T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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941.1 | our $.02 | USCTR1::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Tue Apr 18 1995 14:09 | 47 |
| Movies recommended by my 10-year-old girl :-) are:
Milo and Otis
Angels in the Outfield
Hocus-Pocus
Games:
Musical Chairs
Charades
Old Clothes relay race: 2 teams, 2 sets of old clothes, each to
include a hat, a shirt that buttons, leggings (or pants),
and shoes that LACE UP. First person races to their pile
of clothes, puts them on (doing up all buttons and laces),
and races back to their team. They take OFF all the old
clothes (including undoing the laces on the shoes). Second
person in line puts them on (right there), races to the
place where the clothes originally were, takes them off and
leaves them there. And so on, until everyone on one team
has done the change of clothes (that team wins). The
winning team members pick from a grab bag of prizes.
Prop improvisation - we haven't tried this but we've seen it on "Whose
Line is it Anyway" and we think it would work for a party.
Get a bunch of props with promise :-) like a tennis racket,
a shoehorn, a hair dryer, a big bowl... and give one prop
to each of two teams. The teams take turns making up a
goofy new use for the prop (example: the hair dryer could
"be" a microphone). Keep count of the number of uses, and
when you run out of props, the team with the most uses
wins. (Alex predicts this game will be the most fun!)
Higgledy-Piggledy - This is for lights-out, when they're in their
sleeping bags. Whoever is "it" goes out of the room; the
remaining kids swap sleeping bags. "It" comes in, picks a
sleeping bag and says to its occupant, "Higgledy-Piggledy!"
The sleeping bag replies, "Oink oink!" "It" tries to guess
who the occupant is; if they guess correctly, the occupant
becomes "it" (and everyone swaps sleeping bags again); if
the guess is not correct, "it" goes to another bag and
tries again. (If you want to keep the lights on, the bag
occupants could just slide down far enough to cover their
heads.)
Have fun! And make sure the little angels don't have access to any
videos you don't want them to see (at one party Alex went to, the
birthday child had persuaded the mom to rent "Milk Money", and the kids
stayed up watching it *three times*... I'm proud to say that Alex
boycotted this and slept in another room).
Leslie
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941.2 | paint t-shirts | TERRPN::FINAN | The sky was yellow and the sun was blue | Tue Apr 18 1995 15:22 | 14 |
| My daughter had a sleepover for her 8th birthday this year. The girls
really enjoyed making their own sundaes and painting t-shirts. I bought
a bunch of fluorescent colored fabric paints. I provided each child
with paint clothes (or you could ask them to bring their own) and spread
an old vinyl tablecloth out on the kitchen floor for a work area. The girls
each painted their own designs on the t-shirt fronts. On the back each girl
wrote (painted) her name on each shirt so that they all ended up a shirt
with everyone's name on it - sort of a party memento. (We actually did the
t-shirt backs the next morning so that the front could dry overnight).
Remember to put cardboard or a paper bag inside the shirt first so that
the paint from one side doesn't leak seep onto the other.
Robyn
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941.3 | Candy and Candle making | ASDG::HORTERT | | Wed Apr 19 1995 09:53 | 14 |
| For my oldest daughters 8th birthday slumber party we made candy. I
bought the molds (all different shapes - hearts, animals, flowers) from
a craft store and they also had the white and dark chocolate in bags
that you melt and pour in the molds. They had fun decorating it with
food coloring paints. I think they sell them in kits as well. I think
the most fun was eating them.
The following year she went to a party where they made candles. The
mother said she bought the kits also at a craft store. I still have
the turtle candle that she made.
I think I have more fun doing all these things than they do sometimes.
Rose
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941.4 | PILLOW CASE PAINTING.. | POWDML::DWOOD | | Wed Apr 19 1995 13:32 | 10 |
|
-.2
Along the same lines... Instead of painting/decorating T Shirts, we
painted Pillow Cases, and the girls autogtaphed one side, along
with the date. This was a nice remembrance of the sleep over, and
sits in the closet with our linens for use each week. Remember,
though, this activity takes up a lot less time than you may have
planned in your head. After a half hour, the girls were done,
and on to something else...
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941.5 | treasure hunt | ADISSW::HAECK | Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa! | Wed Apr 19 1995 15:06 | 16 |
| Instead of having party favor bags for each of the guests, we had a
treasure hunt. I blew up balloons and put clues inside the balloon.
The guest was handed their first clue, and then sent off to find the
balloon. When the balloon was found, it was broken to get the next
clue. This eventually led to their party favor bag.
I made some mistakes, but all in all they seemed to enjoy it. Some of
the mistakes I made was not placing the balloons in the right order,
having clues that led to someone else's balloon, and having clues that
needed to be explained.
I guess they weren't really clues so much as they were directions.
Things like "go to the TV in the den" would require that I step in and
define which room we called the den.
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941.6 | Haloween Specific Ideas??? | MKOTS3::DOLAN_C | | Mon Sep 11 1995 13:48 | 11 |
| I'm debating on letting my daughter have a haloween party. Some of
these ideas are great (making pizza, shirts, etc..), but does anyone
have any ideas on haloween specific activities?
Has anyone ever made a haunted house? How did you do it?
She's 9 1/2, I'd probably have it from 4:00 - 9:00 on the Saturday
night before haloween (so they could make a haloween decoration) and
probably 4 or 5 friends.
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941.7 | Halloween party | EVER::LALIBERTE | GT&NS Tech Services | Mon Sep 11 1995 15:15 | 35 |
| My son is postively obsessed with Halloween. Last year at age 6 we
let him have a Halloween party on the Saturday before. He had 10
friends (5 boys, 5 girls) from school. My husband created a haunted
forest in the dining room using cardboard tubes for trees with actual
branches hanging out with cobwebs hanging from the branches. And then
we had the little lights hanging from the trees so there was a little
glow. Also, he brought in leaves from the lawn for the floor. We gave
each kid a little plastic glow light that you break in half. We told
them a spooky story and had them walk thru the dining room and turn the
corner where my friend was dressed as a very believable witch in a
rocking chair. They did bobbing for apples and eating donuts from a
string. Whata mess.
All the boys were dressed as power rangers and i found i had to put
them on the back deck and closely supervise them so they wouldn't kill
each other. Once they had those costumes are, these kids were in high
gear. A little too much.
Some real cute things that I made were ghosts out of white
cheesecloth... dip the cheesecloth in liquid starch and drape it over
a ball (a ball on a stick is best) or a baloon...it stiffens to form a
sheet-like ghost that you can hang so we had these hanging in the
'forest'...
Another thing we did ahead of time but you could do it at the party
especially if is is before Halloween...is pumpkin carving. We had
ours all done ahead so we had several unique faces as you came up the walk.
We had taken class on how to make them with the transfer paper and the
little pumpkin saws that you can carve out the eyes, mouth, etc.
easily. If this is an activity you do at the party, I would scrape out
the pumpkins ahead of time because that is the most work for kids.
So...I thought I fulfilled my obligation last year but he's already
asking for another party....
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941.8 | be creative..... | MTWASH::FLECCHIA | | Tue Sep 12 1995 10:38 | 41 |
| We had a halloween party last year for my daughter and her classmates
(age 9). This was a coed party.
First we decorated the driveway with cardboard cutouts of tombstones
with each kids name on it and a saying. ex: Colby Brown, here lies the
smartest boy in our class, may he rest in peace. So when the parents
drove in they got to see them (plus it was fun making) we stapled them
to some wood and stuck them in the ground.
Second my husband dressed up as a surgeon (outfit at buidling 19 for
$1) he would answer the door with ketchup (blood) all over his outfit
and butter knife saying Oh your just in time I just finished the last
kid that showed up. Got some great reactions out of the kids and
parents!
We had spooky music playing in the back ground. As as each kid arrived
the others that were there would hide and scare them coming in.
Everything was in the basement. We decoreated the wall, hung streamers
and balloons and curtained (with sheet) off an area. In this area we
would blindfold one at a time and take them in there and have them put
there hand into some buckets to see if they could figure out what was
in there. ex. baby carrots (fingers/toes) jello/with olives
(brains/eyes) cooked spaghetti floating in water (intestines) you get
the idea. Well being blindfolded and not knowing what to expect had
the kids screaming and yelling gross everytime they had there hand in
the bucket, which got the kids on the otherside of the curtain nervous
and scared to go it!
Lastly, kids this age are slobs! No mater what you have for food it
was everywhere even when we did activities outside.
The end of the party was watching the Adams Family tape and cooking
popcorn.
It was a fun evening! Be creative you'll have a blast.
Oh I was a cowboy and our 1 1/2 was a lion....
Karen
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941.9 | how do i handle this one? | RDVAX::HABER | supercalifragilisticexpialidocious | Tue Sep 12 1995 11:14 | 16 |
| I love these ideas -- my almost 8 yr old has decided she wants an
overnight this year -- but she also wants to have a regular party of 6
or 7 with only 3 of the girls to sleep over...how can I manage that w/o
hurting feelings? I've tried to explain to her that some of her friends
have never done overnights at friends' houses [she's one of the older ones
in her class, and has been doing overnights since she was 3!] She also
doesn't want one her "best" friends to stay overnight -- this girl is a
year older so I can sort of see why, but....
Maybe the solution is to have a few overnight and the rest come for
breakfast the next morning? That might be the solution! Maybe my mind
is starting to come back after vacation after all?!
sandy
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941.10 | | POWDML::VENTURA | Bad spellers of the world, UNTIE!! | Tue Sep 12 1995 11:33 | 17 |
| Two other things that we did for haunted houses to add to .8's idea.
Set up a free standing ladder (one that doesn't have to lean up against
something) and hang something either gooey feeling or some type of
spider webbing from it. Have the children walk under the ladder and be
sure that their face hits whatever is hanging there. We got some
plastic bats and dipped them in baby oil.
Also, wherever you have the buckets for them to put their hands into,
have one person under the table and every once in a while, they should
grab the child's ankle. Then explain that it's just your pet
(whatever).
Holly (who had LOADS of fun in Rainbow girls putting together a haunted
house).
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941.11 | Bloody hands in the punch! | CSC32::L_WHITMORE | | Sat Sep 16 1995 23:53 | 26 |
| Note 299 (entitled Halloween) has some replies concerning halloween
parties - maybe the last few replies should be relocated there??
Anyway, I just saw this in the latest Better Homes And Gardens
magazine - looks kind of fun!
What you'll need: clear plastic or latex gloves, twist ties, scissors,
sugar-free flavored fruit drink mix,
gummy worms (Optional)
If the gloves have a powdery residue inside, turn them inside out and
soak in warm water or wipe with soapy water and rinse. Allow gloves to
dry. Or, turn gloves inside out, leaving the powdery side to the
outside. Mix your favorite fruit drink (sugar-free liquid freezes
better than liquids with sugar) and pour into the gloves. Add enough
drink to fill the gloves loosely but not so full that the fingers will
not move. Fasten the gloves tightly with a twist tie. Place paper
towels on a cookie sheet and lay the hands on the paper towels.
Freeze. When hands are frozen solid, carefully cut off gloves with
scissors. Float hands in a bowl of punch for scary fun. If you wish,
you may add gummy worms to the juice before freezing.
In the picture, they show red and green hands floating in a bowl of
clear punch. The red ones look like bloody hands!
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