DLTK's Crafts for Kids
Ladybug Birthday Invitation
I usually use the standard printed invitations from our site for my girls' birthday parties, but for Kaitlyn's 6th birthday she
wanted to do something a bit more crafty for her invitation. This is what we came up with.
In my opinion, this is appropriate for age groups that can help
(or do most of the work) making their invitations or for moms who
really like crafting... If you're not such a fan of crafts, just
use the regular printable
cards and save your energy for all the millions of other things
you'll have to do -- don't burn yourself out before the party even
starts! (there's a ladybug in the summer theme and one of
these days I'm going to add an insect theme).
Materials:
- black poster board or cardstock
- red poster board or cardstock
- hole punch,
- brass tack
-
silver gel pen or white pencil crayon.
-
scissors,
- glue,
- printer and paper
Instructions:
- If you like, print out the template (see bottom of this page)
- I just used plastic lids in different sizes and did it without
a template, but it's up to you.
- Glue the template onto a piece of cardboard (old cereal boxes or
the back of a paper pad work well) and let dry.
- Cut out the template pieces.
- Trace template pieces onto poster board (body onto black and wings
onto red).
- Punch a hole in the corner of each wing. Line the wings
up on the body and mark where the holes are (one tack should go through
both holes). Use a sharp pencil to poke a hole in the body.
- Use the brass tack and the holes you've made to attach the wings
to the body
-
Glue the spots and eyes onto the ladybug.
- Use a gel pen or white pencil crayon to write the invitation information.
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).
Note: you can just make the invitations from paper
instead of cardstock and use the color template to save yourself some time...
but the cardstock wings hold up a bit better especially since the kids tend
to "flap" them.