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Conference moira::parenting

Title:Parenting
Notice:Previous PARENTING version at MOIRA::PARENTING_V3
Moderator:GEMEVN::FAIMANY
Created:Thu Apr 09 1992
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1292
Total number of notes:34837

1101.0. "Camp Arts-n-Craft Director looking for suggestions." by NETCAD::CREEGAN () Thu Feb 29 1996 09:10

    My cousin will be an Arts-n-Craft Director at a Summer Camp
    in a town run day camp.  The hiring people were very specific
    in that they want well-planned projects and she can spend
    up to $15.00 per child per week.  The drawback is that they've
    made it very clear they expect results of some high quality
    /caliber projects.  This doesn't mean it has to be complicated, 
    tho'.

    Do you have any ideas?  It's from 6 years old up, so she
    has to plan a whole spectrum of ideas.  She showed me a few
    of her ideas made up:

      - a framed plaster of paris and tile project with
        clock movement installed.

      - a frame spray painted gold with all sorts of gadgets
        glued to the frame (you name it) and a mirror installed
        onto that.

      - some excellent sculpy clay jewelry projects, but this
        have to be for the older kids (She was hired because
        of her abilities in this area).

    I think she's on a roll.  With hope all the notefile
    readers can give  other ideas of things you would like to
    see your child come home from summer day camp with.

    Also, does anybody know the words to the camp song,
    "Hello Mother, Hello Father, Greetings from Camp Granada (sp?)"?
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
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1101.1a couple more lyrics FWIWMPGS::WOOLNERYour dinner is in the supermarketThu Feb 29 1996 09:4316
    I can correct slightly the first line of that song, and I remembered a
    verse:
    
    Hello Mudda, Hello Fadda
    Here I am at Camp Granada
    All my friends <>
    <> have some fun if it stops raining
    
    (chorus) Take me home!  Oh Mudda, Fadda
    	     Take me home!  I hate Granada
    	     Don't leave me out in the forest where
    	     I might get eaten by a bear
    
    
    (Now you have it running through my head!  Thanks a LOT!! :-)
    Leslie
1101.2NOTIME::SACKSGerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085Thu Feb 29 1996 10:231
See BACK40::SOAPBOX note 105.358.
1101.3CSC32::P_SOGet those shoes off your head!Thu Feb 29 1996 10:2519
    
    Last year at Cub Scout Day Camp, my son came home with a
    beautiful dream catcher.  The boys ranged in age from 6 to
    11 and they all did a good job.
    
    I have since made several dream catchers and they average
    about $2 a piece when I buy materials in bulk.  
    
    Equipment
    Brass ring
    Leather strands (buy on a roll)
    sinew (comes in a roll)
    feathers (a friend gave me a whole wing from a turkey)
    beads
    
    The first one I made from a kit to learn the basics and went from
    there.
    
    Pam
1101.4USCTR1::HSCOTTLynn Hanley-ScottThu Feb 29 1996 11:303
    A good craft store and/or book store will have lots of books, geared to
    various ages, for your friend to use as resources.
    
1101.5crafts conferenceRDVAX::HABERsupercalifragilisticexpialidociousThu Feb 29 1996 13:263
    check out the crafts conference
    
    KISMIF::CRAFTS
1101.6how about ...MARLIN::COLEFri Mar 01 1996 12:3420
    When I was in college years ago, I was the nature camps counselor at a
    day camp.  Aside from the usual nature walks, we did a few things that
    the kids really seemed to enjoy.
    
    1.  Get a huge box of sand, and let the kids "sculp" the
    design for a candle, e.g., 4 legs, a round hole, etc.  Kids then have
    to tie a wick around a small branch, and dangle it into the hole.
    
    Counselor then melts the wax (of course, we did this over a campfire),
    and pours it into the kids holes.  It hardens, and the kids pull them
    out of the holes and have candles with sand around the outside. Kids
    loved it, parents hated us because they'd get sand in their car on the
    ride home.
    
    2.  Paper machee around balloons?  Cheap, messy, kids love it, can
    paint it when they're finished.
    
    3.  what would camp be without macramee?  Even better, gymp!
    
    
1101.7POWDML::AJOHNSTONbeannachdFri Mar 01 1996 12:5217
    a way around the sand-in-the-car problem is to line the forms with
    aluminum foil.
    
    If a "sand-on" candle is really desired [I like them better] have a
    separate vat of wax there to dip the finished products. This seals the
    sand in [mostly]
    
    
    Another idea is Sun Prints. There is a solution available that turns
    blue when exposed to sunlight. It works well on fabric as well as
    paper. Buy a large white handkerchiefs and dip them in the solution.
    Have the kids arrange stuff on them [twigs, feathers, keys, ferns,
    leaves, whaever] and expose to sunlight to devlop. And you have custom
    "bandanas." It's easy enough for the youngest children and the designs
    that kids make can be very complex as well.
    
      Annie
1101.8tie-dyingRDVAX::HABERsupercalifragilisticexpialidociousFri Mar 01 1996 13:5710
    My kids do lots of tie-dying at camp as well. Just have the kids bring
    in a washed T-shirt/sweat shirt,etc., then let them do the tieing of the 
    fabric [twist-ties, rubber bands, string]. I think the counselors do the 
    actual dipping [not sure if the 11+ kids do their own or not].  There
    are lots of books in libraries that tell how to do this.
    
    One of these daze I'll even think far enuf ahead to get t-shirts in my
    size -- the kids have so many tie-died shirts already.
    
    sandy
1101.9DECWIN::MCCARTNEYFri Mar 01 1996 15:215
Clay and simple potterty are another thing that kids love.  For the youngest,
they can make bowls, etc.  For the older ones, let them use their imagination.
After it dries you can even get various color glazes to put on them.

Irene