Saturday, September 15, 2007

Crafts for Under the Sea Parties

Children are certainly fascinated by animate beings under the sea, especially the bigger animate beings such as as giants and dolphins. Boys be given to be fascinated by fish off all kinds, including all assortments of under the sea creatures. For your child's under the sea party, there is a merriment trade that is easy for the children to make. In order to do the blowfish fish you necessitate old egg cartons, building paper, fishing line, wiggly eyes, and glue. For colourful fish, the colored egg cartonfuls are good to use.

To do the fish, cut out the two underside cup parts of the egg carton. On building paper lineation the cups that volition travel together. Add a fish head, top and tail five lineation to the lineation of the egg cartonful cup. Cut out the lineation so that it looks like a fish. If you're not certain of your drawing skills, you can happen a form online to do certain your fish really looks like a fish and not like something from another planet. Some children are very good artists, while others deficiency accomplishments in that area—have A form ready for those who necessitate it. Use gum to the rims of the egg cups and then gum the building paper lineation in the middle. Add the sinuate eyes and usage lines to pull five details. When you gum the organic structure together, you can add some fishing line if you desire to hang your fish after the gum dries.

The undertaking is not hard and is one that children of all ages can make, whether male child or girl. Be certain to set it on your listing of trades for the adjacent under the sea party.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Lapel pin trading at the Little League World Series

I recently attended the L.L. World Series in Williamsport dad and could depict my experience in one word inspiring. The thought of being surrounded by people and children from around the Earth participatingin Americas pastime, Baseball. However, it is no longer and probably never was just Americas past times time, but the full worlds!

Upon arriving I immediately came across people trading lapel pins, dice struck enamel, photograph etch enamel, promotional pins...Little League baseball game pins. Children and grownups from the United States trading with others from Japan, China and even Saudi-Arabian Arabia. They carried portfolios around with 100s of baseball game lapel pins from old age of collecting, I'm sure.

I noticed 1 peculiar male child telling the other that the pin in inquiry to be traded was last old age most popular pin and would necessitate a trade of 4 pins to have his one. They agreed and the trade was completed. Both male children were happy and they moved on to the adjacent individual for another possible pin trade.

Vendors were on land land site offering manufacturing of these tooth enamel pins and the terms were very inexpensive, one in peculiar was B2 Promotions the web site is www.b2promo.com the other was lapel pins and badges www.lapelpinsandbadges.com They have got been producing pins for over 20 years.

This type of lapel pin involvement at the World Series lasted the full hebdomad of the games and looked as though this was the chief ground these children attended Williamsport! not for baseball game but for pin trading. Imagine that, maybe Americas favourite interest is not Baseball maybe it's lapel pin trading!

Cherie, female parent of three!

Thursday, September 6, 2007

Free Face Painting Designs For Children

When I first decided to learn face painting, I looked all over for free face painting designs For children.

I went to the library, bookstores and searched the Internet. I had dabbled in One-Stroke Painting (a neat decorative painting technique made famous by Donna Dewberry) so I figured I could paint a kids' face at the same "pretty good" level that I could paint a mug for Father's Day. Um, not quite.

Once I really got into the research, I couldn't believe the level of artistry that was out there in Professional Face Painting. The world of Professional Face Painting was filled with real artists from all over the world. I'd never seen an island sunset painted on someone's face that looked so real I wanted to grab my coconut drink and head for the nearest hammock.

The designs were absolutely breathtaking, but not quite what I was looking for. I had fifteen three and five-year-olds coming over and I wanted to paint sweet little designs on their cheeks. Not to mention the attention span of a three-year-old didn't lend itself to a full-blown Caribbean sunset.

In the course of much more in depth research, I learned these basics:

- Use the right paints (in other words, if the packaging doesn't specifically say "face paints" or if they're for some other purpose besides face painting, don't use them on skin!)

- Use the right supplies (this includes brushes, sponges, glitter, etc.)

- Choose designs that are within your skill level and that are appropriate for your audience.

- When you are just starting out, choose just a handful (maybe five or six) designs and offer those to the children. Practice them religiously so that you can paint quickly and keep the line moving.

- Speed is key. Nuff said.

- The beauty is in the details. Small touches like glitter or highlighting can make a design from "okay" to "Wow!"

Look for Free Face Painting Designs that show you step-by-step directions; you will find the learning process much easier.

Practice some basic, popular designs like hearts, butterflies, flowers, snakes, fish, spiders, balloons and you will have enough designs in your arsenal to make most kids happy. Preschool Coloring books are great places to find Free Designs like these because the lines are bold without a lot of detail.

In the end my event was a huge success. Everyone went home with a little butterfly, heart, monkey or sun on their cheek. The kids were so proud of their cheek art and I was so proud to be able to paint them.