sábado, 31 de março de 2018
sexta-feira, 30 de março de 2018
quinta-feira, 29 de março de 2018
Chicken from kitchen gloves




Well, I think you have unveiled the mystery of how to make these hens:)

You will need a kitchen glove. Blow it halfway. There must be enough glove remaining, that will be used for a nest. Tie the glove well with a rubber band.

Cut soft paper into small pieces and put them into that part of the glove that was inverted inside out. When you are ready, on top of it put green paper grass (see how it is made).

And finally – the funniest part – the decoration of the hen. You can use markers, feathers and all kinds of coloured paper.

quarta-feira, 28 de março de 2018
terça-feira, 27 de março de 2018
Easter Masks (hats) for kids
See how to make your DIY hat-masks for little kids.
Kids, when they are small, they cannot stand masks on their faces for a long time. This can be embarrassing when they act in a play, for example, right?
The base is a paper hat, which is decorated depending on the character.
For the paper hat you will need cardboard paper (54cmX31cm). If the head of the kid is bigger than 51cm, then increase the length (the new figure must be divisible by 2).


Start glueing, but be careful for the sequence.

We put paper-clips to fasten the paper until the glue dried up.

We made the rabbit’s ears from wadding and put drinking straws inside to prevent them from bending.

chicken

ladybird

swallow

violet, made by crepe paper

bear

rabbits
segunda-feira, 26 de março de 2018
Еaster Bunnies and Chicken for the Very Young
The shape is very easy to make – take an A5 sheet of paper (half an A4 one). The kids can manage easily, because all they have to do is cut a few straight lines.

Еasy color-in bunny – after you fold down the cut-out part, draw the eyes and the mouth on the reverse side.
Color-in chicken- fold in the part that you cut on figure 4 and make a beak.
domingo, 25 de março de 2018
sábado, 24 de março de 2018
sexta-feira, 23 de março de 2018
Idiom: Hold your horses
Definition: Slow down!
Example: “Hold your horses!” Jen shouted at her husband as he ran towards the pub. He’d heard there was free beer to be had.
Origin:
Not surprisingly, this command dates back to the American West and the time of cowboys, six-guns, and wagon trains. It simply refers to pulling back on your horses’ reins in order to bring them to a halt. First found in print in 1843, the original phrase was more informal, being ‘hold your hosses’. It wasn’t until the 1930s that the modern version first appears.
Some sources cite its heritage all the way back to Homer’s Iliad, the story of the siege of Troy. In it, Menelaus tells Antilochus to hold his horses during a chariot race. This is more likely to be co-incidental in nature, and the choice of words by the translator, rather than the birth of an idiom.
quinta-feira, 22 de março de 2018
quarta-feira, 21 de março de 2018
Subscrever:
Mensagens (Atom)
















