T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1354.1 | a few ideas, fwiw | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Back in the high life again | Wed Aug 11 1993 18:07 | 16 |
| Hi Sandy,
I like the idea of forming and baking challahs. Just bring in prepared
bread dough ready to form. It will need a final rise. That's assuming
you have an oven available.
Maybe for RH/YK you could do something on the theme of Jonah and the
whale. The idea of being swallowed up, overhwelmed. Climbing through
large tubes?
Another idea, maybe not the most exciting but. Make paper book covers
for the holiday prayer books. The kids could decorate them with
suitable religious themes. You could show them pictures of ornately
decorated prayer books and bibles.
L
|
1354.2 | Chanuka idea | MEMIT::N_RICH | | Wed Aug 11 1993 20:38 | 7 |
| For Chanuka, one idea we've used is to have the kids put both hands
down on construction paper, have another person trace their fingers.
This makes a nice menorah (chanukia) shape with their 8 fingers that
they can color, put glitter on, etc.
-Neil
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1354.3 | | NODEX::PINCK::GREEN | Long Live the Duck!!! | Wed Aug 11 1993 22:10 | 16 |
|
In Holiday happenings my brother made a menorah that we still
use once a year.
The pieces needed are:
1- One piece of wood about 9 inches long
2- one piece of wood about 1 inch long (about square)
3- 9 nuts, the size so that a standard chanakah candle will
fit inside.
4- stickers, pens and other decoration stuff
5- glue
I guess the construction is real strait forward and probably
would take less then 1/2 an hour.
Amy
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1354.4 | in the Live Free or Die state ;-) | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Back in the high life again | Wed Aug 11 1993 22:22 | 7 |
| Last year my husband gave the school a sack of polished, spent, shot
gun shells to make the menorahs. They glued them to the wood, then
varnished the whole thing.
How do you get off the wax afterward?
L
|
1354.5 | thanks so far... | ASABET::HABER | supercalifragilisticexpialidocious | Thu Aug 12 1993 03:59 | 16 |
| thanks for the ideas so far.
One year my son brought home a menorah made from metal nuts attached to the
wood -- i think that's too much for 4+5 year olds. [plus both of us
teaching the course work, and don't have the time to get everything
ready in advance!] it is a nuisance getting the wax out too.
i like the idea of tracing the hands -- i've seen it done for turkeys
for thanksgiving, never thought of it for chanukah tho.
Wish we could let them crawl through tubes. but the temple isn't set
up with a playground; we get as far as "creative movement".
Keep the ideas coming -- we appreciate everything!
sandy
|
1354.6 | Honey for a sweet year... | GRANPA::AFRYDMAN | | Thu Aug 12 1993 17:15 | 11 |
| For Rosh Hashana why not make honey jars. It is traditional to dip
apples in honey at the evening meal and to use honey with your challah
until after Sukkot. Baby food jars (with tops) can be decorated to
look like apples or bees or just decoupaged or covered with glitter.
My children have produced a collection of these over the past decade.
They love to use them and show them off.
L'hit,
Avi
|
1354.7 | great idea! | ASABET::HABER | supercalifragilisticexpialidocious | Thu Aug 12 1993 18:04 | 9 |
| re: .6 -- now that's an idea! we used baby food jars last year to make
candlestick holders for Shabbat; never thought of making them for
honey jars. [We also make spice boxes for Havdalah from toilet paper
rolls, sticky paper, and spices -- who said we don't recycle?]
thanks.
sandy
|
1354.8 | Make candles, too | TLE::JBISHOP | | Mon Aug 30 1993 22:33 | 35 |
| re .4, getting wax off things
If the object can be dunked in very hot water, or tolerate
baking, the wax will melt off. Otherwise you're stuck with
scraping and chipping, unless there's some wonder-soap around
I don't know about. I suspect that the wax chips better when
cold.
Anyway, you can make candles with hot water, and if your kids
can handle boiling water you can add hand-dipped candles to
the things to make:
Fill tall containers with wide mouths (e.g. mayonnaise jars)
with boiling water. Put paraffin blocks or old candles (fish
out old strings). Color with crayon bits. The wax will melt
and float on top of the water.
Fill another container with cold water.
Cut white cotton twine to a few inches longer than the jar is
deep. Dip into wax, then into cold water to set. Repeat.
As the string gets coated, you can dip it deep in the "wax"
jar, through the wax into the water--it'll lose some wax on
the way down and gain more on the way up.
With dipping in various levels and different colors you can
do all sorts of layers and decorations, and while they are
warm and flexible you can tie knots in thin candles or braid
them, and when cold can sculpt them.
Real candles have specially made wicks which are formulated
to burn at just the right rate, and the twine isn't--but these
candles will work, more or less.
-John Bishop
|
1354.9 | what about these ideas | BIGTOY::BLOOM | Steven Bloom - Hailing frequencies open ! | Wed Sep 01 1993 05:23 | 23 |
| Another neat way to make candles is to get a foam cup or polystyrene cup even
a paper cup and fill it with ice cubes. Insert a wick down the middle when
you put the ice into the cup. Pour melted wax into the cup. Eventually
the ice will melt and you get left with a candle filled with interesting
holes.
Potato painting:
Cut potatos in half and carve out a shape on the flat side. dip into paint
and stamp it on to paper.
What about making things with pipe cleaners....you know those little bits
of wire covered in fluff that people use to clean their smoking pipes. You
can make all sorts of little objects with it by bending and twisting the
wires round eachother.
Collect leaves and flowers and stick them onto paper and make different
pictures with them
Regards
Steve Bloom
DECdirect
Sydney Australia
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