This title helps your child turn trash into treasure with craft and activity expert Jane Bull - now in paperback! "Make It!" from activity expert Jane Bull, gets your child re-using rubbish to create amazing things. Think about all the stuff we throw away every day, like plastic drink bottles and metal cans, magazines and even clothes; they can all be re-used. There's no need for fancy materials. Over 100 crafty step-by-step projects will have your child turning humble household rubbish into amazing treasures you'll want to keep. Watch them create jewellery from paper, flower pots from plastic bottles and shoulder bags from old jeans. It is packed with facts on earth's natural resources and tips on recycling too.
A neat book about craftcycling, upcycling - call it what you want, and I don't mind it's a trendy topic. :) The book is written for kids as the main target audience, but there are a lot of ideas for adults too. Browse, get some ideas, and the next time you were rushing to buy something new, instead make something of the junk materials you already had home. Like an empty milk box or carton, old cans, the mountains of junk mail...
Excellent book, and one of the first I found with "up cycling" projects. Awesome for all kinds of crafters, including kids, and a great resource for teachers, library staff who do programs for any age, camp counselors, and so on.
The book is 64 pages, so not a lot of meat to start with. Much of it was lecturing about recycling. I counted about 12 projects that had instructions. There are a lot of other ideas shown, like pasting torn paper onto paper, or threading stuff on string. There were about 3 projects I thought were worthwhile, from paper mache bowls and beads to sewing animals from discarded gloves. Lots of reviews I read say this is the best book they've seen. Maybe I've just been around too long and have read too many of these.
Some fun art projects to do using the kind of recyclable items most households are apt to have from time to time. Some of them are less useful, but others are kindof exciting. My 6 year old picked several projects he wanted to do, and we collected the recyclable items at home until we could do the art projects. His almost-3-year-old sister participated. I would recommend this for parent-particpation and their children aged 3-9. My son particularly liked the collage portraits, the paper mâché bowls, the rag rug, and the odd-mitt stuffies.
Probably the best kid recycling craft book I've seen so far. Some really cute ideas, extremely easy directions and all of the "ingredients" are everyday throwaways.
A lot of recycling craft books rely on "finds", but these would be found in every home's trash can or recycling bin.
I liked how this book talked about the source of different materials, when they were discovered and how/why to recycle them. The book gives several suggestions for crafts reusing different materials.
This is another in the current trend of green crafts and recylcling. This one, however, stands out. There are some standard paper projects, but also new things like reusing small plastic toys, bottle lids, socks, etc. Lost of full color pictures make this easy for children to use.
This book is about using readily available recycled materials to make simple crafts. We haven't tried any of the projects yet. My 8 year old wants to make the papier-mache bowls using junk mail. The bubble-wrap pillow also looks doable.
This is a pretty good little book that teaches kids about recycling and has some interesting, easy, and fun crafts to do with recyclable materials. It's a DK book, so it's very busy. This would be a great rainy day project book.