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SIMPLE KIDS CRAFTS: Colorful Pipe cleaner pencil topper


Formore kids crafts visit and info: www.simplekidscrafts.com info@simplekidscrafts.com Also visit: www.artsandcraftstv.com Manualidades para niños en Español www.manualidadesconninos.com Manualidades para adultos en Español: www.manualidadestv.com Muslim Kids Videos and Crafts: www.manualidadesconninos.com Background Music: Free Royalty Free Music from: www.partnersinrhyme.com Free Music by Kevin MacLeod from: incompetech.com Public domain music downloaded from: www.virushead.net About Simple Kids Crafts: Simple Kids Crafts is a blog dedicated to reviving the old art of handicrafts. and art that has been lost to fabricated toys. We provide easy fun crafts, with step by step instructions, coloring pages, home school resources, educational resources, kids arts and crafts projects for teachers and all for free! The focus of the site is mainly on preschool, kindergarten, and elementary school crafts. Make wonderful, easy, simple crafts with things found around the house featuring: paper crafts, animal crafts, decoration, painting, beading, gift making, gardening, felt crafts, puppets, play date tips, scrapbooking, yarn and needle crafts, photography, home decor, reading, poetry, jewelry making projects and science projects. About the author of the videos: My name is Merve, I am a Muslim, an engineer from New York, a mom, a wife and a crafter by nature. My parents introduced me to arts and crafts at a very early age. I love doing arts and crafts as a hobby but most importantly

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Easy Arts & Crafts Kid’s Projects: Make a recycled “Pencil” Pencil holder


For more kids crafts visit and info: www.simplekidscrafts.com info@simplekidscrafts.com Also visit: www.artsandcraftstv.com Manualidades para niños en Español www.manualidadesconninos.com Manualidades para adultos en Español: www.manualidadestv.com Muslim Kids Videos and Crafts: www.manualidadesconninos.com Background Music: Free Royalty Free Music from: www.partnersinrhyme.com Free Music by Kevin MacLeod from: incompetech.com Public domain music downloaded from: www.virushead.net About Simple Kids Crafts: Simple Kids Crafts is a blog dedicated to reviving the old art of handicrafts. and art that has been lost to fabricated toys. We provide easy fun crafts, with step by step instructions, coloring pages, home school resources, educational resources, kids arts and crafts projects for teachers and all for free! The focus of the site is mainly on preschool, kindergarten, and elementary school crafts. Make wonderful, easy, simple crafts with things found around the house featuring: paper crafts, animal crafts, decoration, painting, beading, gift making, gardening, felt crafts, puppets, play date tips, scrapbooking, yarn and needle crafts, photography, home decor, reading, poetry, jewelry making projects and science projects. About the author of the videos: My name is Merve, I am a Muslim, an engineer from New York, a mom, a wife and a crafter by nature. My parents introduced me to arts and crafts at a very early age. I love doing arts and crafts as a hobby but most

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How to Make an LED Candelabra

All you need to make the candelabra is…

8 wire coat hangers, a circular cake board, 10 LED Lights, card, silver spray paint, and electrical chocolate bock, cable ties, clear baubles, No Nails glue, bendable craft wire, electrical wire, soldering iron and solder (But not in all cases)

Cut and straighten out the coat hangers and re-model them to form ‘C’ shapes. Use two cable ties to hold the coat hangers together, forming a trunk.

Manipulate the branches to form appealing shapes. The LED lights will be at the tip of each branch, bear this in mind when you are shaping the tree and try to spread the lights evenly about so that the structure looks attractive from every angle.

At the base of the structure, the wire ‘legs’ are splayed out like the spokes of an umbrella. Make a small 90-degree turn at the end of each ‘leg’ to create a ‘foot’ (pointing down)

Each of the ‘feet’ needs inserting into a hole in the edge of the cake board. Use a hammer and a nail to make holes in the cake board. Tape the nail in a way and wriggle the nail about a bit before pulling it out, to enlarge the hole.

Fill the hole with no nails glue and push a foot into it. Hold it in place with selotape until the glue dries. Insert all of the wire feet into he cake board in this way.

Leave until the glue is completely dry and then remove all the pieces of selotape.

Using craft wire, make interesting twisty bits to decorate the candelabra’s branches. To make ‘springs’, wrap a length of wire around a pencil. To fix the wire in place, anchor it down by wrapping the end of the wire around the coat hangers forming the trunk. The wrapping around the trunk adds to the support of the structure when the cable ties are taken away.

Option 1 – There are a couple of options with the lights themselves. The ’99p Store’ sell 20 mini battery operated LED lights. You could use these lights as they are and have lights along the branches wherever the bulbs happen to be.

Option 2 – You could use these electrical parts from the 99p store lights to keep the costs down. This would also mean that you wouldn’t need to solder, you could just twist wires together and wrap in insulation tape.

Option 3 – You could buy LED lights, resistor and a battery compartment separately, and solder the components together.

For the latter two options, you will need to apply 2 electrical wires for each bulb to the candelabra. The battery compartment will be hidden under the trunk of the tree. Leave 5cm surplus wire here for connecting to the battery compartment later. Twist the wire up and around the trunk and along the branches keeping your wires in pairs. This wire should create the effect of ivy growing up the structure. Again leave 5cm of wire at the end of the branch for connecting the LED light.

8 of the LED lights will be situated at the ends of each ranch and the remaining two should be nestled from where the branches sprout.

Attach an LED bulb to each of the pairs of wires. You can solder the connections or twist them together if you have dismantled LED lights from the ’99p Store’. If you twist the wires together you will need to wrap the join in insulation tape.

Use a small amount of tape to stick each bulb into place o the wire structure.

Mask each bulb with newspaper and selotape and spray paint the structure with silver spray paint. Also spray the out side of the battery compartment. Use the spray paint in accordance with the instructions on the back of the tin. You may need to give your tree 2 coats of paint for a really good Finnish. Leave until completely dry and remove masking from the bulbs.

Pull the plastic hanging devices off each bauble, leaving a hole or a tunnel going into the baubles. Use a small amount of clear drying glue to stick each LED light inside the hole of the baubles.

To wire up the 10 LED lights to the battery compartment you need to put new working batteries into the battery compartment. LED lights will only wire up one way so you need to find out which wires go where from the pairs of wires at the base of the tree.

Strip a small portion of its plastic covering, from the two wires on the battery compartment, as if you were getting ready to join the wires. Mark one of the wires with a small piece of electrical tape.

Go through each pair of wires at the bottom of the candelabra in turn; stripping away and amount of plastic sheath and holding the bare wires against the two wires connected to the battery compartment. If a bulb doesn’t come on, swap the wires over.

When the bulb comes on, mark the wire that joins to the wire marked with electrical tape. Eventually you will end up with 10 marked pieces of wire and 10 unmarked pieces of wire.

Take the marked ends of wire and twist them together in groups of 3 or 4 ends, and push the 3 groups into the first 3 spaces of an electrical chocolate block. Screw them in. Do a similar thing with the unmarked wires, pushing them into spaces 4,5 and 6 on the chocolate block on the same side as the marked wires. Screw them all in firmly.

Next cut two 4 cm pieces of wire, and strip both ends. Twist one end together with the marked wire from the battery compartment, and twist the other one to join the end of the first one. This gives you 3 twists of wire from the marked wire from the battery compartment. Push these three twists of wire into the chocolate block to join the marked wires from the structure, in spaces 1, 2 and 3. Repeat this procedure for the unmarked wires, pushing the twists into spaces 4, 5 and 6 to join the other unmarked wires. All the lights should now work.

Use glue to stick the battery compartment and the chocolate block to the cake board, directly under the trunk of the structure.

Cut out assorted sizes of ivy leaves from thin card. You will need 20 or 30 leaves in all. Use a needle to make a hole in each leaf where the stalk would be. Spray paint both sides of the ivy leaves silver and leave to dry.

Attack the leaves to the structure by threading the leaves individually on a short piece of craft wire, then bend the wire around the network of wires on the tree and twist the craft wire ends together to secure the leaf. Use the largest leaves at the bottom, gradually getting smaller further up the candelabra. Also, make sure that the bottom most leaves hide the battery compartment and chocolate block.

There you have made a stunning candelabra, which is bound to be a talking point wherever you place it.

For More Article Visit :: http://www.thearticleinsiders.com/

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Crafts For Kids – Cinna-Shapes (Fun With Cinnamon And Sandpaper)

This craft project is easy and is a great way for small children to join in the decorating fun. Cinnamon sticks are a delicious way to make the transition from summer to autumn, and this is a craft that is simple to do and smells great.

Age Group: 3-6 with help, older with supervision

Time: Less than an hour

Materials needed
• 1 sheet of sandpaper per child. While finer grit sandpaper would be best for this project, whatever grits of sandpaper you have on hand will work just fine. Sandpaper can be purchased at your local hardware store and the higher the number the finer the grit.
• 1 cinnamon stick per child. You can find inexpensive cinnamon sticks in your nearby craft store. These cinnamon sticks will not be used for cooking, so you do NOT want to buy the expensive cinnamon sticks sold at your grocers in the spice aisle.
• Sturdy scissors. Cutting sandpaper is not easy, though finer grit is easier to cut than the coarser varieties. Tin snips or heavy-duty shears work best for this project, but may not be appropriate for young children. Use your judgement, and you may opt to have children use a good pair of craft scissors instead. As a reward for all of the hard work, cutting through sandpaper will sharpen your scissors.
• Pencil. You will need a pencil to draw the pattern of the shape that you want to cut out.
• Hole Punch
• Ribbon
• Permanent marker

Preparation
1. To keep messes to a minimum cover your work area with a newspaper, drop cloth or old sheet.
2. If you have some small children doing this craft, it is a good idea to have some pre-cut shapes available for them to use.

Process
1. Give each child a sheet of sandpaper (or a pre-cut shape), a pencil and a cinnamon stick
2. Have each child draw a simple shape on the backside of a sheet of sandpaper.
3. Instruct them to cut out their shape.
4. Then rub the cinnamon stick across the rough side of the sandpaper demonstrating for the children.
5. Have the children do the same thing with their cinnamon sticks making sure to cover the whole sandpaper shape.
6. Use a hole punch to make a hole in the top of each shape.
7. Slip a loop of ribbon through the hole.
8. Write the child’s name on the paper side of the shape with a permanent marker.

Variations
• Cut out several sandpaper leaf shapes, rub them with cinnamon, and use them as decoration for a door wreath in September and October.
• Make scary Halloween shapes to decorate a classroom or the front door.
• Sandpaper Cinnamon Shapes make great Christmas ornaments when cut in classic holiday shapes like an ornament, bell, snowman or wreath.

Make it a Learning Experience
• Have the children describe what happens as they rub the cinnamon stick on the sandpaper shape. Compare the bits of cinnamon on the sandpaper to ground cinnamon. Are they the same or different? How?
• Learn where cinnamon comes from and how it grows. What does a cinnamon plant look like? Older children can apply it to geography and learn about spices and the spice trade.
• Find out why sandpaper sharpens scissors.
• For very young children who are learning classroom readiness skills, have the children identify pre-cut shapes and have them match a pair of shapes.
• Most children find the texture of the sandpaper intriguing so making a set of sandpaper flash cards by gluing the shapes onto cardstock offers further practice.

Clean Up
• There is not much to clean up. Simply fold up the newspaper or cloth and check the floor for any sandpaper scraps or cinnamon bits.
• Take a deep breath and enjoy the aromatic scent of the freshly ground cinnamon which will linger for several hours.

Home decor specialist Aja Klenna is the top writer for Metal-Wall-Art.com, a wall decorating store offering wall decor art and metal wall art tree.

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Folding Origami Paper Crafts : How to Fold a Piece of Paper Into a Heart


Learn to fold an origami heart with instructions from a professional artist in this free video about paper folding crafts. Expert: Robert Segundo Contact: www.Wearehdtv.com Bio: Robert Segundo has been an artist since he could hold a pencil. He is also an Origami wizard. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz

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paper craft 5 (k98 blank + pencil shooting)


shooting color pencil (blue) with a homemade blank. I was aiming for the circle!!! :3 Ps. i was a little high on chocolates….

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T-Shirt Pochette – Eco-Friendly Craft Ideas by Shiho Masuda


Shiho turns a tired T-shirt into a posh pochette. Here’s what you’ll need to get started: (1) an old T-shirt, (2) gardening twine (or a leather strap), (3) needle & thread, (4) ruler, scissors, pencil. As featured in NY Japion newspaper. Music: “Art of Rap” (instrumental) by Copperpot.

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Folding Origami Paper Crafts : How to Fold a Paper 4-Pointed Star


Learn to fold a four-pointed star with instructions from a professional artist in this free video about paper folding crafts. Expert: Robert Segundo Contact: www.Wearehdtv.com Bio: Robert Segundo has been an artist since he could hold a pencil. He is also an Origami wizard. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz

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Christian Preschool Crafts: Paul Escapes


This is a fun bible craft / bible activity you can do with your children when learning about Paul’s escape from Damascus in Acts 9:20. Paul was lowered from a basket outside the city walls, and this craft will help children remember the bible story. All you need is String, Pencil (or stick) and egg carton cup. You can print up Paul from our website www.ChristianPreschoolPrintables.com … Bible Craft Paul Escapes Children’s Ministry Videos Christian Crafts Preschool Activities Sunday …

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Kids Crafts : Fun Crafts for Kids With Pipe Cleaners


Fun kids crafts that use pipe cleaners include making a person out of pipe cleaners and wrapping pipe cleaners around the body of a pencil. Discover how to make pipe cleaner reindeer with help from a teacher in this free video on fun crafts for kids. Expert: Stacey Olson Bio: Stacey Olson holds a Bachelor of Science in education and human sciences, with an endorsement in inclusive early childhood education. Filmmaker: Jon Olson

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