plants each morning. “I can look at them a little longer?” he’ll ask, even once the watering is done for the day. I do hope we see colorful blossoms eventually!

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