Due 100% to Pinterest's complete and utter bad influence, I showed my kids ideas for homemade Valentine's Day cards, and let them pick what they wanted to make to give out to their classmates.
Let me fill you in on a little secret that no one tells you when you are enjoying Pinterest in your own crafty mom fantasy land: yours won't look even a little like whatever it is you're eyeing. (This is a lesson I should have remembered from my last Pinterest-inspired bout of creativity. But alas, I did not.)
Luckily for me, my kids are too young to notice (or they're just really, really polite). Here's what we made:
Kay "I sometimes go to first-grade" chose to make Play Doh Valentines. This involved a grown-up printing a circular label to go on top of the Play Doh container (we went with Tic Tac Doh! Be My Valentine!),
adding a heart sticker, and Kay signing her name.
Someone also needed to cut-out the label and affix it to the Play Doh container with a glue dot. This someone was supposed to be the child in my mind, but apparently it was me in her mind, so yes... it is mostly my handiwork.
Making these Play Doh Valentines was totally easy. But making them look good? Not so easy. Here is our Pin-spiration from Random Thoughts of a SUPERMOM!:
And here is our finished product:
With the Play Doh Valentines complete, next up was making Valentines that would be suitable for third-grader "I'm too cool for Valentines" Magpie. Her only criteria was not to include a message that could in any way imply she ever liked anyone at anytime, anywhere or in anyway. Her choice? You Rock! Valentines.
Again, the easy factor on making these classmate Valentine's Day cards is high. I cut out old-school hearts by folding pieces of construction paper in half, and Magpie used a glue dot to affix a rock or two to the heart. And, Magpie even wrote the Valentine's Day greetings all by herself.
I thought they looked pretty great:
But great as they are three-grade handwriting and all, they are nothing like the original Pin-spiration from Fiskars.com:
And last, my two-year-old Ziggy needed Valentines, but just a few. His preschool is Jewish, so there isn't any of that St. Valentine's Day stuff going on there, Baruch Hashem.
I made Ziggy's Valentines for him, using recycled crayon hearts we still had from when we made them last year for Earth Day. The heart crayon-size is just right for toddler hands, and I was happy these Crayon Heart Valentines only took a few minutes to make. Once again I just needed to cut-out a construction paper heart, glue-dot on the heart crayon, add a few stickers and write Happy Valentine's Day!
And while I couldn't be happier with how ours turned out, it sure doesn't compare to the original pin-spiration from WhipperBerry (or to a similar crayon Valentine that has been repinned over 16,000 times).
If you'd like more ideas for homemade Valentines, there are lots more here at Valentines That Make the Grade in the Classroom and on my Valentine's Day Ideas Pinterest Board.
Also? I will never degrade the value of a store-bought Valentine's Day card again.
Awesome! I really want to do the play-doh ones.
ReplyDeleteif you want the template for the label for the top just let me know and i can email to you, though maybe you can do something better - and by better i mean worthy of pinterest!
ReplyDeletewow. crafts. i can manage a pretty good craft project for school homework things (we made a shield for ancient egypt that wasn't half bad, I have to say) but I always fall down when it comes to Val Day (maybe b/c I have 2 boys who pretty much could care less about the entire endeavor except that chocolate is sometimes involved). So they end up with lame (REALLY LAME) store-bought cards involving one or more commercial tie-ins. I always feel so .... dirty... after one of those purchases. Yours are much, much nicer!
ReplyDeleteYou are awesome!
ReplyDeleteMitch
PS Toy Fair let me in this year! Yay!