Showing posts with label Valentines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Valentines. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Craft a Little Valentine Garden

      Your little ones will love designing Valentine gardens while waiting for a party or even in the middle of one.  All it takes is a bit of imagination!
      Craft your little 'valentine gardens' with just a few materials:
  1. green, blue and pink construction papers
  2. green crepe paper
  3. an assortment of magic markers
  4. white glue
  5. scissors
  6. cup cake liners
  7. both chocolate kisses and heart shaped chocolate candies
Food the cup cake liner in half and then in half a second time. draw flower petals,
cut these out and then cut out the center of the cupcake liner to create ruffled flower petals.

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

"Bee Mine" Valentines

Two happy little bumble bee valentines.
      Bumbles bee Valentines have been a part of American classroom crafts for over 50 years. They are classic little paper crafts that all young ones love to assemble and share with each other.
      I have included here two of my own "Bee Mine, Valentine" bumble bee patterns for your little ones to make this Valentine's Day. Teachers may wish to print and cut the patterns and then trace them on to heavy cardboard so that students can trace around the stencils all by themselves. 
      You will need bright yellow, white and red construction papers for the bodies, wings and hears. Black chenille stems, black and yellow pom-poms, white glue, scissors, markers and tiny brads are also needed for both paper craft projects combined. 

Directions:
  1. Print and cut out the patterns that I have drawn up below. 
  2. Trace around the elements using a soft lead pencil and yellow construction paper for the bodies of the bees. 
  3. Then cut their wings from white paper or transparent wax paper. I outlined my wings to make them stand out for the photos; but these would be just as cute cut from waxy transparent paper. 
  4. Color in the stripes black and add facial features. 
  5. Antenna can be cut from the chenille stems and pom poms can be glued to the ends. I also added small yellow pom poms for hands to my first bumble bee sample. Encourage your students to add their own ideas to their bumble bee cards. 
  6. Write a traditional bee message somewhere on your Valentine. Something like:
"Bee Mine, Valentine!"
or
"Honey, Your So Sweet!"
or 
"You can attract more bees with a bit of honey!"
 
This cheerful little bug can't wait to
surprise some lucky little Valentine.
This honey bee pattern includes bumble bee parts for two Valentines. You will need to cut one of each before tracing them on to bright yellow and white construction paper.
"Honey Bee My Valentine" bumble bee valentine is crafted from the
paper pattern include above. He is designed from three yellow heart
shapes turned upside down then glued together. Two large white
hearts are his wings. I added a few tiny hearts to his
antenna and cheeks too.


More Bumble Bee Themed Valentines, Cards and Crafts:
Learn More About Bees:
Vintage Bumble Bee Valentines:

"Bee" My Valentine Honey! card
"Bee" My Honey Valentine
"Honey, Bee Mine! card
To My Valentine, I think that you're a honey and I hope
that you'll Bee Mine!" Valentine

"Love Bug" Valentines

      Ladybug Valentines are actually a relatively contemporary theme. Although these little critters have certainly been popular since I was a child. I have never seen a vintage Valentine including a lady bug but I suppose the possibility of such a thing may exist. 
      I have also included butterflies, crickets, snails and flies here among the collected ideas for Valentine bugs on this post. Young children are fascinated with tiny creatures and what little boy would be to embarrassed to receive a bug or two from a friend or classmate?

Ladybug Love Bug Valentine
Four detailed photos of my little Ladybug Love Bug Valentine up close.
To make the little Ladybug Love Bug Valentine you will need:
  • a variety of bright red scrap papers
  • black construction paper
  • red construction paper (alternative to wrapping paper)
  • google eyes
  • black ribbon
  • a heart shaped punch
  • white glue 
  • scissors
  • pattern
 Step-by-step Instructions: 
  1. Print and cut out my simple love bug pattern below.
  2. Trace around the body pattern and then cut out as many of these as would like, using black construction paper.
  3. For the wings, I used red wrapping paper scraps. Teachers may prefer to use red construction paper because the surface is easier to write upon.
  4. You will need to cut two 'half heart' shaped wings for each love bug. One of these is pasted completely down to the body; the second is only pasted along the inside bottom edge of the wing so that a secret 'buggy' message or a small piece of candy may be neatly tucked inside. (see example above)
  5. Glue on black hearts for the love bug spots; these may be punched or cut out by hand. 
  6. Glue on googly eyes, heart shaped cheeks, and a black bow for the finished looking love bug.
Little "Love Bug" Lady Bug Valentine Pattern by Grimm

Love Bug Candy Pouch
Three detailed photos of my Love Bug Candy Pouch. The red doily heart may be purchased from a local craft or grocery store.
To make the Love Bug Candy Pouch you will need the following supplies:
  • store bought, red doily hearts
  • black chenille stems
  • tiny red pom poms
  • black ink marker
  • heart hole punch (optional)
  • pink and black construction paper
  • scissors
  • white glue
  • shredded, shiny Easter grass
  • masking tape
 Step-by-step Instructions: 
  1. You will need to trace around the red doily on to the pink construction paper with a soft lead pencil. Then cut this shape out and paste it to the back side of the red lacy valentine.
  2. Repeat the same step with the black construction paper only include a half circular shape at the top of the heart in order to suggest a 'head.' (see example of cut bug parts below)
  3. Glue around the back side of the bug's red doily wings up to the top of the heart shape only. Remember to leave the top part of the heart shapes free from glue so that a pouch for candy may be left open!
  4. Punch or cut tiny hearts from both the black and pink papers. You will only need two tiny heart shapes from the pink, as these will be used for your critter's little buggy eyes. The black hearts may be pasted randomly over the lady bug's red doily wings to mimic the spots on a real ladybug.
  5. Write the word "Love Bug" on the pink paper and paste this to the center of the pouch's wings.
  6. Now paste on the love bug's pink, heart shaped eyes and add the iris with a black pen. (see photo example above)
  7. Cut two short antennas from the black chenille stem and glue on a tiny red pom pom to each end. Set this aside to dry.
  8. After the antenna have dried, tape these to the back of your love bug's head and then glue a second circular shape cut from black construction paper to paste on top of the taped antenna. this will cover the chenille stems and strengthen the lady bug's head.
  9. Stuff these lady bug pouches with shiny, red Easter grass and Valentine candy treats. Your students will love to make and take this little ladybugs home to either decorate with or give as a gift to a beloved family member.
The heart pieces needed to assemble the Ladybug Candy Pouch are pictured above.
You will need to cut the pink and black shapes from construction paper. The red doily
heart may be purchased from any hobby or drug store; these are common Valentine
craft supplies in the United States.
      After crafting a few ladybug pouches, I found I had too many left over red doilies so I came up with a second idea for using up my craft supplies. The doily candy pouch below is a bit more sophisticated don't you think? Perhaps it would be a better suited Valentine for my husband or for my older daughters? In our home, everyone exchanges Valentines with loved ones. It is not merely a day for romantic love interests. This red and black Valentine container will be a perfect valentine for any friend, family member or student once it is stuffed with a selection of dark chocolate covered caramels, yum.

Hanging Red Doily Candy Pouch
To make this second idea for a Hanging Red Doily Candy Pouch you will need to collect the following materials:
  • black construction paper
  • hole punch
  • red doily
  • small, sharp scissors
  • red ribbon
  • white glue
  • red, shiny Easter grass
  • red cellophane or tissue 
  • stapler (optional)
Step-by-step Instructions:
  1. Select a soft led pencil or a white drawing pencil to draw around the red doily, transferring a replica copy of the heart's size and lacy edge to a black piece of construction paper.
  2. Cut this black heart out and set it aside for assembly.
  3. Using sharp, small scissors, snip from the doily the parts of the embossed design that you do not want to include in your finished pouch design. I chose to emphasize the floral patterns.
  4. Snip out the smaller, center heart to create a 'window' for the heart pouch as well.
  5. Gently apply glue with the tip of your finger onto the back side of the red lace doily and then paste it on top of the black construction paper heart. 
  6. Trace around the center of the doily heart a second time so that you will be able to cut from the black heart the exact same heart shaped hole that is in the doily design.
  7. On the back side of your doily frame, paste a square of cellophane or tissue paper to cover the small 'window' of the pouch.
  8. Now repeat the above seven steps if you would like the candy pouch to be the same on either of it's sides. If not, lay the finished frame shaped heart on an additional sheet of black or red construction paper to trace a replica shape for the back side of the pouch.
  9. Squeeze out a thin layer of of glue around one of the hearts and adhere it to the second heart shaped frame to create a pouch. Remember to leave the upper half of the two hearts free from glue so that a basket like pouch remains. You could staple the two hearts together if you feel that your glue will not be strong enough to hold the pouch together. This would depend upon what you intend to stuff the Valentine with.
  10. Polk a hole or use a hole punch on either side of the heat pouch in order to string your red ribbon into the Valentine for hanging after the glue has been allowed to dry sufficiently. (see picture above)
This photo depicts the order of preparing the heart shapes in order to assemble my Hanging, Red Doily Candy Pouch.


"Love bugs make perfect Valentine's Day party favors! You'll need craft supplies such as pipe cleaners, wiggle eyes, feathers, construction paper, foam, felt, a low-temperature hot glue gun with glue, and candy from HERSHEY'S. Use these materials and your imagination to create charming love bugs for your guests, or invite kids to make their own!HERSHEY'S makes life extraordinary! Check out more great ideas at http://www.hersheys.com/celebrate"


Vintage Bug Valentines:

"To my Valentine" butterfly bug card.
"Stick Around Valentine, Catch On" fly paper Valentine card.

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Handmade Valentines of The 1800s

      This article was published in the San Francisco Call on Sunday February 9th in 1896. I thought our readers might enjoy reading first hand just how young girls crafted old-fashioned valentines over a century ago!

 St. Valentine In Childhood's Realm
     We have made our children's page today a real "valentine page." A little early, you think? But, remember, by next Sunday Valentine's day will have joined the countless procession of all past happy days and will live only as a sweet memory.
      That it may be a sweet one - that there may be no regrets - I am going to give my boys and girls a wee bit of advice of how to spend the day.
      Remember, it should be the merriest, fullest of frolic festival of the year. Have as much pure fun as you can, but oh, please don't bring the flush of anger or shame to the cheek of any human being. Shun the company of those two wicked imps, "spite" and jealousy," who are so ready to take advantage of the "mystery" and "secrecy" attendant on St. Valentine's day to wound the feelings of others by reminding them of some mental or physical frailty.
      In other words, have nothing to do with those vulgar disgusting publications called comic valentines. (vinegar valentines)
      Make yours a day of fun, loving and giving, and at its close may your minds be filled with the peace which comes at twilight to the heart of him "whose deeds have been most kind, whose words have fallen like sunshine where they they went."
      Home-Made Valentines for Girls.
      Almost any useful thing which you take pleasure in sending mysteriously to relatives or friends can be made to take on the real valentine spirit by painting across it some original legend, humorous, sentimental, or pertinent, or by the artistic use of the conventional hearts and bow-knots, which are the very essence of 14th of February gifts. Let ingenuity be your master requisite, and neatness your most obedient servant.
      Probably one of the most practical gifts is the always acceptable picture frame. The simplest kind is made of two square envelopes (tinted ones are the prettiest), laid face to face, and punched with an awl a half-inch from the top and bottom of one side. Through the small holes thus made run  baby ribbon, and tie the two envelopes together in small bow knots. Now the frame stands firmly, and has two leaves witch are daintily held together. On the inside sketch lightly with a hard pencil the outlines of an oblong picture-opening.
      In the center of this opening (found by drawing diagonals from corner to corner) place a small dot, using this as your starting point for cutting.
      Cut with the scissors from this dot to each corner of the outlined opening.
      Turning the four triangles thus formed back from the lead-pencil lines, and you have a space for pictures which are kept in place by sealing the backs of the envelopes. (Figs. 1 and 2.)
      Other frames may be made of two heart shaped pieces of thin pasteboard (with picture-opening in one). covered wit linen or figured China silk, overhanded neatly together except at the top, where the picture is to be slipped in and finished with a double knot of ribbon, in which is tied a brass ring, which serves as a hanger for the frame.
      These frames may be made still more simply of two circular pieces of cardboard or celluloid, *pinked around the edges, with a tiny hole in each scallop.
      Through these holes run narrow ribbon of a contrasting color, and finish at the top like proceding frame with a bow-knot and small brass ring.
      The pinking may be roughly simulated by notching the edges and making with an awl the required holes at regular intervals. This photo-holder is particularly pretty made of sage-green celluloid, laced with a dark and light shade of green ribbon, with the lines traced above the heart shaped opening, as in Fig. 3.
      If you do not happen to be skilled in the use of pen or brush do not hesitate to cover your fancy work with China silk. Beautiful designs, violets strewn over light grounds or dashing sprays of delicate chrysanthemums, form a decoration in itself, often far surpassing the most ambitious of amateur work. One quarter of a yard of this silk, costing about 25 cents, will make two circular frames. 
     A pretty laundry tablet may be made in a similar way, having an oblong frame or cardboard painted or covered with silk, and placing in the center a tablet of white celluloid, on which in gold lettering are placed the names of articles usually sent to be washed leaving a space on the left side for the number. Finish this at the top by a bow of baby ribbon with two long ends, to one of which a small pencil is fastened, and to the other the sponge is tied.
      A tiny heart shaped needle-book, covered on the outside with kid from the long wristlets of some worn out glove, and inside with a scrap of pink silk. Three little button-holed leaves of white flannel within for needles, and all tied together with pink bow-knots of baby ribbon, as in figure 5, make a dainty valentine for grandmother's work-basket. (sewing basket) Paint across its face the words, "With heartfelt greetings."
      Sachet-cases, large and small, in simple and fantastic designs, are now so much used that one can never come amiss. A pretty one, tastefully made in the old bagshape of shaded *heliotrope ribbon, filled with a large quantity of heliotrope *sachet (for the fragrance vanishes with astonishing rapidity from a small allowance of powder), tied together with a splashing bow of dark heliotrape ribbon, with the following lines traced carelessly across it with gold paint or with ink, would certainly give pleasure to mother, sister or friend:
I send you, dear, a valentine,
The sweetest I could find,
Though it's not half so sweet as you,
Who are so good and kind.
      If you wish to pay a humorous compliment to a friend, from a heavy piece of cardboard cut an outline of the sole of a shoe, and from some bright-colored paper the outline of a small heart. The larger the sole the greater the implied compliment. Tie the two together with a ribbon bow and write in ink or gilt lettering:
I send my love, sweet Valentine,
With all my heart and sole.
  
      Upon a neat menu card put a sentimental rebus, as in Feg. 6.
      Here again, if you are lacking in sketching powers, you may substitute the real things(bows, matches, cents, etc.). Deftly tied or pasted on, they greatly enhance the unique appearance of the card.
      A dainty blotter for a friend's writing desk may be made by tying together, with rose-colored ribbon, two or three blotters and a piece of cardboard of the same dimensions. Ornament the edge of the cardboard with water-color gilt, and paint in one corner the harrowing design in figure 7. Write underneath the rhyme given on the design, or any other ridiculous one which may occur to you.
      A pretty little heart shaped sachet (Fig. 8) may be made of silk, and filled with violet or heliotrope powder. A silk or lace frill is added around the edge, and a bow of ribbon at the top, and this inscription painted or worked in outline stitch:
       A pen-wiper of kid with several leaves of *chamois-skin may also be cut in the shape of a heart tied together with a ribbon and ornamented with the appropriate verse found in figure 9.
      Adapting these hints to your own ingenuity and resources you will be able to manufacture valentines which will prove more desirable than any which you could afford to buy. You will have, besides, the fun of the making, the satisfaction of gratifying the wants of friends, and best of all, the dear old mystery of sending, which seems to make of this happy, nonsensical day a sort of second Christmas. --C. B. Jordan, in Youth's Companion.

*pinked refers to scalloped edged scissors formerly known as "pinking shears." These scissors were used by those who are sewing garments in order to prevent a lining inside of a coat or some other such garment from fraying.
*heliotrope is a flowering plant of vibrant purple.
*chamois-skin sometimes known as a shammy or also as wash-leather, is a type of porous leather that is favored for its gentle, non-abrasive composition and absorption properties. 
*sachet from the French sachet, meaning little bag is a small disposable bag or pouch, made from plastic, tin foil, or mylar, often used to contain single-use quantities of foods or consumer goods such as ketchup or shampoo. Sachet are commonly filled with odor pleasing scented petals used by ladies to line cabinets, closets, or drawers. These often prevent insects from "nesting" among clothing.

"25 kids are interviewed about love, dating and marriage, affection, babies, and things they love.
A Film By Lumineux for Small Fry Blog  http://smallfryblog.com and  http://lumineuxfilms.com/

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Patterns For Home-Made Valentines

      Here are patterns for hearts in two sizes, darts, cupid, butterfly, wreath and blue-bird. Lay the patterns on top of colored construction papers or white water-color paper. Let the kids cut them out and paint with watercolors, crayons, or pastels. Then paste their creations on red, pink or white hearts. Trim with lace dollies and give these Valentines to a lucky friend.

 Click on the Valentine pattern to download the largest possible file size.

Friday, December 21, 2012

The Pleated Christmas Heart

      Pleated Christmas hearts (Danish: Julehjerte) are a Danish and north German Christmas tree ornament.
      The exact age and origin of the tradition of making paper hearts is unknown, but the oldest known pleated Christmas hearts were made by the Danish author Hans Christian Andersen in 1860. However, as Andersen's heart has no handle, it seems unlikely it could have been used as a Christmas tree ornament. That pleated heart is today located in the Hans Christian Andersen House in the city of Odense in Denmark. We know, however, that Andersen did make decorations for Christmas trees, and that the predecessors of the pleated Christmas hearts were made from wicker baskets.
      The oldest known guide to making pleated Christmas hearts is found in the Official Nordic handicraft Journal from 1871, and the oldest pleated Christmas heart (from 1873) is preserved at the National Museum in Copenhagen. But it was still some 40 years before the pleated Christmas hearts became more widespread.
      It is believed that kindergartens from around 1910 started spreading the use of the pleated Christmas hearts which were made from glossy paper in order to enhance the children's creative abilities, patience and fine motor skills.
      The first pleated Christmas book, called Julehjerter, was released by the Lottrup Knudsen brothers in 1975.
      A more recent book, which includes a big variety of pleated Christmas heart templates, is Francis Jordt's Flettede julehjerter.

Woven Christmas Hearts: