Showing posts with label valentines day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label valentines day. Show all posts

Friday, January 14, 2022

Valentine's Day Party, 2021



Hey, thank you for stopping in. Here is a party post at last that is actually relevant to the time of the year. I realized I never posted our little Valentine's Day party/décor from last year, so here are the pictures of our Valentine's party of 2021. The tablecloth and bouquet wrapping were just brown Dollar Tree wrapping paper I drew on. The hearts were made from paper plates. If I have a guess, all of the florals came from Ingles. I was kind of going for a playful, whimsical, floral look to make it different from past parties.














I hope you enjoyed! 

-Lauryn

Share this PostPin ThisEmail This

Saturday, February 15, 2020

Artistic Developmentally-Apropriate Valentines for Kids to Make (Tutorial)

Happy belated Valentine's Day! I am sorry this is late and not very useful for 2020. I nearly wrote this whole post yesterday, but I just couldn't upload the photos and finish it in time. I hope everyone had a great Valentine's. Here are some Valentine cards made by my friends that, according to my training thus far in art education, are appropriate for the preschool and kindergarten to early elementary school artistic stages of development.

I'll begin with preschool. My friend Morgan, who is three, loves trains, so that was his theme. If you want a young child (or anyone, actually) to  make valentines, they need intinsic motivation, so go with the theme the child chooses so long as it is appropriate. They may need some prompting. At the preschool ages, children need to experiment freely with a wide variety of media. They should not copy tutorials or simply color in coloring pictures (that is a whole discussion for another time), but should get a feel for various media and techniques while expressing themselves with as few limits as possible. For our valentines, Morgan cut out and tore paper, glued collages, used recycled cardboard (that was safe to use), colored and drew trains with pencils, painted trains with watercolor, and with supervision used perment marker on top of the recycled collages. We even tried to make cardboard hearts with string wrapped around it, but he got bored with that process quickly. In short, we used lots of media and made different kinds of valentines to not only hold his attention and make them fun, but also so he could continue using his imagination, fine motor skills, and grow more proficient at all different media (although he is advanced in artistic development and quite skilled at the media already). Just give your child lots of supplies, and supervise/prompt them as they create. I cut out the cardboard hearts to make the process more efficient (since their attention spans may not be very long at that age). After, write "Happy Valentine's Day", preferrably add a pun to go with the theme, and have the child sign in cursive, which is easier than regular writing. On our heart collages, I wrote "I love you from the bottom of my heart" with the "I love you" literally on the bottom part. I thought it was hilarious, but then again, I am easily amused by puns, especially when a fitting one just pops into mind like that one. I also added train whistles from Dollar Tree to go with them.










My friend Lillie made hers all on her own, but I thought they were great and wanted to share them. If you have a child at the elementary stage or at the point where they love to write, they could cut out hearts (she told me she used one of the cardboard hearts as a template to trace), write a message inside, and then add something such as pencils. If they don't like to write, then they could try one of the activities above or use a new medium. We washi-taped in glowsticks (which was her suggestion). Make sure that the child signs their name, preferrably in cursive since that is much easier to learn, more fun, and looks very pretty.





I hope these quick tips and ideas are helpful! I have some art history inspired valentines to share next! Thanks for visiting!

-Lauryn
Share this PostPin ThisEmail This

Monday, July 1, 2019

Bee-Themed Valentine's Day Party






Hey, everyone! I'm sorry it's been so long! I had an extremely busy spring and early summer semester. There are lots of gifts, tutorials and events I want to catch up on, so to begin with, here's a Valentine's party from way back in February. I wanted a unique party that wasn't red or pink, so I went with a punny "Hap-Bee Valentine's Day" theme. I made up the pun, but I got inspiration from several other bee parties on Pinterest. I wrote "Thanks for bee-ing a great friend!" by the favors. This party was actually a double-pun because the original date was cancelled and it took place after Valentine's Day, so it was "bee-lated". I don't have many photos because I threw this together the day of and I was too busy to take many photos. For party favors, I made hot-glue bees painted with gold nail polish on paper clips. Everyone exchanged valentines, and I will eventually share tutorials for my newest book-themed valentines. This took place at a local park. 








Thanks for visiting! I hope to share more soon!

-Lauryn
Share this PostPin ThisEmail This

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Valentine's Day Party at the Park, 2017

As I mentioned in my last post, I'm really behind on blogging. Remember the Valentine's Day Party at the Park from last year? Well, it's become a tradition! Here's a party held on the weekend of Valentine's Day at the same location. I handmade the heart backdrop, and plan on making a tutorial for it. I kind of threw everything together in less than three days, so it was very simple and last-minute. The color scheme was browns, white, green, pale pink, and gold. The food was provided by all of the guests. The diamonds were created using straws. The children and teens all exchanged Valentine's cards. It was fun!




























I have more posts planned for next week!
-Lauryn

Share this PostPin ThisEmail This