Primary Color Rainbow Suncatcher

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St. Patrick’s Day gets us thinking about all things rainbows and pots of gold. Here’s a neat way to show a toddler how to make a full rainbow… just from the three primary colors!

To start, I cut an arc from contact paper and taped it down to the floor. I then cut lots of tissue paper squares in red, yellow, and blue. I had these mixed in our craft tray which I soon worried was a mistake, instead of sorting them. But the big messy mix turned out to be half the fun!

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To make the rainbow, you’ll need to work deliberately row by row. An outer row of red is followed by an overlapping yellow (to make orange), then plain yellow. Next overlap blue (to make green), then add a row of plain blue. Finally, overlap a little more red and you’ll get a bottom row of purple.

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Veronika wasn’t old enough to understand that the colors needed to stay in their proper rows, but I soon realized the benefit of having mixed all the colors in the tray; she was the perfect helper to find me each right color. “Now let’s find only red squares!” I told her, and she happily dug through the tray.

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Then she discovered how fun it was to make the tissue paper rain down as I finished up the rainbow.

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The real engagement with the craft began for her once the suncatcher was taped to the window. Of course there’s the obvious element that now it sparkled and shone…

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…but now the full rainbow magically appeared as well. Where red and yellow overlapped, there was orange; yellow and blue made green, and blue and red made purple. We sang rainbow songs and Veronika loved following the arc of it with her fingers.

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Next she pretended her favorite toy was sliding up and down it! We’re going to keep this beautiful rainbow suncatcher in the window to cheerfully greet the spring.

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Bundt Pan Suncatcher

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We’ve made sparkly winter suncatchers in cookie cutter shapes before, but this year we decided to think big: Bundt pan big that is!

To start this gorgeous project, head off on a treasure gathering hunt. Veronika especially loved finding the bright pop of red berries and collecting small pine cones as we took a walk.

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Once home, I filled a Bundt pan with water about half full, then we plunked in our treasures.

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Now simply set it outside to freeze! We actually had to wait a few days for this to work, since first I realized our layer of water was simply too deep and poured some out. Then we needed a night that dipped down to 20 degrees, and finally we woke to a beautifully solid chunk of ice.

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To unmold, simply run the bottom of the pan under a little hot water and slip out gently. I wrapped a bright ribbon through the hole in the center of this ice “cake” and suspended it from a tree branch.

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This was absolutely gorgeous in the sunlight!

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Travis loved that way that tiny icicles began to form near the bottom as the sun warmed the ice through a little.

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We’re hoping for a few icy cold days so this can last before the sun melts it. As a bonus, all the nature treasures can simply fall where they lie as the suncatcher melts. Just be sure to clean up the ribbon!

Play Dough Suncatcher Craft

 

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You can never go wrong with a morning of play dough play, but to add a fun twist when I pulled out all the colors for Veronika this morning, I thought it would be fun to make suncatchers.

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I showed Veronika how to press small pieces of color into an empty yogurt container lid.

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She loved to help mush them in, which was great for fine muscle development!

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Even more, though, she loves to tear play dough into tiny pieces.

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That meant she unwittingly created the perfect size pieces for me to gather up and arrange in the lids, alternating colors as much as possible.

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We filled two lids this way!

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In order to hang them once complete, I cut two pieces of string and made a loop for each suncatcher, securing with an additional blob of play dough.

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Let the play dough harden and dry overnight, and then you can hang these the next day to catch the morning sunlight.

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At first I suspended them in the plastic lids. But then I realized the play dough had set enough that I could pop them out from these molds and simply hang in the window. Even prettier!

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Sunshiny Art, Three Ways

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Baby it’s hot outside! But instead of lamenting the fact, Travis and I are using the sun as our accomplice in art.

First, we made suncatchers. This is a craft we’ve done before but it never loses its luster. Use markers to color over coffee filters – the more colors the better! Spritz with water to bleed the colors together.

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Once dry, we made paper frames by cutting rectangles out of white paper and taping around the filters. Place them in the window to catch the sun!

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Then we headed outside with a long roll of craft paper to make shadow portraits. Have your child stand so that the paper catches their shadow (you might have to lay it down a few times before you get the right angle). Trace around the shadow.

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Travis filled in his outline with a smile and clothes – all orange today!

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I challenged him to draw my shadow next. This task was tough, especially because he lost his place when the sun went behind a cloud, but it was great tracing practice.

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Finally, we returned to another oldie-but-goodie: sun prints. Place toys or other items on a piece of dark construction paper. Travis liked placing the items just so.

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Wait a few hours, then check and see if the image of the items remains on the paper. The longer the sun bleaches your paper, the more pronounced the effect will be.

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Thanks for helping out, Mr. Sun!

Early Explorers Weather

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I remain half-convinced that there is a spy working between our Kiwi Co. and Little Passport’s subscriptions because once more they are sync. Having recently received Koala’s crate all about the wind, we found the more broadly themed Early Explorer’s Weather package waiting in our mailbox. No complaints here; there wasn’t too much overlap, and we love anything that continues our learning of a topic.

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As usual, we received a booklet of activities to fill out, stickers for our map and suitcase, flashcards, and a “flashlight adventure.” Matching up peas and pennies to see various hail stone sizes was particularly fun!

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Weather Craft:

It’s easy to forget that “sun” counts as weather, since it can seem like the default, but these gorgeous suncatchers are a great way to appreciate the sunlight. Place a piece of contact paper, sticky side up, on a large work surface. Give your child pieces of colorful cellophane to put all over the paper.

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Note: I recommend purchasing small sheets of craft cellophane, which you can then easily cut into squares. Large rolls of cellophane (sold for wrapping gifts) would be a huge pain in this case.

Travis started out placing each piece deliberately.

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But then dumped on the whole plateful!

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Cover with a second sheet of sticky paper to seal in your child’s design, then cut to desired size and hang in a sunny window.

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Weather Science:

The booklet included a great experiment to showcase the water cycle and evaporation on a small scale that kids can grasp. Plus any experiment with food coloring is always fun.

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Add two drops of blue food color to 1/4 cup water, then pour into a zip-top plastic bag. Color a sun and cloud (Travis drew a huge sun, which I then cut down to size), cut out, and attach to the bag.

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Now hang the bag in a door or window of your house that gets direct sunlight. Soon we could see evaporation at work!

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Weather Keepsake:

The weather wall calendar was the closet overlap with our Koala Wind Crate, but we loved the ease of attaching the felt pieces on this one.

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There’s also a handy pocket for storing all the pieces that are not in use. Simple, but fun for kids each morning.

Weather Field Trip:

For this one I had to get creative. Where could we best observe the weather? I decided a lighthouse would be great fun, both for the novelty of it, and because lighthouses were meant to protect ships in all sorts of stormy weather. We headed off on a slightly unsettled day to visit one about an hour away.

Travis loved the climb.

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And the beacon up top!

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Make sure you do your research before you go, as many lighthouses have age and height requirements for those hoping to ascend to the top.

And sometimes, weather field trips are unplanned. We just happened to be at the beach when this ominous thunderstorm rolled in. Travis loved watching from a nearby cafe window!

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Weather Further Activities:

As always, there were suggestions for lots more activities, and we had fun ticking them off (weather permitting!) over the course of a couple weeks.

Take advantage of a windy day (and a trusty plastic bag kite) and watch the wind make your kite soar.

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Then cook up some cloudy day fun in the kitchen. Tint your favorite vegan jel dessert with a few drops of blue food coloring and prepare according to package directions.

 

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Once it sets, top with SoyaToo whipped cream, and eat the clouds out of the sky!

We then repeated an old activity, collecting rain in a jar for a homemade rain meter. We had an absolute downpour, and I was sure we’d have at least an inch, but later discovered the wind had knocked our jar over. We learned that the storm had dumped nearly 5 inches of rain in some parts of the state, and about 1.5 inches in our area.

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Finally, we took the exploration online. Travis loved learning how I check the weather on an app each morning.

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Then we looked at the Virtual Weather Museum (or go to one, if you have a good museum near you!) where he loved the available satellite images on everything from cloud formations to ocean currents.

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