Category: Unplugged Project

Joy - The Letter “J” (Weekly Unplugged Project)

By , September 28, 2009 2:28 pm

This isn’t our usual artsy/craftsy Weekly Unplugged Project, but that’s what’s fun about the Unplugged Project, it can be ANYTHING! A last minute decision to spend the weekend in Phoenix (108 degrees by the way, ouch!) necessitated a change in our original plan.

Since the theme for this week’s Unplugged Project was simply The Letter J, our project became joy.

This water slide was joy, pure and simple.

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If you did a Letter J Unplugged Project this week, then thank you and please link to your project post in the linky below. If you did not join in but would like to learn how, then I invite you to read more here. We’d love to have you!

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The theme for next week’s Unplugged Project will be:

Weather

Enjoy!

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Feather - Make a Quill Pen (Weekly Unplugged Project)

By , September 22, 2009 2:33 pm

Feather was the theme of this week’s Unplugged Project. We decided to try making a quill pen out of some big, beautiful turkey feathers that a friend gave us.

I found very detailed instructions here: Cutting Quill Pens from Feathers. This project involves sharp knives, so unless you have older children, you will probably end up doing most of the work like I did.

First temper the quill to toughen it up. We filled a small, all metal pan with sand from our giant sand pile (you can use a tin can for this part too) and heated it in a 350 degree oven for 15 minutes.

Next we stuck our feather tip into the hot sand and left it there until the sand was cool.

Use a sharp kitchen knife to scrape off some of the feathers near the end in order to make a feather-free area to grip.

Find the orientation of your feather. This will determine which side you are going to cut. Feathers curve and you want the pen to curve back in your hand as you write. The feather is top side up in this photo.

The first cut is actually made opposite the way you would think. Hold the feather pointed away from you and top side up. Using scissors, cut the tip off the feather at an angle slanting away from you (so more of the top side is gone than the bottom).

The second cut is a long shallow cut along the bottom of the feather. It should be centered along the top cut and should remove about half the tube. This opens up the feather and you can dig out any membranes that are inside using tweezers.

The next part is making the slit. I didn’t really understand this step until I saw how my cuts had shaped the tip, but you will see two little points (the website calls them “horns”) that are formed by the intersection of the two cuts.

Squash the tip of the feather flat so the two points/horns are flat one against the other. Press hard and this should make a crack in your feather tip halfway between the points. Ideally it should only be about 1/4″ long.

The final step (and the one I found the most difficult) is shaping the nib. Look closely at the instructions to determine the proper shape. I used scissors for my first cuts, and then a sharp kitchen knife to gradually shave the nib to hopefully something like the proper shape!

Clip off any teeny tiny rough bits, dip your nib in some good ink and test your quill on high-quality paper. I used sepia non-waterproof (ie. washable) ink. Obviously washable ink is preferable if kids are going to use it!

I must say, while not perfect, the quill actually did hold ink in the shaft and wrote much better than I expected. Not too bad for a first try at a lost skill that really requires much practice and patience to learn properly.

If you decide to try this, I urge you to read the much more complete, knowledgeable and well-photographed instructions at Cutting Quill Pens from Feathers.

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If you did a feather Unplugged Project this week, then please link to your project post in the linky below. If you didn’t join in, please do not link, but read more about how to get involved in the Weekly Unplugged Project here. We’d love to have you!

By the way, sorry I am late with the post this week, but life comes before blogging!

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The theme for next week’s Unplugged Project will be very open-ended:

The Letter J

Enjoy!

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Sound - Fun Links (Weekly Unplugged Project)

By , September 14, 2009 10:41 am

I had all kinds of thoughts churning about in my head for this week’s Unplugged Project theme: sound. A science experiment, a game involving sounds, making a musical instrument. But this weekend we were so naturally unplugged, that we didn’t have time for an Unplugged Project!

Soccer, a concert fundraiser for our school (a concert involves music which is sound, right?), homework, and then a lazy rainy and cool Sunday afternoon spent reading on the sofa in front of the fire. That wonderful first fire of the season. Fall is definitely on its way.

This week I offer instead, a few quick links related to sound. Not terribly “unplugged” perhaps, but hopefully useful for someone.

Neuroscience for Kids - Hearing Experiments: Fun activities and experiments for children arranged by grade levels (Kindergarten - Grade 12).

San Fransisco Exploratorium - The Science of Music, Headlands Experiments: What do you get when you mix a tunnel, a metal gate, two musicians, and a physicist?

Hark the Sound Computer Game: A game designed for visually impaired children that includes games involving naming, categories, math, words, and Braille. There is also the possibility of easily modifying the existing games to suit your child’s needs, or to create your own new games.

Exploratorium Online Sound Games: Play “Pong” with your eyes closed (sound guides you to the ball), analyze bird calls, create your own soundscape, do “sound jigsaw puzzles” and play a sound memory game. Not unplugged, but really neat activities!

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If you did a sound Unplugged Project this week, thank you! As usual, please link to your post in the linky below. If you didn’t do a sound project, but would like to join in, then please do not link but read more about the Weekly Unplugged Project here. We’d love to have more people!

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The theme for next week’s Unplugged Project will be:

Feathers

Be creative and have fun!

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Ocean - Sandpaper Transfers (Weekly Unplugged Project)

By , September 6, 2009 9:41 pm

This week’s Unplugged Project theme was ocean. Not having anything in mind when I chose the theme (it was the first thing that popped into my head as I wrote last week’s post), I decided we should try an art technique that I have been wanting to experiment with for some time.

Well, my plans fell through a bit. The two oldest were invited to a sleepover tonight and the little one needed to go to bed, so I decided to go solo on this week’s Unplugged Project.

I am not sure what this is called, but I call it “sandpaper transfer.” It is super easy and produces really remarkable results!

All you need is sandpaper (I used a coarse grain and a fine grain to see what different results I would get), crayons (we have PLENTY of those), and an iron.

Draw a picture on the sandpaper and color it in with crayons. Of course I chose an ocean theme (plus sand is found by the ocean, so sandpaper fit the theme too, right?).

I drew a colorful fish on the coarsest grain of paper and a green/blue/brown artsy ocean wave scene on the finest grain. Be sure to press hard for best results.

The next step is the really exciting one! Place the sandpaper picture-side down on top of a sheet of paper (or cardstock, which I used). Iron over the top. It will only take one or two passes of the iron to transfer the image.

NOTE: Don’t iron too much or you might notice wax soaking through the sandpaper backing and onto your iron. Also, if you use paper rather than cardstock, I would recommend putting an old towel underneath the paper so melted wax doesn’t soak through onto your ironing board.

Peel off the sandpaper and you will “ooh and aah” over what you have produced!

This is the coarse-grained fish:

Here is the fine-grained ocean:

Quite different results.

These are very pretty on their own, or they would make a great backdrop for more coloring, collage, paint, stickers … anything you want!

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If you did an ocean Unplugged Project this week, then thank you! Please link to your project post below. If you don’t have an ocean project to share, then please do not link. You can read more about how to join in here. Everyone is welcome, and the more Unplugged Projects we have, the more fun and inspirational it is for all of us!

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The theme for next week’s Unplugged Project will be:

Sound

I don’t know what we’ll do yet. What would you do?

Have fun and please join in!

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Geometric - String Pattern Art (Weekly Unplugged Project)

By , August 30, 2009 9:55 pm

The theme for this week’s Unplugged Project was geometric.

Inspired by this article from Family Fun we made geometric string patterns. However, not being able to resist changing instructions, we did it a little bit differently.

The article uses painted wood panels and nails. While this would certainly produce a sturdier and probably more striking result, I didn’t want to mess with sawing and painting, so I came up with a simpler alternative: foam board and straight pins.

You’ll need foam board, colored yarn, scissors, and pins.

Cut the foam board into a 12 inch square. The edges were messy so I bound them with red duct tape which actually made a nice frame.

Trace around a dinner plate onto a piece of paper to get a perfect circle. Cut out the circle. This will be your pattern for placing the pins.

Fold the paper circle in half four times and unfold. You should have 16 evenly spaced creases. Lightly tape the circle to the center of the foam board.

Stick a pin in at the top of each crease touching the edge of the circle. The pins will be sticking out pretty far, but that will give you lots of room to wrap the yarn. (NOTE: We experimented with cutting the pins in half to make them shorter, but they kept falling out and didn’t leave enough room for multiple strands of yarn.)

Remove your paper pattern and choose your yarn.

Tie the end of the yarn onto the top pin (the “12 o’clock pin”, let’s call it number 1). Create a repeating pattern and wrap your yarn. For example, moving clockwise, skip two pins and wrap around number 4, then go back to the next pin over from the “12 o’clock pin” (number 2) and wrap, moving clockwise, skip two more pins and wrap, etc. This pattern would be: 1, 4, 2, 5, 3, 6, 4, 7, etc. (NOTE: Pattern in the photo below is different, don’t get confused!)

Work all the way around the circle. When you are finished you should have a nice design. Cut the yarn and tie the end onto the last pin (should be the 12 o’clock pin).

Tie a new color onto the 12 o’clock pin and proceed with a different pattern. Any pattern at all is fine as long as it repeats itself all the way around the circle of pins. We found that three different patterns were all the pins would hold comfortably.

The article suggests putting a dab of glue on the knots. We didn’t bother, but probably would have if we had gone all out and done the wood and nails method.

My 9 year-old daughter loved this so much that she made two other little ones in the corners of her board:

My 3 and a half year-old enjoyed it too. I gave her a small piece of foam board, stuck pins in for her, and told her to do whatever she wanted.

This was the result:

She was very proud and couldn’t wait for me to take a photo!

USEFUL TIP: Remove all cats from the room. Much to everyone’s aggravation, Pita The Adventure Cat enjoyed this project tremendously:

OTHER IDEAS: You don’t have to use a circle. Try triangles, squares or rectangles. Try different numbers of pins. If you really want to get fancy, you can even make these in three dimensions!

LINKS:

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As always, if you did a geometric Unplugged Project, then please leave the link to your actual post below. If you didn’t do a geometric project, then please do not link. You can read more about how to join in here. We’d love to have more participants!

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The theme for next week’s Unplugged Project will be:

Ocean

Have fun and please join us!

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