Saturday, October 1, 2022

Large Clock Face Pattern for Classroom Use

        A large clock face for teachers to print out and use with students in their classrooms. Comes with large and small hands to identify hours and minutes of the day on a traditional clock. Help young students practice reading time.

Punch a hole in the middle of a clock face mounted on cardboard. Cut out hour and minute hands and punch holes on the ends. Insert a brad into all three holes and bend it at the back. Now students may use the clock to practice telling and writing time.


Halloween Window Decorations

Big cut-outs of a vintage jack-o-lantern, flying bat and black cat.

        I've restored these vintage, Halloween patterns for teachers to use in the decoration of their classroom windows, or on Bulletin Boards. If you need something festive for the walls in your room or in the school buildings halls, wherever these may be needed, educators are sure to need a few patterns to enlarge, cut from construction paper and apply to their room decor.

3 cut-outs of classic jack-o-lanterns for teachers plus Autumn leaves

Friday, September 30, 2022

5 Simple Halloween Crafts: Templates Included

       Some of the following crafts need adult supervision while a glue gun is in use. Please read through the instructions entirely before making the crafts with very young children. The crafts below are intended for decoration excluding the spider puppet. The spider puppet is for children five and up because of the stick. If your students or child can be responsible when playing with something pointy like this, it may be given to a 3 or 4 year old.

My version of this craft has an inner support and a stand.

A Shredded Paper Pumpkin Craft: My version of this old craft includes tubes and a stand for support so that it may be stored and kept from year to year without it getting smashed. Just wrap it in tissue and store it alone or with things light weight in nature. If you've measured the necessary lengths of the tubes in advance, this project can be made for students in first grade and up.

Supply List:

  • orange, brown and green construction paper
  • wooden or cardboard one inch diameter circle shape
  • black marker
  • white school glue

Step-by-Step Instructions for The Pumpkin:

  1.  Roll lengths of tube using paper or cardboard to make both the inner support of the pumpkin shape and the stem of the pumpkin. You can do this step before or after you cut the strips for the pumpkin. The inner tube for the pumpkin should measure a couple of inches shorter than the length of the strips, so that the tips of the strips can be bent and glued to the top and bottom of the inner tube. This is how the shape of the pumpkin will be kept in place.
  2. Cut strips of orange construction paper 1/2 inch wide, all equal in length. 
  3. Cover the inner tube with orange construction paper to "hide" it from view.
  4. Glue each strip's ends to both the top and bottom of the inner tube.
  5. Glue the wooden or cardboard circular disk to the bottom of the woven pumpkin. this will help the pumpkin to stand on it's own.
  6. Glue on the stem, after covering it with brown paper. 
  7. Draw vein details with a fine tip marker, onto the stem.
  8. Cut a small green leaf to glue to the top of the pumpkin. Add veining on this if you prefer.
Left, pictured are the tubes rolled from cardboard to give the "shredded paper pumpkin support.
 Right, see the gluing process. I'm firmly pressing the paper ends on top of the tube.


Left, I bent a few of my strips without the tube between in order to determine the length of tube
 that I would need for support between my strips of orange construction paper. Right, here you can
 see the end result after I have randomly "woven" the orange strips above and below the inner cardboard tube.


A cute little ghost peers through the window.

The Ghost In The Window Craft: A simple preschool/kindergarten level craft for Halloween.

Supply List: 

  • 6 wooden craft sticks all the same length
  • two googly eyes
  • white school glue
  • white and black construction paper
  • brown acrylic paint
  • ghost template below

Step-by-Step Instructions for The Ghostly Window:

  1. Glue four wooden sticks together in the shape of a square.
  2. Glue a cross piece on top of the square and wait for the glue to dry.
  3. Print out the ghost in the window template, cut it out and then trace around it on top of white construction paper.
  4. Glue the little ghost on top of black paper and paste on it's google eyes.
  5. Then paste the ghostly view to the back side of the wooden window frame.
  6. Paint the window frame brown.

A Black Batty Candy Container: You will need the following supplies for the bat: black construction paper, two googly eyes, the paper template for it's wings and one recycled toilet paper roll. Any child in Kindergarten through third grade will enjoy putting this project together for friends and family.

The back side and front sides of the cardboard tube candy container shaped like a bat for Halloween.

Left, recycled cardboard tubes. Center, painted tube for the bat body of the candy box.
Right, tracing around the wing template for the black batty candy box.

Step-by-Step Instructions for the Candy Holder:

  1.  Paint a recycled paper toilet roll solid black.
  2. Print out the template for the batty wings from below.
  3. Cut the template and then trace around it on top of a black piece of construction paper.
  4. Cut out the wings.
  5. Pinch one sides' end of the paper tube shut. Use glue to make this permanent. You may need to use a clamp to hold this in place till the glue dries.
  6. Hot glue the googly eyes in place near the top of the candy container where the bats head would be.
  7. Pinch together the bat's pointy ears on opposite ends of the tube. This will create a crease in the cardboard while you are working. 
  8. Apply a bit of shaping along these creases to "make" the closure for the candy box. 
  9. Slip in some candy corn or wrapped candies into the tube shaped box if you prefer. Searve up this super sweet, batty box treat at a Halloween party!
The assembled recycled ghosts with curled paper trim.

Recycled Paper Ghosts: Paper recycling craft intended for early learning students through second grade. They will learn how to cut, trace, curl and paste!

Supply List:

  • white school glue
  • white recycled papers
  • black marker
  • small scissors 
  • two ghost templates (below)

Step-by-Step Instructions for The Paper Ghosts:

  1. Print the templates from below on white paper.
  2. Cut long white paper strips and glue these to the backsides of the cut ghost bodies.
  3. Take a pair of child scissors and curl the ends of the strips.
  4. Use a black marker to make silly faces on the ghosts heads.

A Pom Pom Spider Stick Puppet: The supplies you will need for this craft are: two pom poms- one larger than the other, two googly eyes, one 6-12 inch wooden dowel, hot glue and gun and black construction paper. If making this with a young student, use store bought pom-poms. If your students are older, have them manufacture the pom-poms themselves.

Steps for assembling a pom-pom spider puppet.

Steps for making your own pom-poms.

Step-by-Step Instructions for the Spider Puppet:

  1. Cut cardboard disks like the ones pictured above and wrap black yarn through the hole and around the shape.
  2. Trim the pom-pom off the card.
  3. Knot the clippings together tightly according to the illustration.
  4. Make two pom-poms, one slightly larger.
  5. Glue a wooden or cardboard disk to the end of a dowel or chop stick. 
  6. Then glue on eight tiny paper spider legs equally distributed about the disk.
  7. Hot glue the larger pom-pom on top of the disk and legs.
  8. Hot glue the smaller "head" pom-pom to the end of the larger.
  9. Hot glue on the google eyes.
Above are five ghost templates and one bat candy container wing. Three of the ghost patterns are
shown above. The templates for paper ghost chains will be covered in a later post and linked
back to this sheet of patterns.


Thursday, September 29, 2022

How kids can quill a jack-o-lantern picture...

The finished Halloween picture, with quilled
3D jack-o-lantern.
        Learning to quill with construction paper is much easier than it looks. This cute little jack-o-lantern is made up of dozens of rolled construction paper strips glued within a pumpkin shaped outline. I've featured him here on top of his own construction paper fence. Little ones may also add more "spooky'' spider webs to their Halloween picture once the paper quills have dried.

Supply List:

  • ample supply of orange, construction paper, shredded
  • white acrylic paint or white pencil
  • black marker
  • black paper for background, brown paper for fence, green for leaves, brown for stem, red for pumpkin background
  • white school glue

Step-by-Step Instructions:

  1. You can either cut strips of construction paper by hand or use a paper shredder for the craft if a large number of students are making this project. In either case you will need to make the strips of paper approximately 1/2 inch in width and the remaining length of the paper you have on hand. Not all quilling is regular, especially when teaching little kids. I intentionally made this sample using irregular cuts of paper and I think is looks very cute.
  2. After cutting the paper in strips, wind it around a pencil, remove it and then roll it between your finger tips. Squeeze is tiny bit of glue onto the end of the paper roll in order the get then ends to stick and hold the quill in place. Now repeat this step many times until you have enough quills to glue on top of a larger picture and make a design. 
  3. An important thing to remember while working on this project is that it takes some time to complete and that the glue must dry before the quills will even remotely adhere to the background. Be Patient!!!
  4. I cut out strips of brown construction paper for the fence and also used brown strips for the quilled pumpkin stem. 
  5. Use a black marker to draw "wooden" veins in the fence if you'd like.
  6. I quilled green for the leaves, pinching the ends to make an oval shape. (see details below)
  7. Then I quilled jack-o-lantern facial features using black paper and glued these on top of the orange quills.
  8. After the construction paper dries, use a white pencil or paint to add spider web details to make a scene like the one show here.

Details showing what the rolled or quilled construction paper looks like when finished. 

Weave a spider's web for a spooky Fall craft...

Sample spider web weaving craft above.
       Little ones can learn simple weaving skills with this Halloween spider craft. Teachers may choose to offer any number of Fall color combinations as far as craft supplies are concerned. As you can see by my samples. I've also shown here a variety of wooden craft stick sizes for the project.

Supply List:

  • Popsicle sticks or coffee stirrers
  • white, black, or orange yarn
  • black, white or orange acrylic paint
  • plastic spider (sold in bulk at dollar stores, optional)
  • white school glue
  • paint brush 
  • sheet of sandpaper

Step-by-Step Instructions:

  1. Make sure that the wooden surfaces of your craft sticks are clean. If these have any residue from prior use, because the sticks may be recycled, clean them up with a small piece of sandpaper.
  2. Use white school glue to stack the craft sticks on top of each other in the shape of spokes on a wheel or like "stars." 
  3. Let the glue between the layers dry thoroughly so that the webs formed by the layering become sturdy. 
  4. Paint these shapes solid Fall colors: black, orange and white. Let dry
  5. Now young students may weave the yarn about the wooden craft sticks to make their spiders's webs. 
  6. The teacher may use a hot glue gun to paste a inexpensive plastic spider in the center of each child's web.

Left, are the "star like" shapes or spokes of a wheel formed by stacking wooden craft sticks and gluing them as you go. Right, I have painted each sample in the colors of Halloween: black, orange and white.

Thursday, August 18, 2022

20 Facts About The Caterpillar/Butterfly

       Caterpillar. Mrs. Sigourney has written a child's poem about a butterfly, in which the beautiful insect sings as it flies through the sunny air, "I was a worm till I won my wings." Truly the ancients never conceived a myth more beautiful and wonderful than this familiar story of nature - the life history of the butterfly. 
Stages of the caterpillar and butterfly.
  1. The lovely, winged creature is the fourth and last step in the development of the insect, and the caterpillar is the second, for it is the larva, or worm, that hatches from the egg. 
  2. A study of the origin of the word caterpillar shows that it means, literally, hairy cat. 
  3. Everyone is familiar with the woolly kinds, and the name, so far as they are concerned, is not inappropriate. 
  4. There are, however, hairless kinds, the skin of which is often beautifully marked lengthwise or crosswise, or covered with rings and eye-spots.
  5. When the tiny caterpillar first emerges from the egg it proceeds to eat, for this is to be its chief duty during the larva stage. 
  6. The eggs are always deposited where plant food can easily be reached. 
  7. Before very long the skin of the worm becomes too tight, for it does not increase as the body grows larger.
  8. Accordingly the caterpillar soon crawls out through a split which occurs near the front end; that is, it molts (see Molting). 
  9. This process is repeated four or five times, and in each case a new skin has formed under the old one.
  10. The body of a full-grown worm is usually divided into twelve rings or segments, and each of the first three rings bears a pair of five-jointed legs. 
  11. There are also short leg- stumps on the abdomen, which disappear when the last molting takes place.
  12. On each side of the head there are six eye-spots; the head also bears a pair of short, three-jointed feelers, besides jaws and other mouth organs. 
  13. Glands, some with unpleasantly odorous or stinging secretions, frequently occur on the skin.
  14. There comes a time when the caterpillar ceases to eat and begins to prepare for the so-called pupal, or resting, stage. 
  15. The caterpillar stage lasts two or three months in temperate regions, but it may be of two or three years' duration in Arctic lands. 
  16. The quantity of food eaten is used to nourish the pupa. 
  17. Moth caterpillars spin a casing of silk about them, and form cocoons, while the pupal stage of butterflies is passed in a hard skin covering. 
  18. Butterfly pupae are called chrysalids. 
  19. When the pupa reaches maturity the outside casing splits open, and the butterfly comes out, rather crumpled and weak at first, but soon ready to spread its wings for a happy life in the sunshine. 
  20. The same processes of development occur in the life history of moths.

Monday, August 15, 2022

Little Danny Donkey

Little Danny Donkey
by Helen Cowles LeCron


I hate to talk about it, 'cause
it's sad enough for tears,

But --little Danny Donkey didn't
like to wash his ears!

At breakfast every morning
Danny's mother sent him back

To do his washing over 'cause
his ears were simply black!

They say he's doing better now--
and oh, I hope it's true!

I'd hate to be so lazy and so
careless! Shouldn't you?

The Lady-Bug Rebus

Lady-Bug
by Gertrude A. Strickler

       Long long ago a lady-bug washed out her children's clothes. "But where to hang them up to dry," said she "O goodness knows!" It happened that a spider's home was in the grass close by, and on the spider's silken line, she hung them up to dry. Then Granny spider laughed "Ho! ho! those lady-bug's clothes are mine because they're in my web" and then she took them off the line. A measuring worm was looking 'round as on a leaf he stood. He saw it all and called for help, as loudly as he could. Then to the rescue cam a wasp, and tho he had to tug, he took the clothes from Granny's grasp and back to Mrs. bug. The clothes were torn but Lady-bug patched up the holes with black. And since that day each lady-bug wears holes upon her back...

Sunday, August 14, 2022

The Interrupting Owlet

The Interrupting Owlet
by Helen Cowles LeCron


When Mother Owl and Father
Owl are talking busily
About old Uncle Blinker in the gnarled
old maple tree,
Or Cousin Drowsy Hoot-Owl in the
oak across the way,
Or stylish Old Miss Snowy Owl, I
much regret to say
That naughty little Downy often inter-
rupts the two
To ask them, "Who'd you say it was?
Say! WHO, Pa? WHO, Ma?
WHO?"

Though Mother Owl has told him that
the question's impolite,
And little owls should never interrupt
on any night
When parents talk, it doesn't seem to
do a bit of good!
For Downy still continues, as no
thoughtful owlet would,
With "WHO, Pa? Who Ma?
Who'd you say?" and "Tell me,
folks! Aw! Do!"
And "WHO'D you say it was? Aw,
Ma! Say! WHO, Pa WHO,
Ma! WEHO--OO?"

Sunday, July 3, 2022

Paper Cuts of Farm Animals

        Below, I have restored a few paper farm animals: horse, cow, goat, duck, rooster, sheep, dog, bunny, pig and cat. These may be freely used by students and teachers for the classroom. Silhouettes on my blog are not to be redistributed by alternative websites and are not meant to be sold or purchased.

These paper cuts of animals found on the farm would make great design
elements in a classroom or any other art project a young
student might need them for.

Find The Fish Puzzle

Puzzle - Find The Fish

Find The Fish
by Helen Hudson


A Joyful day it is for us,
Tommy and Richard and me,
For our friend Bill Jones is taking us
Where the biggest fish may be.

If it should be our luck to catch
The fish Bill tells about,
I really do not see quite how
We'd ever haul him out!

The Feathered Patriot

 The Feathered Patriot
by Daisy M. Moore


"Tcheer! Tcheer! Tcheer!"
I heard a warble clear;
How came a bird to know
That July Fourth is here?

"Tcheer! Tcheer! Tcheer!"
The warbler nearer drew,
And peering through the leaves
I saw his coat of blue.

I caught full sight of him
Before he flew away,
And knew just why he cheered
On Independence Day!

Of course, each one of you
Is wondering how I knew-
His lovely feather clothes
Were red and white and blue!