Applesauce & Applepaints

Today we had an apple tasting, made homemade applesauce, and painted…or tried to…with cut up apples.

First, I dug the various varieties of apples out of our fridge:

Ginger gold, summer gold & pink lady

I’m not sure I’ve ever heard of summer gold, and based on how incredibly tart they were I suspect the man at the farmer’s market just picked ginger gold apples waaaay too early!  The girls definitely likd the pink lady apple the best, but also enjoyed the other two, despite the fact that they weren’t so sweet.

Chopped up apples in a pot.

Then I peeled and chopped the apples while the girls snuck apple peels to munch on.  We added a couple more ginger gold apples and wound up with about 7 cups of chopped apples.  To this we added a tablespoon of sugar (since the apples were mostly tart), a few drops of lemon juice (to prevent it from browning so much), about 1/2 cup of water, and several shakes of cinnamon.

Is that enough cinnamon...?

While that was cooking (for about 10 minutes?) we sliced an apple around it’s middle and found a star shape made by the seeds!

Look, a star!

So I got out some paint and paper.  However, the apples didn’t really cooperate so much…they just made a paint-y mess.

Er...this worked better in my head.

So then we resorted to finger painting (the templates from our stained glass apples).

Finger painting is more fun, anyway.
Squishy red paint.
We could make apple prints on the apple templates!
Messy, messy jazz hands.
Wait, we're finger painting...not painting fingers!

Finally, the apples were cooked and mushy.  So, after lots and lots of hand-washing, we got out the potato-masher and smashed them…

This looks smashing!

…and ate the resulting delicious applesauce warm.  Mmmm.

So very, very yummy!

Curly Apple Trees

It’s September 1st!  How did that happen?!?  Just a few short days until school starts, and I’ll have to decide whether to continue doing themed projects during the school year – I have two enthusiastic votes for “yes”, but I’m not sure, realistically, how much time we’ll have once the big girl is in school all day…

Papers, glues and sharp cutting things.

Today’s project was inspired by a couple of different ideas I found on the internet…which I didn’t bookmark.  :(

Paper strips and paper curls.

First, I cut strips of red and green cardstock, about 1/2″ x 4 1/4″.  Then we curled those strips around a pencil to create little curls of paper.  (Carolyn was very good at this part, Anna was more interested in uncurling the curls.)

Future tree trunk growing here.
She drew a very detailed trunk, with intertwining branches!
Gluing the trunk.

Then we drew tree trunks on brown construction paper – Carolyn drew her own and I drew one for Anna – then cut them out and glued them onto a light blue background.

Anna liked this bit a lot!
A cluster of leaves and apples.

Finally, we glued the curls of paper onto the trees to make leaves and apples.  I think the original project ideas I found had you gluing the edges to the paper, but both girls preferred the look of the curls glued on their sides.

Anna's curly apple tree.

Of course, this way they don’t stay especially well-curled, but they’re cute anyway!

Carolyn's curly apple tree.

We glued some green strips to the bottom of the paper for grass, and I have no idea where they were going with the little yellow bits they cut out…?

A (small) curly apple orchard!

Apple Cinnamon Ornaments

I found a slightly-expired jar of applesauce while I was cleaning out my pantry last weekend.  And then I found a recipe for Apple Cinnamon Dough (scroll down on that page).

If you don't count the glue, this could be delicious!

The kids had fun helping me measure and mix – there was a cloud of cinnamon floating about our heads the entire time.  The kitchen might never smell normal again!

Thick apple cinnamon dough.

We rolled it out and cut it with apple cookie cutters…and other fall shapes.

Roll it...
...and cut it...
...and poke it with a pencil...

The instructions said to leave them someplace to dry for days.  We’re not that patient, so I set the oven to 200F and put the ornaments on parchment paper-lined cookie sheets.  After 10 minutes, I flipped them over and baked them for another 10 minutes.

Oodles of ornaments!

They aren’t quite completely dried out, but they’re pretty close!  And they smell wonderful.  We might paint or otherwise decorate these later this week, but with a pretty ribbon strung through the holes they’d also be lovely and sweet smelling just as they are.

Stained “Glass” Apples

This week, in order to get us in the back-to-school spirit for next week, the theme is “apples”!

There are lots of fun projects to do with actual real edible apples, but it was too windy to go apple picking yesterday (we were worried we might wind up with apples falling on our heads, and we already know about gravity, thank you very much.)  So, since the current apple population in the house is rather dismal, we did a paper-y craft project instead today.  (We used the template, and loosely followed some of the directions, from this site.)

tissue paper + glue + wax paper = stained glass?

First we taped our template to the back of a piece of wax paper, then taped that down to the table.

Work surface ready to go!

I had the girls squirt glue all around the inside of the apple shape, then brush the glue around to fill it all in, going over the edges a bit.

Painting. With glue. Love it!

Then they tore up bits of red tissue paper and pressed them into the glue all around the apple.  A few pieces of green for the leaf, and a bit of gold for the stem completed the tissue paper piecing.

Carolyn carefully placed each piece of tissue...
...while Anna went with the quick method!

When they were finished with the tissue paper, I cut out the apple from the template paper, and traced it – right side facing down – on a couple of pieces of black construction paper.

Unless you want your pencil marks to show, flip it over!

The girls had wandered off to play by this point, so I finished cutting the traced apple out of the middle of the paper, then called them back to glue the frames on their apples.

A frame about to be glued on.

They look really pretty taped to a window!

Anna's finished apple.
Carolyn's finished apple.

Glitter Playdough!

Jenny sent me a link to glitter dough several weeks ago, and it occurred to me that this would fit in well with this week’s theme.  Blue playdough + silver glitter = starry, starry night.

Not so blue, this Berry Blue flavor...

We started with “Berry Blue” flavored Kool-Aid – I used our usual playdough recipe.  That seemed a little greenish, so we added “Grape”.

Adding Grape doesn't seem to have helped much.

That looked a tiny bit bluer, so I cooked it.

But wait! After cooking it really is a nice blue!

And it turned out to be just about the perfect shade of blue.  I dumped a ton of glitter in it and kneaded it for a bit.

Lots and lots of sparkly glitter.
Oooh, shiny!

The girls had a blast playing with this stuff.  And although most of the glitter stayed put, they’re both a little sparkly.  They don’t mind one bit!

Blue glitter pretzel. Yum!
Galaxy-flavored ice cream, anyone?
A whole birthday party - cookies, ice cream & cake!

Planet Mobile & UFOs

We didn’t do our art project yesterday, so we did two today!

Carolyn included for scale.

First up: planets.

As usual, gather the supplies first!
Proto-planets!

My biscuit cutters came in handy tracing circles, and I was inspired by this post to make a couple of ovals for rings.  The crescent moons were mostly to use up as much cardstock as possible.

Well-used watercolors.

Then we broke out the watercolors.  I thought for sure the girls would want to glue bits of tissue paper on the planets, but they were happy to paint.  So we painted!

A red planet.
A green planet.
A plethora of planets, drying.

After the planets were dry, we punched holes in them and strung them up with crochet cotton, cut the fish lines off of our stick, and tied the planets in their place.

I love how this came out!

Now we have an “out of this world” door decoration!

"Mama, why are we using eggs?"

While the planets were drying, we made some UFOs.  I cut up an egg carton for the UFO tops, and then used mini cupcake liners for the bottoms.

It's like the man in the moon, if the moon were made of paper products.
These were green to start out with...
...so watercolors might not have been the best choice!

The girls painted these, and we let them dry with the planets.

UFOs, ready for assembly.

When all the bits were dry, we fashioned landing gear from chenille stems by cutting about 2″ from one end, bending it in half, and twisting it with the bottom inch of the remaining stem.  Then we stuck the stem up through the mini cupcake liner, then up through the egg carton piece.  (I poked a hole in the egg cup first so it wouldn’t tear.)

Landing gear down, ready for invasion!

We wound the remaining stem around bamboo grilling skewers.

Unidentified flying egg cartons...?

And now we have a fleet of UFOs hanging from our kitchen ceiling.  (Doesn’t everybody?)

Moon Sand

This week’s theme is “Out of this World!”  I had found some moon sand on clearance at Target, and thought it sounded like fun (and would be perfect for this theme) so I picked up a two-pack.

Is the moon really made of magenta and orange sand?

The verdict?

It's nice that there are molds built right into the lids...
We used paper plates to try to contain the mess.
Well, filling the molds was fun, anyway.
If you look at the shapes too hard they fall apart.

Not nearly so much fun as playdough.  The girls were pretty “meh” about this (though they were excited at the idea and the packaging) so after a little bit of trying to figure out what on earth we could do with our moon sand – it didn’t stay molded long enough to really build anything out of it – we gave up and went to the playground instead!  Now we know why it was on clearance…

Fingerprint Corn

To wrap up our “On the Farm” week, we made fingerprint corn.

Another craft project with minimal supplies.

This one was pretty simple.  I cut vaguely corn-like shapes out of white paper, something resembling leaves from green paper, and put a dollop of yellow paint on a plate.

A new take on "finger painting"!
Little fingers, little kernels.

The girls had different ideas of how much painting to do, so Carolyn wound up making a solid yellow corn variety while Anna’s turned out bi-colored.

Who says we need to just use pointer fingers??
Not much more room for fingerprints!

We had to wait for the ears of corn to dry, so we went out on the deck and shucked real corn for dinner.

Anna peeled one leaf at a time.
Carolyn was fascinated with the corn silk.
Fresh corn on the cob: the best part of August!

Including the corn, nearly every part of dinner was from the farmer’s market: new potatoes, eggplant, red pepper and green beans.  I love this time of year!

Glue *and* paint in one project? Heaven!
Some paint was still a little wet - but we glued it down anyway.

We had to wait until after dinner, there was so much paint on one of those ears of corn, but then we glued the ears of corn to a sheet of brown paper and glued the leaves on top.  It doesn’t look quiteas delicious as the corn we had for dinner, but it’s pretty cute!

Fingerprint corn, ready for harvest.

Harvest Collages

I found some printables for collages and tried to figure out what materials we had that could work for various textures and colors.  Turns out I just had to look in the pantry for a perfect tie-in to “On the Farm”.  We used dried lentils, tri-colored couscous, a rice blend, navy beans, (unpopped) popcorn, a bit of wool and pencil shavings.  (Those last two aren’t in my pantry, really.)

Harvest Time!

Anna picked up on the idea pretty quickly, and seemed to really enjoy it, but lost interest before she filled in her whole page.  She thought the pencil shavings and yellow wool were the most fun, with the lentils close behind.

We love to glue!
One lentil at a time...

Carolyn knew what to do without any explanation, but I think would have preferred a more detailed picture – she added details like a corn stalk and a house in the bottom hill (before covering them with green wool for whatever reason) and was picking out the dark brown rice from the blend so she could have her details just so.

A navy bean cloud - very bumpy!
Fine details.

Overall?  Glue + intriguing objects = thumbs up.  I wish I’d had slightly more colorful things for them to use – especially something blue for the sky – but considering I didn’t know what we were doing for a craft project today and threw this together at the last minute, I’m pretty happy with the results!

Anna's study in yellows and browns.
Carolyn paid attention to details more than the big picture.
(It looked like fun, so I made one too!)

Bubble Prints

Or, how to get paint everywhere in just a few easy steps…

Paint Pie?

We used a combination of these instructions and these.  So we put a layer of bubble solution (maybe 2-3 Tbsp?  I didn’t measure) and paint (1 Tbsp? -ish?)  in the cups.  I poked pinholes in the straws (note that this was not as effective as promised and Anna managed to suck up a bit of the paint & bubble stuff mixture at one point…non-toxic, right?)  Then the girls stirred everything up and started blowing bubbles into the tins.

For once I'm actually *letting* her blow bubbles!
A pile of purple paint-y bubbles.
A bubble print!

We got lots and lots of paint-filled bubbles.  And some really neat prints!  Because of the “sucking the paint up the straw” fiasco, I wound up doing most of the bubble blowing to avoid any other bubble drinking accidents.

Popping paint bubbles. Messy fun!
We combined some colors for extra-unique prints.
A red & orange bubble print.

When we’d had enough of having to clean out the pie tins to make more prints, the girls dug out the paint brushes and some more paper and did a bit more traditional painting.

A foundation for a house.
Anna loves colors!
Gleefully painting!

Clean fun?  Not really – the blowing paint-y bubbles bit got little (washable) paint splatters everywhere.  But good fun?  Yes.  Yes, indeed.