Decoupage Crafty Cats

We love doing arty projects but I must admit I have a few favourites and they tend to be mostly paint based.  I have never been big into decoupage – I don’t like the glue (yip exactly where my kids get their sensitivity from).  But I know that practicing dealing with sensory challenges is really important.  Whether it is noise or touch, practice has helped both my kids.  I remember years ago how my daughter struggled every time we used the underground – total sensory overload and these days, after lots of gentle practice she manages amazingly well.  So with that in mind there are certain crafts that we keep coming back so the kids can practice that feeling of the materials on their hands and using liquid glue, like in decoupage is one of them.  It is not something my two took to straight away but we have been practicing it, small doses, gently, at home starting with simpler projects and then working up.

To begin with I found using glass jars perfect.  The reason is simple, it is easier to stick the paper onto the glass jars with the paint brushes (Decopatch Silk Brushes, Pack of 5) and they could keep the glue on their hands to a minimal amount.  So it was gentle practice. (photo below is an old one from a few years ago)

Begining Decoupage with sensory children it helps to use simple shapes like a recycled glass jar

As the kids got happier we have starter using animals that you can buy at craft stores.  My main reason is the animals have a more complex shape, there are smaller bits jotting out and gaps that need to get covered so they are naturally forced to use their fingers more and the end up with more glue on their hands and that sticky feeling is more intense.

Decoupage is a great sensory activity for children with sensory processing disorder

But it has been okay because we have built up, slowly with lots of practice.

Decoupage for sensory kids. Great activity for them

Now they are a lot happier creating fun, multi-coloured animals.

Decoupage Cats. Easy and fun crafting activity for children to do at home. Great all year round activity

The items that we used in the photos were purchased by me from Crafty Crocodiles

For their full range of Decoupage /  Decopatch items look here – Decopatch Range

The cats are these ones – paper mache cat base.

The glue that we use is – Mod Podge 8 oz Waterbase Sealer, Glue and Finish, Gloss

If you have never used Mod Podge glue it looks white when you apply it but once it dries it is transparent.

Decoupage cat using Mod Podge the glue dries transparent

Please note – when I say gentle practice I do mean gentle.  We never do sensory challenging activities with the kids when they are already in an overwhelmed state and when the kids indicate they have had enough we never force them to sit and complete the project, we have a break and come back to it later.

I do include Affiliate links. If you follow an affiliate link and go on to purchase that product, I will be paid a very small commission, however your cost will remain the same. I only include affiliate links for products that we use and love.

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Rock Explorer Books

We recently added the Rock Explorer Books to our home library.  There are 4 books in the set – Minerals, Rocks, Gems and Fossils.  I must start this post by admitting something Geography topics are not a strong area of mine.  But both my kids are finding the whole rock cycle / volcanoes / and general Geology very interesting so I am learning alongside them.

My kids and I are very visual learners especially when we are still getting a basic understanding of a topic.  I have found with both of my kids until they have a good basic understanding of the subject – books with striking pictures and key points are vital.

Rock Explorer Books Rocks. What is a Rock

Only after they have grasped the key points and developed a further interest can we bring out the long paragraph books. So for us these four books are perfect for our level of knowledge on the topic (The books are officially aimed at ages 6 to 9 but my ten-year old and her mother (ie me) have found them very useful and interesting so I think the age range could be extended a bit.)

reading the Rock Explorer books. Great introduction to Geology

Each book is 24 pages so they are concise.  Think stunning photos and short boxes of information (they do manage to include some interesting facts like the Most Deadly Minerals). And at the end of each book they have a Rock guide / Mineral guide / Gem guide / Fossil guide which we found very useful.

So what does each book cover.

Rock Explorer: Minerals

  • What is a mineral?
  • How minerals grow
  • Amazing crystals
  • Bright and Beautiful
  • Shinning metals
  • Strange and powerful
  • Most deadly
  • Hunting for minerals
  • Useful minerals
  • Mineral Guide

Rock Explorer Minerals - Amazing Crystals

Rock Explorer: Rocks

  • What is a Rock?
  • Igneous Rock
  • Sedimentary Rock
  • Metamorphic Rock
  • Amazing Patterns
  • Strange Shapes
  • Deep caves
  • Useful Rocks
  • Rock Art
  • Rock Guide

Rock Explorer. Rocks. Igneous Rock

Rock Explorer: Gems

  • What is Gemstone?
  • Colourful Jewels
  • Dazzling Diamonds
  • Precious Patterns
  • Hiding Inside
  • Found in the Ground
  • Rare and Strange
  • Cutting and Polishing
  • Famous Jewels
  • Gemstone Guide

Rock Explorer books the Gem book include bits about different stones like the Emerald

Rock Explorer: Fossils (my son loves this one because of the whole dinosaurs angle)

  • What is Fossil?
  • How Fossils form
  • Hunting for fossils
  • Sea Creatures
  • Discovering Dinosaurs
  • Strange and Extinct
  • Wonderful Wings
  • Precious Plants
  • Our Family
  • Fossil Guide

Rock Explorer books Fossils. Sea Creature page

These books were included in a lovely parcel of STEAM books that Quarto Publishing sent us.

I do include Affiliate links. If you follow an affiliate link and go on to purchase that product, I will be paid a very small commission, however your cost will remain the same. I only include affiliate links for products that we use and love.

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The JOY of siblings reading together

I am very lucky that my two kids adore each other and generally get along really well (of course they are siblings and siblings do have arguments) but they happily play together and really do enjoy each others company.

For a number of years now we have done something that we refer to as family reading – it is where my husband or I read to the kids and the kids join in with the reading – when they were younger it would just be a sentence or a word, then in grew into a paragraph, a page and now sometimes my oldest will read an entire chapter in the family reading book.  It has worked really well for us.  But that is not what I what to talk about today it is more what has grown out of the family reading sessions and has become the sibling reading sessions.

Siblings reading together. Reading Heidi

It has been going on for over a year now and it has been an incredible thing to watch.  It started with my youngest listening to his sister reading one of her books, then it grew to him sitting next to her and following word for word, then he would join in and just read a paragraph or a page of her book and now it has gone full circle to him reading entire books to his older sister. (She is also very good with correcting him, we have policy not to correct small errors when the kids are reading  – the words we know the kids can read but rather focus on helping them with the longer words.  She has adopted this strategy with her brother and only corrects or helps him with more complex words.  So he does not feel like he is being constantly corrected.)

Siblings reading aloud together

They both love it.

After recently listening to him read a fairly complex book to his sister I sat and thought about what it was that we have done differently with him that has propelled his reading so quickly (and it is not that he is a natural in languages, in fact his sister is the one who has a flair for languages).  There is honestly nothing different that we have done and I am convinced it comes down to the sibling reading.  He has had the advantage of having his parents read to him AND his sister read to him.  And his sister is a bookworm so she reads every day and she reads a wide selection of books and 90% of the time when she is reading he goes and sits and follows along.

The sibling reading has without a doubt helped his reading.  But it has also made reading books something to be proud of, something that he has desperately wanted to do so he could be like his big sister.  He wanted that pride of being the one doing the reading.  He wanted to be the one who “told the story”.

 

 

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Forest School Adventure, A Gem of a Book

My kids love being outdoors, whether it is messing around in our garden or going to the local woodland area they love it.  So when I saw the Forest School Adventure book I was intrigued and when I started reading it I was blown away.  This book is a GEM.  Honestly Wow.  They have packed it fill of outdoor activities for the kids to do (could be used in a group setting or for a family) and they have included fascinating facts.  I honestly learnt so much by just reading through this book.

Forest School Adventure. Outdoor Skills amd Play for Children by Naomi Walmsley and Dan Westall

The authors – Dan Westall and Naomi Walmsely work as buschcraft educators in the woodlands in Shropshire and they also took part in a 5 month stone age immersion experience in the US, where they lived in the wilderness learning lots of interesting skills.  Their experience really does come through in the book.  (They have a website – Outback2Basics )

The book is divided into 4 broad categories – Nature awareness, Bushcraft, Wild Food and Games.  Each category is filled with activity ideas to do with kids and for each activity they have included an age suggestion, time, tools requires and materials needed.  They also include step by step instructions and lots of photographs showing the activity or idea unfolding.

Forest School ADventure. Outdoor Skills and Play for Children. Includes step by step instructions for each activities and lots of photographs

The ideas are wide-ranging, some I have heard of before but even the ones that I have heard of they put a more wild spin on it.  And lots were totally new.  I loved the idea of the 3D map – so simple, one of those why did we never do this moments ? And Camouflage hands – brilliant.

Forest School ADventure. Outdoor Skills and Play for Children. 3D Maps

And the information that they have included.  Packed fill.  From step by step instructions on how to tie different knots (my kids love this we have already been trying out a few),

Forest School Adventure. Outdoor Skills and Play for Children. Lots of different knot tieing methods

to the different ways to build fires – this made so much sense but I never realized all the different ways until I read it.

And when they talk about something like fires they don’t just list the different ways to build a fire, they also talk about fire safety, about which types of wood burn differently (another bit I absolutely loved), different sources of tinder and how to make some charcoal.

Forest School Adventure. Outdoor Skills and Play for Children. Different type of trees to use for firewood

Oh and the water section, so interesting I never knew about Birch Tapping.

This is what makes this book such a Gem for me.  They don’t just list a bunch of activities and move on.  They include information about the materials used, they include other activities that extend around the idea and they also include their own real-life stories.  You can tell when you read the book that they truly know their topic but more than just know it they are living it and are passionate about kids playing and exploring the outdoors and learning basic skills (but also learning the skills safety and in the proper manner, knowing certain rules about nature).

There are so many brilliant parts to this book – oh the clay – another why have we not been doing this moment – using clay for kids art and craft – loved the tips on how to use natural clay instead of store-bought products.  We are going to be experimenting with this over our summer (just need to stock up on some Vanish to help clean the kids clothes).

The book also includes a great section on eating wild and some yummy looking recipe ideas – my daughter has already earmarked four that she wants to try.

You kind of wonder how they managed to pack so much into this book.

Forest School Adventure Outdoor Skills and Play for Children. Lots of creative outdoor activities for kids to do

The Book Distributors have actually got a little clip of the authors talking about their book on the GMC YouTube channel – Forest School Adventure Book Trailer.

I was so impressed with this book that I contacted GMC Publications and asked if they would be interested in doing a Giveaway and they said YES – So we have 3 copies of this stunning book to Giveaway.  Please comment below this post or on our facebook page and I will draw the winner on Wednesday the 27th June (giveaway for UK residents only). The Giveaway is now Finished and all three winners have been notified via our facebook page.

Forest School Adventure Outdoor Skills and Play for Children written by Naomi Walmsley and Dan Westall

You can also find the book on the GMC website – Forest School Adventure

Or on Amazon – Forest School Adventure: Outdoor Skills and Play for Children

I do include Affiliate links. If you follow an affiliate link and go on to purchase that product, I will be paid a very small commission, however your cost will remain the same. I only include affiliate links for products that we use and love.

 

 

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Encouraging writing with little booklets

I am always on the lookout for fun writing activities for the kids.  Both of mine have incredible imaginations and come up with lots of stories but they are not big on putting the stories down into a written format.  It is something we have been gently encouraging my oldest to do.  We always use the topics that she is interested in but even then a blank piece of paper can be very intimidating.  One of our new favourite ways to write mini-stories has been using the Activity Village booklets.

Writing Booklets from Activity Village. Great way to encourage kids to write

They are not very big, you print the template onto an A4 size piece of paper (A4 is just the standard size of printing paper here in the UK) and then fold it according to the instructions (I am leaving a link for the folding instructions at the bottom of the post).

Lion Booklet from Activity Village, great writing activity for kids

Each page just ends up with a few lines which is perfect for us (you can also print out a blank version without any lines).  This means she can fairly quickly fill the booklet with her writing, which reduces the pressure to write too much but she also has the option of continuing writing in a second booklet if she wants to.

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We have used them for factual writing about the animals (like a mini fact booklet) and also for fictional story writing.

And for someone like my daughter who likes collecting bits and pieces the booklets are always packed away afterwards.

She has been enjoying the booklets so much that she has persuaded her brother to try a few.

Writing about Lucy the Fire Dragon in a Dragon booklet from Activity Village

The Booklets that we are using are from Activity Village and are part of their paid for membership.

For step by step instruction on how to fold these booklets look here on the Activity Village site – Step by Step folding instructions.   I must admit that we don’t always end up with a perfectly folded booklet especially when my son creates one but it does not ruin the writing fun.

They have a number of different booklets on the site.  You can search the site for individual booklets or look under some of the groups eg –  Minibeast Booklets, Dinosaur Booklets, Australian animals and British Wildlife

The individual Booklets featured in our photographs are these ones – Dragon, Lion, Bee and snake

Encouraging writing with mini booklets from Activity Village.  Lots of different versions to choose from

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