DLTK's Crafts for Kids
Back to School Pinwheel Crafts
I loved pinwheels when I was little... They seem to be one of
those toys that have been around forever. There are two different
templates to pick from.
You can use the templates I've provided or design your own using:
- construction paper and stickers
- fun foam, or
- thin pieces of plastic (like one would use for overhead
projectors)
Fun foam ones are nice and sturdy, but you'll need to use straight
pins instead of push pins to make them. |
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Materials:
- paper,
- printer,
- something to color with,
- pencil with eraser at the end (unsharpened is best, I think),
- push pin or straight pin
- Optional: a small bead (like a pony bead)
- Optional: blue or red acrylic paint and paintbrush
Instructions:
- Optional: Paint the pencil blue (or red depending
on your taste and the template you choose) using the
acrylic paint because it dries quickly. You will need
to give it a couple of coats to cover.
- Fold on the dashed line to make a square decorated on both
sides.
- Note: At this point, you can put a piece of thin cardboard
or construction paper between the two halves to make your pinwheel
a bit sturdier.
- Glue the sides so you have a square decorated on both sides.
- Cut on the diagonal dotted lines (don't cut all the way
into the middle.
- Bend each corner to the center dot, but don’t crease your
folds.
- Push a pin through the center into the eraser of a pencil
(don't push it super tight).
- Optional: Put a bead in between the eraser and the
paper ... some people find it spins a bit better this way...
I've never noticed the difference (maybe it's the type of pencil
eraser? I use fresh, unsharpened school pencils).
- Blow the edge of your pinwheel to make it spin (if it doesn't
spin, loosen your pin a little or wiggle it around to make the
hole in the paper bigger)
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