Showing posts with label celebrations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label celebrations. Show all posts

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Happy Half Birthday Tyler! A Memorable Photo Post

2.5 years old already... I know it's cliche, but where has the time gone?! In one way I can't believe he's this old and in another, I can't believe he's only this old. Happy half birthday Tyler "Bean"!

6 Months


"When you have brought up kids, there are memories you store directly in your tear ducts"
~Robert Brault



18 Months



"Making the decision to have a child is momentous. It is to decide forever to have your heart go walking around outside your body"
~Elizabeth Stone


30 months



"It's not only children who grow. Parents do too. As much as we watch to see what our children do with their lives, they are watching to see what we do with ours. I can't tell my children to reach for the sun. All I can do is reach for it, myself."
~Joyce Maynard

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Our Valentine's Day

Happy Valentine's Day everyone! Since Montessori philosophy includes celebrating cultural holidays, I thought I'd share our day with you.


Tyler was surprised at breakfast with heart-shaped cinnamon sugar toast, a lion stuffed animal (we actually gave it to him last year, but he didn't like it so we put it away for this year...), and a homemade card with a personalized poem that he really enjoyed!
While my husband gave Ty a bath, I hid hearts all over the house for him to find.


I gave him a little basket to carry around and put his hearts in. He especially enjoyed counting as he went along. Though he didn't find them all at first, he discovered them randomly throughout the day and straight up to bed time, which was fun!

Ty also made a sparkly hearts collage with a friend this morning. She had this cool bottle of Elmer's glue that looked like glue stick, but you squeeze it. Awesome for little hands!

During nap, I hid foam hearts in his sensory bin (filled with colored rice) for him to find. He did this over and over! I think the best part for him was dumping the hearts back in and going crazy with the rice to cover them back up.  :)

I meant to gather all of his books with the child/parent love topic ("Guess How Much I Love You" etc) so we could read them together, but the moment never presented itself. 

How did you spend the day with your little ones? 

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Four Art Activities for Valentine's Day!

1. Sticker Resist Foam Hearts on Canvas

This project is much like the sticker resist on paper that we did a few weeks ago, but with much better results. With foam stickers that were easy to find and peel as well as canvas rather than paper (which of course doesn't doesn't rip) this was easy! Tyler first placed the stickers wherever wished.

We used many shades of purple, pink as well as white, but Tyler also insisted on using black. It was his art, not mine, so okay! I admit to not giving him much though. If he asked for more I would have obliged, but he was quite happy.

Hands are much faster at covering a large area!

As he's discovered in the past, rollers make a nice effect

Though not as dramatic of an effect as laying your belly over the paint! His methods are funny and he knows it, but he also likes what it does to his art.

You can see his belly print int he middle! He decided he was done after this and my husband whisked him off to the bath, but I had forgotten about the glitter! I literally held the canvas over the tub while Ty happily shook glitter on.

When it was dry (well, almost...whoops), Ty removed the stickers.
The finished result! He obviously got a bit of the wet paint on his hands and it ended up in the hearts, but it adds to the character. We hung it at eye level in our dining room and Ty has been quite proud to see there when he walks by!


2. Hearts Collage

I didn't think I'd post this activity so I don't have a lot of pictures, but it's pretty self-explanatory.

I cut several different sized hearts from paper, Tyler spread glue with a brush and stuck the hearts to the glue.

When dry, we hung it in our bay window. It looks quite lovely when the sun is shining in!


 3. Multi-media Heart Collage

I've always adored setting-up collage projects for toddlers. I try to offer several different mediums to create with and let them do as they will. Here I provided Tyler with crayons, pink glue (dyed with a touch of paint) and a brush, glitter, all sorts of paper cut-out hearts, pink and red tissue paper, several different kinds of heart stickers and three large hearts cut from heavy white paper to glue everything on to.

Not surprisingly, the glue and glitter were big hits!

He also discovered that crayoning through the glue made a neat negative space effect. I wondered how the crayons would write after this, but discovered they were just fine after a simple wipe with a cloth.
 His table typically stays in the kitchen, but I pulled his table into the living room for this project as the sunlight coming through our side window was just lovely on a very cold afternoon...

After he had finished, I asked if I could poke a small hole in each heart and put them on a string when they were dry. He was excited by that! It may seem silly, but I don't want to mess around with his work without asking first, just as I wouldn't want someone to do that to me! He decided we should hang it over the couch, so that's what we did.

4. Toilet Paper Tube Hearts

This idea has been all over Pinterest and various blogs, but I'm posting it here in case someone hasn't seen it!


All you need is an empty toilet paper roll, paint, paper, and a shallow container for the paint. Simply bend the tube to the shape of a heart, tape it to allow it to keep it's shape, then let your child use it as a stamper!

Before we even started, I kinda knew that Ty would probably just stamp a few hearts then want to paint with his hands, but we gave it a shot! After he covered the paper, he did go back to the heart stamper for a moment.

He had more important things to do, like his signature scratch painting. :)

I have to end this post with a thank you to my Mom and Dad for knowing how much of an art lover Ty is and spoiling him by sending him a large box of awesome art supplies for Valentine's Day. Much of it was used in the above projects!

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Celebrating Dr. Martin Luther King: Shades of Skin Collage

Tyler, being a bi-racial child (as well as living in a highly diverse city), is no stranger to differences in skin tone. He's seen a sharp contrast within his own parents since birth. While of his grandmothers is about as dark-skinned as you can be, his other grandparents (as well as his mother) are some of the palest you will find. Though he has unfortunately faced discrimination already (from another child's parents), he was unaware of it. To him, there isn't much to think about the whole "skin color" thing yet. It's life. It's "people". It's quite normal. The walls of his large motor room are filled with  multicultural photos as well.

While I felt that Tyler was a bit young (28 mos) to understand the influence Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. has had on the world, and his own life, I wanted to celebrate in some way. Creating a collage full of various skin tones and hues and talking a bit about them seemed to make sense this year.

I gave Tyler a dish of colored glue (dyed with food coloring) so that he could see where the glue was on his paper. He used a large paint brush to spread it around.

During nap, my husband and I went through several of the National Geographic magazines I was lucky enough to win on Freecycle long ago, cutting out faces of every shade we could find.

Before Ty started, we looked over the many faces and talked very simply about how different people have different colors and shades in their skin. We talked about the differences skin shades seen in members our family as well as our friends and neighbors. I didn't talk about how we're all the same inside or trouble him with the ideas of racism. We just noticed how skin can be different.

Tyler noticed who had dark skin and who had light skin when I asked. He also noticed who was smiling and had a "happy face" or who was wearing glasses.

Tyler calls this his "faces" collage. It now hangs over his table. He often looks at the different faces while he eats snacks and meals. He likes how you can see the "blue-green glue". He smiles back at the big grinning man at the top. It's people. They are as they are.