CHECK IT OUT
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When boredom threatens to derail summer sanity, it may be time to get
back on track with cutting, pasting, painting and other craft activities.
If you’re clueless about where to start, look for Georgene Lockwood’s
“The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Crafts with Kids” in the Newport Beach
Public Library’s e-book collection, in databases at o7
https://www.newportlibrary.orgf7 . Along with projects made with such
traditional materials as construction paper and pipe cleaners, there are
directions for working in wood, metal, leather, clay and glass in this
crafts primer for all ages. Loads of tips make it easy to get comfortable
working with different media, while suggested age levels contribute to
user friendliness.
Instructions for 100 other creations, including bread dough monsters,
sea creature mobiles and eggshell mosaics, are in “The Muppets Big Book
of Crafts,” from the inspired craftspeople at The Muppet Workshop. While
it’s geared for kids 4 through 8, this treasury of crafts includes ideas
for printed pillowcases, pine cone baskets and tin-can lanterns that
teens and adults may enjoy creating.
For crafters interested in specific art forms, slim volumes in the new
“Step-by-Step” series are devoted to printing, papermaking, mosaics, clay
modeling and creative lettering. Background information, color photos and
easy-to-follow directions make these good books for kids in grade school.
Crafts can be launch pads for learning, and they open windows to other
cultures in Meryl Doney’s “World Crafts Jewelry.” Using such everyday
objects as seashells, curtain rings and clay, young designers will be
able to fashion Indian trading beads, African friendship bracelets and
Chinese hair ornaments with this guide for making exotic accessories.
An ancient Japanese art form is the focus of “The Usborne Book of
Origami,” in which Eileen O’Brien and Kate Needham provide directions for
folding colored paper into hats, gliders, frogs, pinwheels, beads and
balloons. For more advanced paper artisans, there’s Norman Schmidt’s
“Fabulous Paper Gliders,” a guide for assembling and launching 16 types
of aircraft using glue and index cards.
Paper and pencil are just about all burgeoning artists will need to
use Laura Murawski’s “Kid’s Guide to Drawing” series. Separate titles
concentrate on airplanes, cars, cats, dinosaurs, dogs and horses. Each
includes easy directions for using shapes, lines and shading to create
realistic drawings, along with background about the subject and Web sites
for further research.
After all this activity, it may be time to get out of the house for
more creative fun. And when you’re stumped for where to go, head for your
nearest library, where books, books on cassette, videos, CDs, Web sites
and live programs provide a virtually limitless supply of suggestions for
things to do.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with
Gina Moffitt. All titles may be reserved from home or office computers by
accessing the catalog at o7 https://www.newportbeachlibrary.orgf7 .
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