I live in Vancouver, which gets relatively little snow in the winter compared to the rest of Canada (sometimes none!). So, when the great outdoors get a little snowy, the kids get a little crazy with excitement. Our back yard is currently coated in a blanket of snow, but snow is always short-lived here, so it likely won’t last much longer. Here’s a list of five (actually six!) craft supply ideas for snow-themed crafts, so we can make our snow days last a little longer when the rain decides to wash the real snow away.
1. Cotton Balls
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The classic craft supplies for winter themed crafts. Cotton balls already look like a snowball, so all the kids need is a little glue and a piece of paper so that they can create snowmen, snow forts, and other snowy day pictures. Ripping the cotton balls up into smaller pieces is a fun tactile activity that creates whisps of snow or snowbanks. |
2. Paper Doilies
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different sizes can be used for small, medium, and large ‘snowballs’ on a snowman picture, or sponge on some glue and sprinkle glitter to make a sparkly snowflake |
3. Shredded Paper or paper confetti
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Put your paper recycling to work by running old bills and statements through the shredder to create long strings of snow. Tear, rip or crumple paper shred into snowy scenes or 3-D forts. Use a sprinkling of white paper confetti to make a blizzard. A blizzard looks especially intriguing if it’s created on black paper with white pencil crayon or crayon drawings, and lots of paper confetti. |
4. White Yarn or String
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Use white string or yarn in any number of ways: glue it on to paper to make a pretty design, press it onto a glued pattern on waxed paper, leaving it to dry into a peel-off snowflake, pull it through white paint to create an abstract snowy painting, or integrate science by making a borax icicle |
5. Shaving Cream
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Play in the snow indoors! Spray a small quantity of shaving cream onto a washable placemat or table surface. Kids can use their index fingers to practice tracing oversized numbers or letters in their ‘snow’. Gently wipe the letter away and start all over again |
6. Food Items from your Kitchen
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The kitchen is overflowing with various items that can be used to create a lovely snowy scene. Use flour or icing sugar for a dusting of snow, sugar cubes to create 3-dimensional snow projects such as igloos or snow forts, shredded coconut for larger snowflakes, and whipped cream for a big dump of snow! Most of these ingredients could be integrated into a baking project too – make Gingerbread with a dusting of icing sugar, and serve with whipped cream and a sprinkling of coconut. Wouldn’t that be great after a big play outside in the snow? |