Photo: SHP Studio

Christmas is my favorite.

As a little girl, Christmas felt like it lasted forever.

I remember waking up every hour on Christmas eve and sneaking into my living room to see if there were presents yet. I think my parents knew that Santa needed to come to our house last, otherwise we would be opening gifts at midnight.

I can still remember the feeling of peaking my little head around the corner to see the living room full of gifts and squealing with excitement.

I remember running through the house screaming “Santa Came, Santa Came!!”

Don’t get me wrong, I know that Christmas isn’t about gifts.

The thing is, I don’t remember the presents I got.

I remember my dad wrapping my presents with so much tape it was impossible to open them.

I remember that he always said he was doing it to be funny, but I think it was because he wanted Christmas morning to last just a little longer.

I remember the snowy boot prints that I would find from Santa walking down the halls.

I remember the carrot crumbs leading me to special hidden toys.

I remember the magic.

Most of the time people grow up and that Christmas magic fades, but for me it never did.

My parents made Christmas so special for me that the magic lived on forever.

When I found out I was going to be a mom, Christmas was the very first thing I thought of. I could not wait to make that Christmas magic for my baby.

I had dreams of little footsteps running into my room begging me to open presents.

 I had dreams of wish lists for Santa!

For the first few years, I tried really hard to give him all of my Christmas magic.

Despite all my efforts, he never seemed to care much about it.

You see my son is autistic, and I don’t think he knows what Christmas is.

He doesn’t know who Santa is.

He doesn’t care about the reindeer.

He doesn’t even open gifts.

On Christmas eve, he is not excited.

I tried my best to not lose the Christmas magic.

I bought him a million toys that he didn’t care about.

I wrapped them up, even though I knew he wouldn’t open them.

I talked to him about the meaning of Christmas and Santa. I told him about the magic, even though he never said anything back.

I imagined he knew what I was saying. 

I fought my hardest to have all the Christmas joy, but I still cried myself to sleep for many Christmas eves.

Despite the heartbreak, I never gave up on giving him the perfect Christmas.

I tried to adapt to a new kind of Christmas magic.

Last year, I didn’t wrap a single present. Instead, I built a sensory gym in our basement. I put big red bows on all the equipment and covered the hallway entrance in wrapping paper!

Little feet didn’t run into my room on Christmas morning. Instead, just like each Christmas before, I snuck in his room early and woke him up with tickles.

I still told him Santa came, even though he didn’t know what that meant.

We came downstairs and the wrapping paper covering the entrance confused him.

Together we ran through the paper, relieving the surprise.

He froze.

His eyes got wide.

He didn’t jump up and down screaming.

He didn’t talk about Santa.

But he quietly walked around the room, touching each new piece of equipment.  

He studied the room, mesmerized by all the new things to climb and swing and crash on.

When he finished, he walked over to me and gently touched my face.

He didn’t have the words, but I knew he was saying thank you mama.

In that moment, I realized that I never needed to give him the Christmas of my dreams.

I could do better.

I could give him the Christmas of HIS dreams, instead.

The Christmas of his dreams consists of endless car rides and loud Christmas music.

The Christmas of his dreams consists of LOTS of Christmas cookies.

It consists of quiet nights by the fire while he watches Peppa Pig and I watch Hallmark movies.

It consists of chocolate chip pancakes and living room dance parties.

It is not the Christmas I had pictured, but nothing about this life with my sweet boy is as I pictured it would be.

Life doesn’t always go as planned, no one knows that more than a special needs mama.

Things don’t have to be the way we thought they would be to be beautiful.

To the mama who is crying on Christmas eve, I see you.

I know you are trying.

I know it is hard.

I know that it might feel like you are losing Christmas.

This year, my Christmas wish is for you.

Don’t give up on Christmas, mama.

Don’t lose the magic.

Your kids don’t need you to replicate the Christmas of your dreams.

They need you to build the Christmas of their dreams.

And maybe, just maybe, that will be even better!

Maykayla is a single mom to an autistic little boy. She sells yacht parties by day, plans weddings by night and navigates the world of special needs in between. She is the co-creator of A Blonde, A Brunette and Autism. She invites you to come along on her journey! 

Need a laugh? This punny gift wrap from Laffy Taffy is here to help you “sleigh” the holiday season. The new Laffy Taffy Laff Bites wrapping paper is now available on the brand’s Facebook Shop

Laffy Taffy Wrapping Paper

 

This laugh inducing wrap will elicit a smile from even the biggest grinch on your holiday list. Wrap up your gifts in jokes, puns and dad jokes galore! 

Laffy Taffy Wrapping Paper

 

The limited-edition wrapping paper (available while supplies last) costs just $1.01 (lol). Grab a roll while supplies last or “yule” be sorry!

—Jennifer Swartvagher

All photos courtesy of Laffy Taffy

RELATED STORIES

Target’s Hottest Holiday Toy List Is Here & Cue the Shopping

Sam’s Club Invites You to the “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation” Shopping Experience

2020 Harry Potter & Star Wars Advent Calendars Have Arrived

This “Friends” Advent Calendar Is Filled with over 40 Keepsakes

Disney Storybook Collection Advent Calendars Return for 2020

I recently saw a quote circulating around the internet that said: “As a grown-up I’ve learned that all the ‘Christmas Magic’ I felt as a kid was just a Mom and Dad who loved me.” I may or may not have slowed my scroll and got emotional thinking about all the fun magic that my parents brought to Christmas.

Then I panicked and thought am I bringing the fun of Christmas to my kids?! Parenting Whitman and Vivi is like parenting the sun and the moon. Whitman is very cool very chill. He accepts things for what they are and doesn’t question it for the most part. Which is amazing because he is non verbal and on the spectrum.

Then there’s Genevieve she runs hot on the daily, and asks 80 million questions. I’ve started a retirement fund—I add a dime every time she says: “Ummmm Mummy?” I asked her last week if she wanted to write Santa a letter to receive an elf on the shelf. Her response: “NO. Santa knows.” Last year, at the ripe old age of 2, we ruined her Christmas in someway. I’m not sure if it was the gifts, but she kept asking “Who got me dis, and why dis?!” People were in her space. And she informed us numerous times that this wasn’t great and she wasn’t having a good time. At any rate I feel like the “Christmas Magic” was a loss on Vivi.

Thinking back to the Christmas magic of my youth, we had all these traditions. When we lived in New Philadelphia we went to the Beitzel’s, ate, exchanged gifts, and then went to church for the Christmas Eve Service. After the Christmas Eve Service we’d go to other side of town and celebrate Jesus’s Birthday with the McInturf’s. I’m pretty sure we did this tradition through 8 Christmases. And truth be told it was my favorite. We’d come home full of hope and cake. Santa would come and we’d open presents then we’d either load up in the car and go to my MeeMee and Papa’s or they’d come to our house for a few days. It was pure Christmas magic!

As we got older and moved to Illinois, Christmas traditions looked different. One year we went to Florida. Most of the time though we stayed and made new memories. Basketball is big in the midwest so it was usually Christmas, then the next day tournaments started at 8 a.m. and that’s how you spent your break until New Year’s Eve. Truth be told, I don’t remember a lot of the Christmases in Illinois. I remember parts like the year my brother wrapped everything in duct tape. Or the year he used athletic bags as wrapping paper so the sweater he got me smelled sweaty. The year my mom had been sick and she didn’t get to go shopping so she had bought everything off of QVC (before they had a webpage). All in all, I just remember laughing and being happy.

I remember last Christmas before my Dad had his stroke like it was yesterday. Mainly because you don’t ever think it’ll be the last time you know things to be and when it hits you that it was the last time it forces you to remember everything about that day. I remember I spent the night at my parents instead of going to my apartment. We waited until my grandparents got to the house to open gifts. I put together all kinds of pictures of my parents and us through out the years to the song “The Gambler.” I remember thinking I thought the song described my parents. Never realizing that they’d live that song in some ways.

I went and picked up my then-boyfriend, now husband, to get him in on the Christmas festivities. My brother read a poem written in Jeremy’s honor. My dad hid a gift for Jermey in the Christmas tree and my mom boldly asked why my dad would have hid it outside in the big tree in their front yard?! My mom had bought plates from Target and it was questioned if we were at Campbell Christmas Dinner or a Renaissance Fair. The day was a messy kind of perfect with the best people. My husband and I laugh to this day and he once told me that he was grateful he got to see the Campbell Christmas in all it’s glory. The following May my dad suffered a massive stroke that changed the dynamic of our lives forever.

I think it was the following Christmas, the first, post-stroke Christmas that I realized that Christmas has always been 100% about the people you are with and not about the karaoke machine that was bought for my brother and me but that my dad used every Christmas. From Blue Velvet to Achy Breaky Heart. John Campbell would sing his heart out for hours over the holidays. There was the year Christmas was cancelled because my mom hid the tapes for the karaoke machine and my dad thought Tyler or I lost them. There was the year none of our gifts came in because my dad ordered them on Ebay so we got manilla envelopes with printed out pictures of what he ordered for us. Some of our Christmases could be compared to the movie “Christmas Vacation,” but they were always a good kind of crazy.

This will be the first Christmas that my dad is gone and I’m trying my hardest to duplicate the Christmas magic that he brought year after year. I may bring out a karaoke microphone and let everyone sing from the lyrics on our TV and hope that my dad is watching us try to make the Christmas magic he helped with for all those years. I hope someday my own kids will look back on Christmas and think about the fun crazy times and how much their mom and dad loved them and wanted them to have the best Christmas. I hope we can duplicate the magic.

 

Lindsey is a mom, wife, and blogger at The Althaus Life. She lives in Ohio with her husband and 2 children. Lindsey is grateful all things and to be able to chronicle her beautifully broken laugh til you cry cry until you laugh life.

Do you consider ketchup to be one of the food groups? If so, then HEINZ has just the merch for you. The popular condiment brand has you covered with its new e-commerce store shop.heinz.com

From vintage holiday sweaters to mittens, scarves, button-ups and beanies, there’s something for every ketchup lover. You can even buy The HEINZ Christmas Pickle ornament for your tree.

HEINZ Ketchup Pocket T-Shirt ($37.95)

 

Heinz Pocket Tee

 

HEINZ Holiday Sweater ($45.95)

 

Heinz Holiday Sweater

 

HEINZ Holiday Mittens ($10.95)

Heinz Holiday Mittens

HEINZ Wrapping Paper ($5.95)

Heinz Wrapping Paper

 

HEINZ Scarf ($24.95)

Heinz Holiday Scarf

Order your gifts by Dec. 15 to ensure they arrive by Christmas. 

The best part? HEINZ’s new e-commerce store is here to stay, because every season is ketchup season – it’s HEINZ’s gift to ketchup lovers!

—Jennifer Swartvagher

All photos courtesy of HEINZ

RELATED STORIES

Target’s Hottest Holiday Toy List Is Here & Cue the Shopping

Sam’s Club Invites You to the “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation” Shopping Experience

2020 Harry Potter & Star Wars Advent Calendars Have Arrived

This “Friends” Advent Calendar Is Filled with over 40 Keepsakes

Disney Storybook Collection Advent Calendars Return for 2020

If you’ve got mini wizards at home, you can make this holiday gift-giving season even more magical with Harry Potter holiday wrapping paper.

The wrapping paper collection, which was created by MinaLima’s wizarding shop in England, is so intricately detailed and gorgeous you could frame it and hang it on the wall as artwork. It does, however, make the absolute perfect gift wrap for a Harry Potter-themed gift.

The paper comes in six different prints including a Maurader’s Map pattern, the Daily Prophet, the Black Family Tapestry, Quidditch gift wrap and more.

Each print comes in a set of two sheets measuring 50 by 70 cm each. Each set can currently be pre-ordered online for £5.95 and will be available starting Nov. 4. While the company is U.K. based, they do ship worldwide.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

Featured photo: Minilima Design

 

RELATED STORIES

Harry Potter Fans Can Visit Diagon Alley with New Set from LEGO

Bring Harry Potter’s Diagon Alley to Life with This Deluxe Pop-up Book

J.K. Rowling Relaxes License So Teachers Can Read Harry Potter Series to Students Online

New “Harry Potter at Home” Hub Is the Perfect Way to Add Magic to Your Day

 

This holiday season Dunkin’ has the perfect gifts for the coffee fan in your life. Tell the world you run on Dunkin’ with this exclusive swag. Dunkin’s limited-edition holiday merch will drop exclusively on ShopDunkin.com beginning Tues., Nov. 17, at 12:00 p.m. ET, with stylish, sensational, and even surprising gifts for every Dunkin’ lover on your list. 

Dunkin' Merch

Much of last year’s lineup sold out within hours, and this year’s holiday lineup is even more exciting, featuring Dunkin’s first-ever personalized apparel and accessories, with custom caps, shirts, laptop cases, and phone cases, created especially with anyone’s name.

Dunkin' Merch

Beginning today, Thurs., Nov. 12, at 12:00 p.m. ET, Dunkin’s most loyal fans – DD Perks rewards members – will get early and exclusive access to fresh, new “Perksclusive” joggers and a crewneck sweatshirt, inspired by last season’s best sellers that sold out almost immediately. Both new and current DD Perks members can find a special access code for ShopDunkin.com via email or on the home screen of the Dunkin’ App.

Dunkin' Merch

Instagram posts by Dunkin’-loving celebrity couple Ashley Iaconetti and Jared Haibon. In addition to the “Perksclusive” items, the sweet selection for the 2020 holiday season includes:

  • Customizable: For presents personalized with your name or the name of anyone on your nice list who runs on Dunkin’, the brand’s customizable lineup features a baseball cap, long-sleeve shirt, phone case, and laptop case.
  • Apparel: Fans can fashion a wardrobe with a pop of Dunkin’, with a cool and cozy orange and pink collection, including hoodies, super-soft joggers, a cropped sweatshirt, and even a bathrobe.
  • Giftin’: From premium presents to stocking stuffers, ShopDunkin.com has it all, such as:
  • Dunkin’ Bedding: Dream about Dunkin’ with snuggly Dunkin’ bedding that includes branded duvet covers and sham covers.
  • Dunkin’ x Keurig K-Mini Brewer: The slimmest Keurig brewer yet is now decked out in Dunkin’. At less than five inches wide, the Dunkin’ x Keurig K-Mini Brewer combines sleek design with space-saving convenience in a portable, stylish package that delivers fresh brewed, delicious coffee from your favorite Dunkin’ K-Cup pods in minutes.
  • Dunkin’ Scrunchies: Sport a Dunkin’ updo with two styles of scrunchies hair ties.
  • Dunkin’ Mini Fridge: Easily Dunkin’s “coolest” gift, Dunkin’s Mini Fridge is perfect for the dorm room or any chill zone.
  • Dunkin’ Tandem Bike: Grab a buddy and make the next Dunkin’ run a Dunkin’ ride with a branded tandem bike.
  • Dunkin’ Apron: For the cook who loves Dunkin’, bring on the spills and splatters with this ultimate gift.
  • Dunkin’ Dog Leash: Upgrade your pet’s walk swagger with a Dunkin’ Dog Leash, the perfect present to give your pooch a happy paw-liday.
  • Fresh Holiday Deals: Festive faves returning this year as Dunkin’ deals include a Dunkin’ metal lunch box, scented wrapping paper inspired by Dunkin’s Signature Peppermint Mocha Latte, and Dunkin’ scarf and glove sets.

“Our guests went wild for our holiday merch last year, so this year we’re taking it to the next level, giving our loyal DD Perks members access to exclusive items, offering personalized options for the first time, and most importantly, bringing everyone who runs on Dunkin’ fresh new ways to proudly show their love for their favorite brand,” said Drayton Martin, Vice President, Brand Stewardship at Dunkin’. “From functional to just fun, our holiday merch offers everything needed to bring our fans smiles and good cheer, and helps them give joy to their Dunkin’ loving family and friends this holiday season.

To learn more about Dunkin’, visit www.dunkindonuts.com or subscribe to the Dunkin’ blog to receive notifications at https://news.dunkindonuts.com/blog.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

All photos courtesy of Dunkin’

RELATED STORIES

Spread Some Cheer with Dunkin’ This Holiday Season

Dunkin’ Delivery with DoorDash Now Available at 3,500 Restaurants Nationwide

Dunkin’ and BARK Introduce New Dog Toys for a Cause

DIY Donut Kits from Dunkin’ Will Keep Your Kids Busy in the Kitchen

Celebrate your favorite babies and toddlers with holiday gifts they’ll love and use for years to come. We’ve divided our holiday gift guides for babies by age to help you find what you’re looking for.

Our Favorite Holiday Gifts for Newborn Babies to 6 Month Olds

Monti Kids

Here they are, presents that go beyond the baby registry. These gifts for newborns and babies up to 6 months celebrate their names, decorate their nurseries, help them with developmental skills and more. Check out our 2020 holiday gift guide for newborns to 6 months.

Top Holiday Gifts for Babies 6 to 12 Months—Toys, Gear & More

Lakeshore Learning

Give growing babies a new way to see the world, toys that delight, and gear that will grow with them. You'll find all this and more on our list of holiday gift ideas for babies under one.

Oh, Baby! Our Favorite Holiday Gifts for 1-Year-Olds

Bella Luna Toys

Yes, they'll be excited about the boxes and brightly colored wrapping paper, but these baby gifts for a one-year-old celebrate their growing brain and all the new skills they learn between 12 and 18 months. From a scooter and a table just their size to a musical instrument and a combination basketball hoop and soccer goal, there's a gift in here to delight every baby on your list. Check out our favorite gifts for one-year-olds.

Toddler Gift Guide for 18-24-Month-Old Boys & Girls

Little Navy

Toddlers love to build, move, learn, and cuddle with their dolls and stuffies, so our holiday gift guide for toddlers age 18-24 months is full of toys and gear to help them. Read on to find your toddler's new favorite presents in our gift guide for kids under age 2!

—Eva Ingvarson Cerise

featured photo: iStock

Editor’s Note: Prices and availability reflect the time of publication.  

RELATED STORIES:

10 Splurge-Worthy Keepsake Gifts for Baby

Drink Up, Baby: 21 Innovative Baby Bottles

12 Awesome Gifts for Any New or Expecting Mom

 

Over two thousand years ago the Buddha observed that “cravings” were the source of most of our suffering. (And he was pretty wise… like a Buddha, in fact!)

Basically, cravings cause us to chase after pleasure in material things, but this habit always ends in frustration and suffering, as the happiness they offer is fleeting and ungraspable.

I was recently reminded of this as we loaded a mini-van full of toys to donate to the Salvation Army in a struggle to declutter.

These toys were an archive of must-have toys from Christmases past, and most didn’t get much love after the New Year.

In fact, our kids had a bad habit of getting a “pleasure-hangover” after the last toy was opened on Christmas morning. Their moods seemed to sink after the cravings and anticipation turned into discontent, often before we could clean up the wrapping paper.

So, after a number of these unsatisfying Christmases, we got wiser. We stopped spending hundreds of dollars on “things,” and don’t even participate in the commercial bacchanal that is “Black Friday.” (ugh!) 

So, what do we do instead? 

Now we get the kids an experience

Our big gift to the kids usually centers around an event, and includes a night in a hotel. Since we’re a train ride from NYC, there’s no shortage of options for family travel, but certainly anywhere fun and exciting will do.

For the last two Christmases we’ve been on a Hamilton (the Musical) kick, so trips to Williamsburg and Philadelphia were a lot of fun. One year it was a long-weekend trip to Florida after we found cheap, last-minute airfare.

This year? Not sure yet. Maybe (half-price) tickets to Aladdin on Broadway, and a night in the city?

We usually make a photo book of our annual adventure, so that’s fun to bring back the memories years later.

Anyway, what I’m trying to say is that we’re all so much happier not dumping “stuff” on each other on Christmas day. We all feel lighter, and there’s a lot less anxiety.

The True Meaning of Christmas

“Sure, Charlie Brown, I can tell you what Christmas is all about…”

Yes, I think Linus was onto something back in 1965.

We’ve all heard that “money can’t buy happiness,” but we’re also told ad nauseam every day that it can.

How? Well, in the form of advertising and social media, of course.

In fact, a recent study shows that we can be bombarded with ads of some sort up to 5,000 times a day. This exposure to advertising is like steroids for our cravings, and that is really bad.

Ugh! If he weren’t so enlightened, Buddha would be so depressed.

Proof that Toys Don’t Buy Happiness (Ah, hah!) 

I’m happy to give you proof that “things” don’t equal happiness. Wrap your brain around this statistic:

You’d think that as the richest country with the most toys, we’d at least be on the list of the 10 happiest countries, but we’re not.

However, we do top the charts in anxiety and obesity, and debt, so maybe we want to stop trying to satisfy our cravings with “things.” 

This obsession with consumption seems to be a human sickness, maybe leftover from our ancient hunter-gatherer DNA? Kind of makes you think that the Buddha was right all along.

Here’s a small way to fight back…

Give An Experience this Christmas!

So, I hope that you consider lightening up on the toys this Christmas. Maybe a Broadway show isn’t in your budget this year, but no problem; it’s the quality time together that matters. 

If you have any ideas of non-material gift substitutes, leave a comment below!

I'm Missy, a mother of three and a middle school drama teacher at a private school. I'm obsessed with my Vizsla (dog), traveling, and the musical Hamilton. I also enjoy writing and sharing fun parenting stories, which is what brought me here.

So you want to do a craft project with your kids but you don’t have the dozen or so things needed to make something amazing? Don’t be intimidated by a materials list! From edible necklaces to easy bird-feeders, here are our five-ingredient-or-fewer faves.

Cheerio Necklaces

Melissa Heckscher

Depending on how hungry she is, your little jewelry-maker will probably want to make a few of these necklaces that require only Cheerios (or any O-shaped cereal) and string to create. Just thread your string through the "O" until you're ready to tie it up and put it on. Hint: These are great projects to do at the table when kids are waiting for a meal.

Materials: "O"-shaped cereal, string.

Tic Tac Toe Rocks

Eighteen25

Sticks and stones may break your bones—but they make great craft materials! A little paint and a bit of nature's own ingredients and your kids can make a tic tac toe board worthy of your coffee table. Crafty moms Jodie and Jen of Eighteen25 will tell you how.

Materials: Rocks, four wood square dowels (or plain old sticks, if you want a more rustic look), paint, paintbrush.

Straw Rockets

Pink Stripey Socks

Note to self: Keep a few of these super-cool straw rockets in your purse for the next restaurant outing with the kids. Better yet, tote the simple four ingredients in your bag and let your kids put together (and launch) this craft while they’re waiting for their meals. The other diners will thank you… until a paper rocket lands in their wine glass. Get the instructions from Mama Leslie at Pink Stripey Socks.

Materials: Paper, markers, straw, tape.

DIY Harmonica

mayamade.blogspot.com

Why buy a cheap, plastic harmonica when your tiny tinkerers can make their own with a few easy steps and just four ingredients. Get the instructions from self-proclaimed "reinventor" Maya at mayamade.blogspot.com.

Materials: Rubber bands, popsicle sticks, paper, tape.

Paper Plate Frisbee

Melissa Heckscher

Would your kid rather play outside than do arts and crafts at the table? This easy paper craft will giver her a little of both. Get the simple instructions from blogging mother-of-four Amanda Formaro at Crafts By Amanda.

Materials: Paper plates, markers, tape, scissors.

Clothespin Dragonflies

Crafty Morning

Pipe cleaners and clothespins are the main ingredients for these colorful clip-on dragonflies. A few easy steps and your kids will be clipping these adorable winged creatures all over your house. Mama Michelle has the details on her blog, Crafty Morning.

Materials: Clothespins, pipe cleaners, googley eyes, paint, glue.

Bowtie Bookmark

Mod Podge Rocks

Want to make something that will inspire your child's reading and her creativity? Bowtie pasta has never looked cuter than in this easy DIY bookmark. Get the scoop from the Mod Podge gurus at Mod Podge Rocks.

Materials: Laminated cardstock, bowtie pasta, glitter, Mod Podge gloss, glue gun.

Egg Carton Bird Feeder

The Creative Cubby

Next time you're about to toss an empty egg carton into the trash or recycling bin, stop and read Creative Cubby's easy instructions on how to make an egg carton bird feeder. Your feathered friends will thank you and you'll teach your kids a good lesson on repurposing everyday items.

Want more bird-feeding ideas? Checkout our post on 12 Backyard Bird Feeders that Rock the Treetops.

Materials: Egg carton, string, glue, scissors, bird seed.

DIY Cork Boat

handmadecharlotte.com

Remember those mystifying ship-in-a-bottle creations? Handmade Charlotte gives our fascination a little twist with a cork sailboat project. Watch it become nifty house decor after you put the ship in a jar filled with water and pebbles, or let it travel the harsh waves of bathtime. Find out how to make your kids captain of this craft here.

Materials: Corks, thread, cardboard, toothpicks

Balloon Bracelets

Michelle Paige

Don't throw those popped balloon remains away! Artsy and creative mom Michelle has the secret to turning those frowns upside down with a balloon bracelet. Get ready to string popped or new balloons into wearable happiness. Note: With completely shattered balloons, snip and save the stems and necks for a different style.

Materials: Balloons, tape, elastic bands

“3D” Paper Neighborhoods

Mrs. Picasso's Art Room

Handsy tots will love watching their imaginative efforts “pop” into the third dimension. Snip magazine scraps and colored papers into houses, streets and skyscrapers. To see how to make this city come to life, head over to Mrs. Picasso’s Art Room!

Materials: Scissors, paper (from plain to magazine scraps), glue, stapler (optional)

Nature Printing

Emily Neuburger

Reprint nature with stamps from Mother Earth herself! Scavenge your backyard for tiny pine cones, ferns, and flowers (last two need to be dried for stiffness) and experiment with ink. Emily Neuburger encouraged her kids to roll, press and smudge their creativity out. The final product? Lovely wrapping paper, framed art or even gift cards.

Materials: Craft paint, ink pads, dried rose buds, pine cones (almost anything can be used as a stamp)

Toilet Roll Characters

Matsutake

Fold in the edges of paper rolls and what form do you see? Do those points make an the ear of a cat? Or maybe there's a wild rumpus ready to start! That’s exactly what Katie from Matsutake and her little assistant saw, and with some paint, they brought a Wild Thing to life. Check out her blog to see what other creatures she was inspired to create.

Materials: Paper rolls (toilet, wrapping paper, paper towels, etc.) paint, markers

— Christal Yuen & Melissa Heckscher

 

RELATED STORIES:

Fun Arts & Crafts Online Tutorials for Your Little Artists

18 Creative Upcycled Crafts for Kids

Freeze Time with This DIY Time Capsule