Color (as required) and cut out the template pieces.
Get Familiar with Your Paper Bag:
I'm going to walk through this slowly.
Look at your paper bag.
It should be closed and flat like a piece
of paper. Just like when they are brand new.
On one side, it's all smooth. This will
be the BACK
of your puppet
It's important that all the kids get the
back and front straight at the beginning!
On the other side there's a flippy tab (which
is typically the bottom of the bag when you're carrying your lunch around...)
This flippy tab will be the HEAD.
Lift the flippy tab up a bit. Underneath
of the tab will be the mouth,
When the child puts her hand in the bag,
she'll be able to make the puppet talk.
Look at the rest of the front of the bag.
(The 3/4 or so of the bag below the part with the flippy tab)
This will be the BODY.
Look at the sides of the bag. There
should be a FLAP
of paper.
We'll be slipping the wings into this flap.
If the kids goof and glue the wings onto
the front or back of the bag, it isn't a big deal.
OK, now that we're comfy with our bags, let's
craft!
Assemble your puppet:
Cover the FLAP
of the paper bag with white paper (just glue it on and trim) or paint
it white and let dry.
Glue the feather tuft to the top of the
HEAD
Glue the eyes onto the HEAD
just under the feathers. If you like, you can use wiggly eyes
instead of the paper template pieces.
Glue the beak under the eyes.
It will likely hang down over a little bit of
the BODY.
Make sure you just put glue on top of the beak (where it touches the
HEAD)
so you don't end up gluing the mouth shut.
Glue the wings into the FLAP.
Glue the feet onto the bottom of the
BODY
Glue the tail onto the
BACK.
Templates:
Close the template window after printing to return to this screen.
Set page margins to zero if you have trouble fitting the template on one page (FILE, PAGE SETUP or FILE, PRINTER SETUP in most browsers).