Upcycled Owl and Cat Treasure Keepers

Upcycled owl and cat treasure keepers by students feature incredible personalities and embellishments. Upcycled means to take one item and use it for another purpose. Worn clothing with holes can become toys. Upcycling is a fun way to repurpose fabric instead of throwing things in the trash.

Any fabric that doesn't fray easily and isn't too stretchy or thick for pushing a needle through it will work fine for fairy crafts. We see every project as an invitation to create. We welcome exuberant self-expression when children sew. The pattern and tutorials for the Owl and Cat Treasure Keepers are in the first Forest Fairy Crafts book. They're a wonderfully fun activity when it's chilly outside. The front decoration is actually a pocket. Perfect for little treasures. Or tooth fairy pillows. The Forest Fairy Crafts book shares patterns, tutorials, and photographs for making your own little critters.

Upcycled Owl and Cat Treasure Keepers to Sew with Children by Forest Fairy Crafts

And they’re so cute!

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Children, Kids Lenka Vodicka Children, Kids Lenka Vodicka

Summer Mermaid

Ah, summer. Your long days that go so quickly! With kids home from school and temps soaring, we spend more time in the water than on land :)

Summer is for mermaids.

We are slightly obsessed with Fin Fun Mermaid Tails over here :) as anyone who follows my Instagram knows well. My daughter and niece adore becoming mermaids.

The next best thing to being a little mermaid is making a little mermaid. I am super-lucky that my niece spends a few days a week with us in the summertime. We play outisde, go to the river, and craft together. We call it Camp Lenkaland :)

My daughter needed Forest Fairies for an entry in the county fair (more on that later). While my daughter sewed her fairies, my niece made a mermaid.

So sweet :). These mermaids aren't for swimming in real water, of course, but she's already joined my niece's collection of Very Special Things. We can create magic :)

Yes, summer is fleeting. Yet the memories last forever :)

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Children, Crafts, Gnomes, Kids, Projects Lenka Vodicka Children, Crafts, Gnomes, Kids, Projects Lenka Vodicka

Sweet Gnome Homes

A few years ago, my daughter made me a precious gift. She asked for a few supplies. Felt scraps. A tiny wood gnome.

She made me this treasure. She designed and sewed everything herself. She was seven years old. 

She had a lot of practice with needles and thread (her mama is Queen of the Fairy Forest after all (her title for me)). But the design and creating of this little gnome is a perfect beginning sewing project.

All you need is felt scraps, needle, thread, a couple decorations, and a wee gnome. This project allows for a lot of trial and error because the felt pieces are small.

She cut the hearts first. They didn't match. She liked that one was bigger than the other. She trimmed them to fit together (mostly). If your child doesn't know where to start with cutting hearts, your child can make a pattern on a piece of paper. Draw a few sketches and pick your favorite. Cut and trace onto felt. Or fold the felt in half and cut just like folding a paper heart (this is a little trickier for little hands).

She could have decorated the hearts with sequins, buttons, or beads. She didn't feel like making it too fancy. I love the simplicity, myself. She sewed them together with straight stitches.

She didn't use a pattern for the gnome. She cut scraps into shapes that she liked and tried them on the peg doll. She sewed the cape with a few stitches. Then she did the same thing for the hat. She folded it in half and sewed it together. She added a flower sequin to the top.

She had sewn before using lots of the ideas in our Forest Fairy Craft Book. If this had been her first sewing project, I would have sat with her and given support as needed.  

What I appreciated about this project was how she was able to plan and test ideas. She found a project- cape and hat, with a little home- where she could try her own patterns. I could have cut the shapes and orgazined the project step by step. But I enjoyed how this gnome gave her a lot of freedom. Yes, I had a pile of teeny-tiny piece of felt at the end. I didn't care.

Visualizing, planning, and creating are all valuable life-skills. A little toy for your efforts is a big bonus!

And it's one of my favorite gifts ever. 

Welcome home, little gnome :)

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