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This
unique idea is not only fun but also will result in sprucing up
your refrigerator door with one-of-a-kind magnets. The Bockler
family reported this project "turned out to be one of our
favorites." On the scale of difficulty and time involved
to gather materials and actually make the craft, this one gets
high marks for being fast and simple while appealing to a wide
age range.
Here is what you'll need:
- Metal lids from frozen juice cans
- Sheet of sticky-back magnet
- Scissors
- A hole punch (If you don't already
have one, pick one up at your supermarket or crafts store. They
cost only about a dollar and are a valuable additon to your
crafts shelf.)
- Collage materials such as thin
ribbon, yarn, jingle bells, sequins, buttons, trims, beads,
wiggle eyes, pom-poms, and construction paper
Here's what you do:
- Make lots of facial features (eyes,
noses, mouths, ears) pieces by sticking a piece of sticky-back
magnet on the back of various bits of the collage material.
It is easy to get small pieces of magnet for wiggle eyes and
tiny pom-poms by using the hole-punch to punch the magnet pieces
from the sheet. Don't use a hole-punch with a catcher for the
holes on it. The magnets get caught up inside the catcher and
are difficult to get out. Stick the punched holes on the metal
lid. Peel off the paper backing, and stick the feature to the
magnet.
- For larger items such as yarn
hair or bows, cut a larger piece from the sheet of magnet.
- For each face, cut a strip of
magnet and put it on the back of a metal lid. Arrange the features
and other pieces on the front of the lid to create the face
of a person, an animal, or an
- Put a piece of magnet on additional
metal lids to use for storing the extra facial features.
Hats
for the lid faces can be made by covering a piece of sticky-backed
magnet with contruction paper and decorating it with markers or
by gluing on feathers and other craft materials. Six-year old
Nick used green felt and a red craft feather to create a hat for
his "Peter Pan" face and was "quite thrilled with
the results."
Once you understand the main idea
for making the craft, substituting and embellishing will come
easily. When Tracy Bockler discovered she had no sticky-back magnet
strips left for her three little craft-makers, she used some old
magnetic business cards and crafts glue. Not only did she solve
her supply shortage, she also found a use for something she no
longer needed. The LaClair family added a "piece of a broken
earring and small fabric butterflies" to their supplies.
Imagination and creativity flourish with this project. The LaClair
girls (9 and 5) "made two pretty faces" while older
brother, Ryan, declared his lid "the weirdest."
Multi-age
crafting can be challenging. Tracy found that making the tiny
accessories for her three-year old and letting her use them to
design different faces was fun for her youngest. She isn't "proficient
with hole punchers or scissors yet." She provided her with
novelty craft buttons, a gold bead necklace, bows and curly blond
craft hair among other choices. Alli "had fun changing the
faces" and came up with a "snazzy girl panda."
Tracy's middle child, Nick, knew exactly what he wanted to make,
but "wasn't sure how to go about it." Guidance from
Tracy resulted in Nick's being "thrilled with the results."
Christian, 7 1/2 years old, wanted to "model his face after
his own image" and proceeded to do so "completely on
his own" using such innovated touches as a jingle bell nose
and a red chenille smile.
This is a project that can always
be added to on another day. As more face pieces are added to the
collection, the possible combinations for faces increases.
It's Also a Take-Along Game
You might want to store the pieces
in an old cookie tin. The pieces can be stuck to the inside of
the bottom tin and faces can be created on the lid. This makes
a great portable game to take along in the car or to an appointment
that might involve some waiting time.
Web Sites to Visit
Go to www.makingfriends.com
and look in crafts under F for fruit faces. You will find a colorful
printout of fruit with sheets of facial features to create a fruit-face
with character!
Much as the children enjoyed this
craft, enthusiasm is reported to be equally high over next week's
project, Dinosaur Garden. Both the LaClairs and the Bocklers have
already planted the grass garden. Tracy Bockler wrote "I
created one of the dinosaurs and their ideas are already flowing".
Take It From Me: "This
project was fun, easy for all, not messy, and didn't take a long
time. And the magnets will be around and enjoyed for a long time
to come." --Peggy LaClair
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