Showing posts with label cheap/free. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cheap/free. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Colored Rice

Most of us don't want to deal with glitter, so we turn to sequins and other sparkly objects instead.  You can make your own colored rice as another alternative!

WHAT YOU NEED
white rice
white vinegar
food coloring


WHAT YOU DO
Combine 1/2 cup white rice, 5 drops of food coloring and 1/2 teaspoon vinegar.  


Stir until the food coloring is evenly distributed.  


Spread on a baking sheet covered in parchment paper.  


Bake at 200 degrees for 45 minutes to dry. Store in plastic baggies when cooled.



IDEAS FOR USE
sprinkle rice over glue on a piece of paper, dig for buried treasures in a bucket of colored rice, pour into jars and seee what patterns you can make... other ideas?  Leave your comments below!

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Fun with the Ironing Board!

I got this idea from my friend Tasha over at ThriftLiving.com.

Use your ironing board as a ramp for cars and balls and other things that go!



We laid one end up against the couch and raced cars, trucks and balls to see whose went the farthest.  Tasha also had a great idea to turn it into a fort, but it didn't work with our set-up.



Every time my son sees the ironing board now he jumps around saying "Racing cars! Racing cars!"  LOL

Monday, January 4, 2010

I-Spy

My toddler doesn't always like to sit in the stroller when we're out for a walk and sometimes I need to get us home in a hurry so I can't let him walk.  One day when I couldn't let him out of the stroller to walk, I kept him entertained by playing a sort of "I-Spy" game.  He LOVED it and it's now a favorite game whereever we go.

All I do is ask him questions - and this is great for teaching shapes, colors, numbers, etc.:
"Can you find something green?"
"Show me something round."
"Point to something with letters (or numbers)."
"Do you see anything that flies?"
Yesterday I even tried "Show me the TALLEST tree you can see" (and he did it!).

If your tot can't find something triangle-shaped/blue/with feathers/etc., show him what you were seeing.  Or if they find one orange object but there were three, point out one of the others.  This game is even great in the grocery store!

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Fun Crayons for Little Hands

I got this idea from my friend Steph over at Mada's Place.  Following Steph's directions, I was able to reuse my broken and dulled crayons from my younger years. And now have a very fun stocking stuffer for my busy body tot!  This will make coloring so fun for him and the crayons will be easier for his small hands to grab than those teeny tiny Crayolas.  I also was able to find boxes of crayons in the dollar bin at Michaels.  They're princess crayons, but after peeling off the labels and melting them down, they are now sports and underwater animals!

MATERIALS
Clean, empty soup cans
Crayons
Candy Molds (such as Wilton)
Big pot of boiling water

WHAT YOU DO
Peel off the wrappers of your crayons and break them into smaller pieces.  Separate by color into each of your soup cans.  Place the cans into your boiling water (water should be high enough to be above the crayons) and allow the crayon to melt.  This won't take very long.















Once the wax is melted, carefully pour it into your molds (or you can use a plastic spoon to spoon it into the mold).  Allow the wax to set a bit and then transfer to mold to your freezer or refrigerator.  Once the wax is cooled, it pops right out of the molds!


















This may not be a project to do with your tot, but they will sure have fun coloring with these cool, new crayons!

Find free, printable coloring pages here:
Sesame Street
sproutonline.com
Disney

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Interwebz fun

There are several sites designed specifically for your tot.  Sit at your computer with your toddler on your lap and let 'em go at it!  These are not educational sites - but your toddler will have a blast "typing" on the keyboard and making things happen!

Knee Bouncers
Sesame Street Games
Fisher Price Online Games & Activities

Monday, October 26, 2009

Bake Together!

Early toddlers may seem a little young for this, but they will enjoy the quality time they spend with you and can actually help quite a bit!

Use a boxed brownie mix or a simple cookie/muffin recipe.  Measure everything out and show your tot what you're doing.  Help them pour everything into the bowl and have fun! Help them turn the mixer on, teach them how to crack an egg.  Supervise closely and be ready for spills and messes :)

It helps if you have everything out ahead of time and then bring your child in to help.  I try to have all my ingredients and utensils on the counter so I don't have to leave him standing on the chair alone.  With his short attention span, having everything out helps move things along before he gets bored.

Recently, my tot and I made banana bread together!  Click here for my favorite easy recipe.














You can never supervise too closely.  Case in point: In the photo above, we were pouring in eggs.  In the photo below is what happened when I watched but didn't help.  He actually almost dumped the egg into the bowl but as he pulled the cup back, the egg dropped to the floor! Haha!


Homemade Play Dough

This is kind of a "twofer" activity!  Activity 1: make play dough.  Activity 2: play!

Rumor has it this recipe came from Parents Magazine.  I wasn't able to find it online or in my magazines to give credit where credit is due.  It's a great, all-natural recipe though!  Natural, stain-free coloring too.

INGREDIENTS
1 cup flour
3/8 cup salt
1 Tablespoon vegetable oil
natural coloring of your choice:
  • brown = 3/8 cup + 1 Tablespoon hot water + 4 Tablespoons cocoa powder
  • pink = 3/8 cup hot beet juice
  • yellow = 3/8 cup hot water + 1 teaspoon turmeric
  • orange = 3/8 cup hot water + 1 Tablespoon paprika
















Allow your child to add the ingredients after you've measured them out.  Explain what you're doing as you measure!  Give them a chance to mix the play dough first and then you can finish combining all the ingredients.  Then, split the play dough in half and play with your tot!  Use rolling pins and cookie cutters too!

This is the orange playdough using a tablespoon of paprika:


Wednesday, October 14, 2009

painting with trucks


















MATERIALS
  • washable paint
  • paper
  • cars/trucks ($0.99 at Toys R Us)
  • frisbee or other dish for pouring paint into
ACTIVITY

Pour paint into kid-friendly (read: non-breakable) dish.  Dip car/truck in paint and drive along paper.  Have fun making car and truck noises!  Kids love to hear their parents make silly noises and can learn about things like the "backing up - beep!beep!beep!" that will translate to real-life experiences.  Try different vehicles for different designs


Sticker Time

MATERIALS
  • stickers
  • scratch paper, newspaper, old envelopes, cardboard box, etc.
ACTIVITY
I have recently discovered that it really doesn't matter what the sticker looks like - it's the process of peeling and sticking that is fun for my toddler.  I search the dollar bin at Target or party stores, and have also taken to using up those free return address labels mailed out by non-profits.  Be sure to supervise closely so the stickers stay where they should be and not on your furniture and walls!