We’ve been experiencing weeks of intense heat here in Kansas. With three young and active children, the heat has provided a challenge as they can’t go outside and play for long stretches of time.
So, everyday has been exercise in creativity (and sometimes patience!) as I wrack my brain for new and interesting indoor activities to keep them occupied. Earlier this week, I was feeling rather uninspired when I spied my stack of magazines. I pulled out a few issues that were getting ready to head to the recycling bin, got out scissors, glue, and other craft supplies and told them to make a page of all their favorite pictures.
They had a blast and it kept them busy for quite a long time. Best of all, it cost me nothing as I used things we already had on hand.
What fun & frugal activities have you been doing with your youngsters recently? I’d love get some new ideas to add to my list!
christi says
i recently blogged about a easy to do treasure hunt. my boys loved it and it was FREE =)
http://1jot.wordpress.com/2011/07/19/treasure-hunt
Jenny says
I have used the magazine trick for years with my granddaughter. One day I’ll ask her to find flowers and make me a picture,one day it’s dogs,one day it’s babies,one day anything blue, happy people,people who are busy ect….. We did this from age 2 on up and she is so creative today.
Sonya says
If you take the magazine pages and cut them into long skinny triangles you can make them into “jewels”. Take the long skinny triangle, start at the wide end and start rolling so that you leave a small opening. When it is about half way rolled put glue on the “inside” of the triangle. Cntinue to roll until you get it all the way rolled up. and add more glue for enforcement. THe pictures on thepaper won’t matter because you only see a sliver of the paper. As you roll it it mixes all the colors so it looks kind of like a stone bead. Take all of these and thread them onto some stretchy string. Tie to make a necklace or bracelet.
I hope this maks sense.
Sonya says
this also works with pre pasted wallpaper scraps because it already has the glue you just get it wet and roll it up, but you might want to make sure you put something small in the middle as you roll it or the paste may make it stick and the hole will disapear.
Heather T. says
We have another heat wave coming this week here in WI and I was dreading it, now we will have something to do. I hope I get a bunch of magazines in the mail this week, I take mine weekly to work so they are not all over. I have been wanting to make magnets so we will have to get some large clear stones at the dollar store. Thanks for the idea!
Susan says
When my kids were young I used to make homemade play dough for them. It was a cooked play dough with a really nice consistency – I used food coloring to tint it and kept it in ZipLoc bags. It lasted a long time as long as it was properly sealed. We’d use vinyl placemats or wax paper to protect the table and the sky was the limit as far as modeling tools – plastic flatware, toy rolling pins, cookie cutters, etc. I never purchased Play-Doh – I don’t like the aroma and it’s so crumbly!
Another thing I did with my daughter when she was about 3 or 4 years old – I traced Disney characters from her big Disney story books and she colored them. She liked those much better than a coloring book, probably because she chose the characters for me to trace.
Boy, it sounds like I had a lot of time on my hands back then. I miss those days!
Cara Ivey says
My oldest 2 are doing this same activity right now!! We are in South East Texas and outside activities just isn’t in the cards too aften!! The house is so nice and quiet while I bath the twins… Can’t wait to see what kind of pictures each kid has gone after!
Earlier today we made forts! I puuled out the sheets and lightweight blankets and we started building. They loved having forts in their own rooms and it kept them quit busy while I made dinner and did some freezer cooking. I threw a sheet over the table for a “baby friendly” fort and the boys just LOVED it!! Kids love being in little private spaces!
Melissa M. says
Things we have been doing this summer to help with hot days. We splash around in our kiddie pool, we also have a slip and slide. We make popcicles with juice and fresh fruit and we have been freezing our pudding-yummy cool treats.
We have gone to the library and spent lots of time there and we like to walk the mall-not spend money, but keep cool there. Sometimes in the evening we will go sit on the back porch and look at the stars and I let the kids run around and play as it is cool out.
Heather @ Creative Family Moments says
Or… if you could challenge the kids to take ALL the children’s books and organize them from tallest to shortest in a game of Dominoes! My kids thought this was hilarious! http://www.creativefamilymoments.com/spring-clean/
Heather @ Creative Family Moments says
We do lots of science experiments… especially ones from Steve Spangler… here’s an absolute fave: http://www.creativefamilymoments.com/tie-dyed-milk/
Christina says
My idea has nothing to do with young children but just FYI when recycling magazines if you have a Half Price Books store in your area they will buy magazines from you to resell. They only pay for the ones that are the current month or the previous month but they take the other ones and donate them to hospitals and doctor’s offices for their waiting rooms. This is a great way I think to recycle the magazines and make a little extra cash in the pricess. They don’t pay much per magazine but every little penny adds up.
Stephanie says
This post is perfectly timed! I had just thrown some old magazines into the recycle bin last night, but I pulled them back out. I think this will help my almost 4 yr old with her cutting/fine motor skills and her creativity too!
Angie D says
Ah-ha! I have been gathering supplies for the same thing, we just haven’t done it yet! So, what magazines do you use? I feel I’m limited to Family Fun and old Highlights. Many others have too mature articles (for my reading kids) or advertisements.
Crystal says
I gave them National Geographic, Family Fun, and Better Homes and Gardens.
Cara Ivey says
I have tons of Whole Living, Martha Stewart, and Food Network Magazine that my kids use!! Full of food, plants, flowers, and animals!! PERFECT!!!
Mary Ellen Ash says
Great idea! We live in Kansas City and it’s pretty miserable having to stay inside all the time because of the heat. I better go out and gather those magazines I just put in the recycling bin. My kids would love this! They also each got a “joy box” at church, where they can put little things in that give them joy. What a good idea to go through magazines and find pictures for their joy boxes.
Deja says
Here in West Texas we’ve had temps over 100 for close to 2 months straight. We home school in the summer… The kids play outside in the mornings off and on, then we eat lunch, swim to cool off and come inside for schoolwork, turn-the-living-room-into-a-fort, or get out the building toys, swim some more to burn off energy before dinner and sometimes swim again before bed.
Camille Craw says
We had an unbirthday party and invited kids of all our kids ages. We asked them to bring a wrapped white elephant gift and we had a toy exchange. We played the exchange your gift with someone who has blonde hair. If you have blue eyes, find someone with brown etc. I made a cake and everyone got to blow out the candles. We played a couple of games (a dress up relay) and what’s in the bag. It was fun! 🙂
Leann Lenze says
My kids did this and gave it as gifts to their Dad and grandparents. They have to cut out pictures that reminded them of that person. It was alot of fun and only cost was the poster board.
Adrienne @ Whole New Mom says
Hi Crystal!
We bought a small and shallow under the bed box for our son and filled it with sand. Now he has a great indoor sandbox. I bought the kind w/ wheels so that it can be more easily moved indoors and out. We move it out onto the deck when the weather isn’t so hot.
This works great for indoor winter play as well!
The only problem is that the sand can be a bit scratchy on our wood floors, so I am thinking about getting a large bag of inexpensive white rice to use in the future.
Thumper says
We save our magazine’s and every year we make what we call ‘Treasure Maps’. We cut out things that we like or want and make a collage out of them by glueing them to a poster board. Making it look pretty to us. We hang it on the back of our bedroom door and all year we periodically look at it and when we actually get something we put a gold sticker on the picture. I used to do this with my daughter as she was growing up.
One year I put a picture of a police officer (thinking I was going to become one) and realized at the end of the year, while I wasn’t a police officer I was now dating one. I had to show him and he just laughed!
We now joke, be careful what you put on there!!! You never know how your going to get it!
Trixie says
What a fun idea! When I was little we used to enjoy cutting out pictures of people and clothing from Sears and JC Penny catalogues and making our own paper dolls. Lots of fun on a rainy day.
Tanya says
I use a lot of magazines with my preschool class. I would have them find pictures of healthy foods, pictures of a certain color, things that started with the same letter of their name. You could use these ideas at home too. Looking forward to following your blog.
Tanya says
I have used lots of magazines with my preschool class. I would ask them to find healthy foods or pictures that were of a certain color. We also found pictures that started with the same letter of their first name. You could also do this at home. Just found your website. Looking forward to following it.
Jessica says
I have my 4yo daughter make cards for upcoming birthdays, or I will have her help me with the baking (it takes 3 times as long when the kids “help”). She also has two felt storyboards and a lot of characters. My husband will play kids of carcasonne or something like that with her. My 1yo son is a whirling dervish of energy. One minute he is playing with the percussion toys and the next he is crawling up the stairs chasing the cats!
carrie says
We made bubble art the other day. Put a little food coloring in some bubble solution, and blow bubbles onto big pieces of white paper. Messier than I expected, but the kids loved it, and the paper looked so swirly and pretty that I’m going to use it as wrapping paper! I think I saw the idea in Family Fun earlier this summer.
Chris says
Less messy idea: put bubble solution in a low shallow bowl/plate and have the kids blow through a straw to make the bubbles and when there is a lot of bubbles (almost overflowing) place a sheet of paper over the bowl/plate so it is just touching the bubbles and not the solutions you will get a nice work of art.
Stacy says
My mom used to make photo books for the kids when they were younger. She would cut out pictures and put them in a cheap photo album and the kids would sit for hours looking at them. This was one way of using up her magazines after she was done looking at them.
Kimi says
I was just looking at some blogs for projects using scrapbook paper and came across this cute hand made “apple picking” game. Here’s the link to ther blog.
http://www.mirandamade.com/2010/09/u-pick-apples.html
Raquel says
My daughter and I have always loved to cut out pictures and make a look n find page. We would make a list of things to find on the back page. We would look for things like ~ 3 pairs of shoes, a necklace, 5 stars, etc. My daughter is a little older now and so she’d make one where I would have to look for pictures of Taylor Swift, Selena Gomez, and Victorious. She loves making them and definitely keeps her busy for awhile.
Judy says
We made a puppet theater out of a cereal box recently and had a great time with it!
http://www.whatilivefor.net/2011/06/cereal-box-puppet-theater.html
Julie says
Puppets are a GREAT activity for kids; it builds so many skills! I highly recommend The Puppet Cookbook by HOBT which has many ideas for recycling household items into activities. At $30 it’s a bit of an investment (unless you can get your library to buy it!)
http://hobt.org/index.php?productID=1532&contentID=1363&product_category=177
Natalie says
We deal with extreme temps every summer here in AZ, so we do indoor activities all summer long! Thanks for the idea! 🙂
Holly says
We have played indoor baseball. We use a piece of paper wadded up into a ball. Then we use some sort of bat (plastic bat, foam sword, etc.). Mark bases with stuffed animals. Lots of fun!
Mercedes Hayes says
That sounds like a great Idea. I should give that a try with my little one.
Brianne says
You can also make beads out of magazine pages. You take the pages and cut strips in a pennant shape and glue the wide end to a straw then roll it up and cover the whole thing with clear nail polish. Then cut out the paper bead and make necklaces and bracelets out of them. Its on family fun .com
Camille says
Our summer is like winter back East — it’s hot and we rarely go outside to play unless it involves water! Last week I pulled out a bag of poms poms for something and the kids BEGGED to play with them. At first they just played but then we sorted them by color, size, etc. They had a blast!
kelli@morebangforyourbucks says
Doing this next week! It is hooooot in Houston!
Sara@Save Money, Live Joyfully says
I should say I write each clue on a post-it note, and stick it to the object.
Sara@Save Money, Live Joyfully says
I do Scavenger Hunts with my little one. I do 5 or 6 clues, each clue leading them to the next clue. (Like, I’ll hide a clue on her baseball glove, and say “find something that you use to catch balls with”). At the very end I hide a baggie with a snack in it. She loves searching for “treasure”, and she learns how to follow directions as well as think abstractly.
Mercedes Hayes says
We do this to. We also play simple find it where I just take two items and hide them while my son closes his eyes then he goes and looks for it. So simple, but it keeps him entertained.
Mercedes Hayes says
I make paper plate spinners with my kiddos. Cost me nothing. I just use what I have on hand. Great Idea with the mags. Thanks
Marie says
what are paper plate spinners? sounds interesting and I’m up for ideas.
Mercedes Hayes says
Here is a link to them on my site http://www.camoandbows.com/2011/07/jack-and-beanstalk-craft.html.
Pretty cheap and easy and my son gets a kick out of em.
Jen bell says
Also a fun thing to have them do is make musical instruments out of boxes, paper towel rolls etc. This keeps them occupied for hours. When finished they can put on a concert.
angela cutler says
you could try making paper bead necklaces with the magazines also…. you most likely have all the supplies and it can make nice gifts for anyone extra for the holidays.
Rae says
I’ve done letter collages with my son before using old magazines. I’d pick one letter for the day and he’d spend a long time looking for pictures of things that started with the letter and also words (not in the regular print but words from bold titles and stuff like that) that started with the letter. When we did “L”, he’d cut out a ladder, lemon, etc for the photos and the word “Love” and “Learn”. He also found the largest “L” (or whatever other letter) that he could and that would be the center of the collage.
sarah says
I totally dig this! Thanks for the idea!
Ginger says
1 idea I got was to look at large pics and cut out hearts, then I taped a ribbon across all and hung them across my door=cute.
I also have been cutting out men and women, full body, similar size. Then my son has to sort men and women! I want to do something with food. Either starting letter, veggie, meat, starch not sure yet.
Jan says
what a good idea! I used to love making collages when I was little 🙂
sarah says
thanks this is a great idea and we will be doing that this week for sure!! thank you
Carolyn says
I love this idea. Keep them coming!
Robin says
I put my coupon insert leftovers in a box for my daughter to do with as she pleases. She loves to be able to have her own coupons to cut (the restaurant and expired ones) or she can glue them to paper.
Denise says
We’ve done that for art class – make a collage. If they make a really nice one you can use contact paper and make placemats for the table too:) It does keep them occupied!
Nicole says
This is exactly what I do with my 4 year old. Fantastic wintertime activity here in Denver!
Sheri O. says
Love this! Why didn’t this occur to me??? We will be doing this asap – it’s super HOT here in Virginia, too!
Katie says
I’ve done this w/ my son too! He loved it so much the 1st time, he asks to do it all the time now! My husband works as a Operations Manager w/ a garbage company, so I have him go into the recycling center there and he brings home a bunch of different magazines! (oh and my coupons 🙂 )
We do “themed” ones sometimes- like all animals, or “summer”.. or Red things… It’s fun!
Jessica says
I love using magazines to create a variety of things – handmade cards, a vision board (in the process of this now), exchanging magazines with others, etc.
Marie says
can you explain your vision board idea. Is this for you or for the kids. I’m just looking for more ideas and this one caught my attention. Thanks.
Karen says
I am also curious as to what a vision board is. Would you mind sharing? Thank you!
Jessica says
Hi Marie and Karen!
I do not have any kids – I’m doing the vision board for myself, but I think this could certainly work for kids aged 6ish and up. I have goals written down that I’d like to achieve: mission trips, help kids (donating my time or things they need), help animals (donating my time or food/litter/etc.), reading, crafting (things I want to learn: sewing, etc.), and characteristics I want to improve in myself: gratitude, patience, etc.
From that list, I’ve been going through my magazines and looking for words and pictures that best capture the goals I have written down. Then, I’m going to arrange all of the things I cut out onto a piece of poster board to hang up in my office at home. I’m hoping that being able to easily see my visions for the future, I’ll be reminded to do them!
I hope that helps 🙂