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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Erin Sherman, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 11 of 11
1. Serendipity Stencil


The Squirrel and I set out to make a stencil. I grabbed a file folder because of its thickness. She drew a cat on it and I cut it out.


The file folder worked out great for a stencil because of the way you can set the paper inside it-- the bottom edge helps with aligning and keeping it in one place.


And when we decided to do a second color (the cat's stripes), I could easily trace the shape onto the back of the folder when closed, then open it up and cut out the stripes...


...and if she aligned with the folder's bottom edge when painting the second color, it turned out pretty good.

By: ErinSherman & TheSquirrel, age 5.5
ErinSherman's blog

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2. Snowflakes with Qtips



Holidays are over but it's still winter :) We made these fun snowflakes with Q-tips.
We cut a piece of white paper plate: hexagon or circle. We glued six Q-tips onto it, (low-temp hot-glue is easiest if you can). A button pressed into the center even helps finish it. TheSquirrel thought it was so cool she could use the Q-tips for something.



Her bedroom has a tree with removeable apples (via Velcro)... so we put Velcro on the backs of these snowflakes, to decorate her "tree" with them in the Winter. (For the Fall, we have autumn leaves to stick on there, and this Spring we'll stick blossoms on there.)

By: ErinSherman & TheSquirrel, age almost-5
WhiteShoes

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3. Sea Shapes

We borrowed a library book involving shapes that become sea creatures in a cut-paper style...


and since today we integrated the letter D to our learning, we looked at the "semicircle" page...


and made our own jellyfish out of cut paper. This is TheSquirrel's, which was great for scissor practice. (The jellyfish I mean; I had to cut the fish for her)


And here is mine:


By: ErinSherman & TheSquirrel, age just4!
WhiteShoes

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4. March lion and lamb

There's an old saying that the month of March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb.



Following a children's calendar craft, above is TheSquirrel's lion and lamb on paper plates.
Below are my lion and lamb, the way I work with patterns/texture on the pieces.




By: Erin Sherman & TheSquirrel, age just turned 4!
WhiteShoes

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5. Pockets

From the library we borrowed a picture book titled "The Pocket Book," in which the character has ten pockets sewn on the front of her dress. I decided to do a dress-shaped project with TheSquirrel, (gluing on) ten pockets of different textures (scraps of fabrics or materials).

Then we wrote the descriptions of them, kinda like in the book. We wrote: "A scaly one, a roughy one, a dotty one, a plaidy one, a spotty one, a stripy one, a furry one, a purpley one, a silky one, and one to match my big blue eyes!"

What child doesn't like putting things into pockets? And, Hooray for glue guns!


By: Erin Sherman & TheSquirrel, almost 4!
WhiteShoes

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6. Fingerprinting Doodles








We discovered we can make little things with our fingerprints. Very fun, very easy, with very cute results! We were using stamp pads (work best, less mess), but for the colors we didn't have in ink, we used paint. Got it all from one book by Ed Emberley (view here).

By: Erin Sherman & TheSquirrel, age 3.5
WhiteShoes

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7. Fishing


We made some fish we can "catch" with a magnet. Kids have just as much fun with plainlooking fish. But here is how we gave them some style:


I had her choose two colors of rectangles, and give each one a pattern with the same color of marker ("squiggles, stripes, dots, circles," etc)


Mine are on the left, hers are on the right. We drew a fish on one of these,


then cut them out, one on top of the other to duplicate.


We cut triangles out of one of them, which will be glued on top of the other...


Then put a paperclip on each fish, for a magnet-on-a-string to pick them up.




This design was my inspiration. I did this as my first experiment with my digital textures style.

By: ErinSherman & TheSquirrel, age 3.5
WhiteShoes

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8. Corrugated Frame


We made a corrugated frame to match The Squirrel's new Farm Room!
Here's what we did: Take a piece of corrugated cardboard (on the edge, you see that inside is made of wavy cardboard):
Peel off the top layer to reveal the corrugation (easiest to have a tool like a pencil to run up the grooves) This part takes the longest so if your child will lose patience, have this done beforehand):
Then cut an opening of any size, paint and decorate! :

(Then put a piece of cardboard of the same size behind it with the picture inside.)

Here are mine that I made for our baby's nursery:
I drybrushed white on top of the main color, and I used wire flower decorations, very scrapbooky.

By: ErinSherman & TheSquirrel, age 3 1/2
WhiteShoes

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9. Leafy Trees Collage



TheSquirrel and I took a stroll in our backyard and had a scavenger hunt for nature objects like leaves, crabapples, a purple flower, a yellow flower, a clover, a walnut, etc. We pressed some leaves flat until the next day we could make these tree collages. (This was a few weeks ago when some leaves were falling but not all had changed color yet.) She sort of did what I did--hers is above and mine is below.
As I picked the orange papers for mine, she wanted pink for hers and I think pink turned out better-looking! The cutest thing is that when she was adding those tall thingys, she wanted to kindof "plant" them right into her "ground" by tucking them under the grass shape she glued down.



Now that the leaves are pretty much at peak color where we live,
here is something else I made with leaves!

By: ErinSherman & TheSquirrel, age 3
WhiteShoes

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10. our pumpkin is junked




This is for Holli's contest. I got more excited as I found more cool things in "the junk drawer."
TheSquirrel made her own as I made mine. She says it's a pig. Anyway, she copied a lot of things I was doing--very fun.




By: ErinSherman & TheSquirrel, age 3
White Shoes

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11. After Breakfast We Went To Texas

MARK: Today I had help from Lucy, age 8, with today’s update. I asked her to talk about our stays in Bryan and Austin, TX while I typed what she said. Full disclosure – I took what she said and changed the order of some sentences so that it goes in chronological order. Otherwise, though, this is what she said. Her comments are in the larger font.

LUCY: When we came into Texas, we were listening to a song named "After Breakfast Let’s Go to Texas.” My mom and dad are in a band that’s called the Church Ladies and it's their song.

We went to Bryan, Texas and stayed with Petey, my mom’s friend. Petey is a really nice man. We walked around Texas A and M. It was really hot out and I liked it a lot. Petey told us about butterflies and Texas Rangers and trees.



MARK: For the Texas A&M football team, there is great importance given to "The Twelveth Man." Here's Karen with her hand on the thigh of that hallowed player.



Also, in Bryan we finally got our antenna fixed! Yay! Here's a picture with Daniel from the Honda dealer.  Such a nice guy!



LUCY: We went to a restaurant. It was my dad’s birthday. It was a Mexican restaurant and I tried Sopapillas and I loved them. In the Sopapillas we put a candle and sang Happy Birthday to my dad.



Another day we went to Aunt Pat and Uncle Frank’s house in Austin, Texas. We saw Suzanne and Stephen my second cousins and Francesco, which is a baby, my new cousin. Francesco was 3 months old when I met him. He was really cute. I love the way that he holded on to my finger.

MARK: Here's Zoe with lovely Francesco, and then my family:




MARK: While we were at in Austin, Lucy decided to play with my aunt’s weight set and promptly dropped a 5lb weight hard on her left ring finger. It then proceeded to turn purple and swell up. It’s still purple and swelled, but a bit better now. And she can move it around, so we’ve decided it must be okay. Yet another adventure with Lucy.

(I have a picture of Lucy's finger but Karen seems to have hidden the camera and she's asleep right now -- the nerve! -- so I can't download it.  But I'll put it up here soon)

LUCY: We went to lots of bookstores and me and Zoe got these little stuffed animals and my brother got a hat. We went in the kids section and played with the trains.



MARK: We loved the beautiful state capital building -- where we arrived just in time for an amazing tour. And we remembered the Alamo...



We visited an amazing independent bookstore in Autsin called Book People. They were very kind to us!


At a Barnes and Noble in Austin we had an unlikely encounter too strange for fiction: I was standing there talking with a bookseller when I heard a woman’s voice behind me say, “Mark? Mark Hughes, is that you?” I turned around and there, out of the blue, stood a familiar face from Rhode Island. Beverly Pettine is a friend of the family who used to work with my mother. Beverly doesn’t live down here in Texas--it was just a strange coincidence that she just happened to be visiting her sister in Austin (who knew?) and just happened to be in exactly the right the bookstore with her sister and niece when she saw a sign announcing that I was going to be appearing here. She looked at the time and my appearance just happened to be exactly when she was here. If I were to put that in a story, no one would believe it. Yet, here’s the proof: Here I am with Beverly in front of our car in Austin, TX, of all places. Whoda thunk? :-)

 

We also had a very nice afternoon with friends of friends. Our neighbor, Jay, grew up in the Dallas area so we were very pleased to meet Brad, Holly, Katie, and Grace, who live in Austin. Lovely people and our new friends in Texas. :-)



LUCY: Yesterday we went to Stephen and Jonathan’s house and they have five dogs. Their names were Max, Casey, Billy, Toby, and Lloyd. They were cute. I loved to pick Max up. He was the littlest but he was 31 years old. We went in Stephen and Jonathan’s pool and swam. Stephen and my dad and mom threw us in. It was really fun.

Right now my brother and sister are filling their stomachs with Cheetos. We’re driving to Dallas, Texas. We’re going to stay with Gigi. We were just listening to High School Musical in the car.

MARK: A sad note: I just got some terribly disappointing news from NPR – they are not going to air the road-trip stories after all. Given their already busy line up and the fact that the producer working with me will be away in Alaska for a month starting this week, they made their decision not to go forward with the road-trip stories. I can’t tell you how disappointed I am about this. I sent out the message about NPRs decision earlier this morning and was truly touched by the many, many the kind emails people sent in reply. I’m grateful to have such a supportive network.

On the other hand, I’ve already learned a great deal from working with NPR so far, and the experience has been a lot of fun. Perhaps after the summer is over I’ll submit some commentaries in the style of the first one, where I talked about quitting my job. We’ll see.

In any case, this is so far the only significant set-back in an otherwise successful and happy road trip/book tour. And I’m determined to get over it before we reach Dallas. :-)

I appreciate your friendship.
-- Mark

LEMONADE MOUTH (Delacorte Press, 2007)
I AM THE WALLPAPER (Delacorte Press, 2005)
www.markpeterhughes.com

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