Showing posts with label The Very Hungry Caterpillar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Very Hungry Caterpillar. Show all posts

3.8.19

Eric Carle inspired Butterfly! (and cocoon)



This project was inspired by an Eric Carle Instagram craft challenge - they're so great for coming up with new ideas! It's a very simple project - younger makers will need some help with the folding and cutting. I've laid out a simplified pattern for Eric Carle's butterfly, but feel free to design your own butterfly!


You will need:
A4 sheet of plain paper
Paints
Two pipe cleaners

Small plastic bottle and cut up pieces of newspaper for the Cocoon

1. First, fold your piece of paper in half lengthways, then fold each half into the middle, open up and you should have four evenly spaced creases.


2. For our Eric Carle inspired butterfly, we used the creases as a guide to paint a purple, then green, then greeny-blue, followed by a blue stripe. We used poster paints and watered them down so they were more of a wash, and went on quickly with a big brush. (I often use a pastry brush, great for painting bigger areas quickly)

We painted the back the same way too, but this really is optional.




3. Once dry, fold the piece of paper in half the other way, so you can clearly see the middle of your butterfly.

We then used thick yellow poster paint to splodge on two round shapes at either end of the purple stripe, and yellow lines between the purple and green, the blue and greeny-blue stripe, and a thick one across the middle of the greeny-blue stripe. Then three dots on either edge of the green stripe.


4. We added a few dots at the top of the blue stripe, then mixed a little red into the yellow for some orange dots on either edge of the greeny-blue stripe.




5. Next, red circles in the corners and small dots in the middle of the orange ones. A red line and a dot on half of the bottom yellow line, and another dot above it on the greeny-blue stripe. Add a dab of orange to the top red circles.


6. Then thick purple lines in the middle of the green and the blue stripes, plus purple dots in the bottom circles. Last but not least a short green line in the middle of the purple stripe and some green dots at either end of the top purple line.


7. When dry, start folding or pleating your piece of painted paper longways, as if you're making a fan. If you're crafting with little ones, maybe make the pleats bigger, so they can be more involved with the folding.




8. In order for the pipe cleaner to be wrapped around the centre of your butterfly more easily, you need to cut a triangle from the middle of your fan - making sure you don't cut all the way through! Aim for a small triangle that's at least half the width of your folds. Make sure you cut it on the non-decorated side too.

Cutting through the paper fan can be hard, so best done by an adult.




9. Pipe cleaner time! We made some antennae with a piece of black pipe cleaner and then used a whole yellow one and made a hook shape at one end (the length we wanted our butterfly's body to be).


10. Hook it over the antennae, then hook the whole thing over the centre of your butterfly wings.



11. Start wrapping the rest of the pipe cleaner tightly around the body, and then over and around the wings to secure them. Wrap the remaining part of the pipe cleaner around the head part, so the antennae are secure too.



12. We wrapped a small piece of red pipe cleaner around the top part to keep our butterfly looking as EC as possible, but this is totally up to you. Dot on eyes with a black marker pen.


13. For the cocoon, you need a small plastic bottle that's at least as tall as the length of one of the butterfly wings.


Cut up some newspaper, water down some PVA (craft) glue, soak the paper pieces in the watery glue and cover the bottle in papier mache. Messy but fun! It really doesn't need to be neat.


14. Once dry, paint it brown, orange and yellow stripes. Have the colours on one plate and let them mix together a bit, so you get a mix of colours in the stripes, and they meld into each other.











7.1.16

Things to make with old Christmas cards - The Very Hungry Caterpillar

Seems a shame to chuck out all those bright, cheery, sparkly Christmas and Birthday cards, which is probably why I have an overflowing box full of them!
So, if you still haven't got around to recycling yours, or you've been hoarding them like me (because you just never know...), then what about a Very Hungry Caterpillar?

Very Hungry Caterpillar made from old Christmas cards

You'll need:
A selection of old cards (Christmas and Birthday)
PVA/craft glue (leave some in a cleaned out jar or yogurt pot over night if you can, so it thickens up)
Scissors
Paper and felt tip pens (optional)
Sticky tape

1. First, sort through your cards and make a pile of the ones with blue or green tones - even just part of the picture is fine. The body pieces aren't going to be too big.


2. Find one predominantly red card for the head.  Draw an oval shape on the back of the picture (ours is about 10cm/4" by 7cm/3" wide, but makes yours smaller if you want), and draw a decent sized tab on one side. The body will be attached to this.




Use a picture of the Very Hungry Caterpillar to guide you, there are loads online - we actually had a VHC card in our collection which was handy, though still managed to get our caterpillar facing in the opposite direction...

3. Start drawing and cutting out body segments - make them a bit smaller than the head. They're a sort of jellybean shape with a tab on the side. Once you've drawn and cut one out - use it as a template for the others.


We made 14, plus 2 smaller jellybean shapes without tabs for the end.


4. Lay out your caterpillar on some plain paper. If like us you don't have a big enough piece, a sheet of newspaper will do. Use a ruler to draw a line on the newspaper to keep your caterpillar level.

Following the arched shape of the picture, arrange the body segments with the tabs behind, overlapping as you go. until you're happy with the shape.


5. Then, get a pencil and carefully place the palm of your other hand on the front section of the caterpillar so you don't move the card pieces, and draw around the bottom of the segments. Repeat along the length of the Caterpillar.
This makes it easier to see where each piece goes when you start gluing, but if you'd rather skip this stage and just start sticking, then do!

6. Push the segments out of the way before brushing some glue onto the head tab for the first body segment. When this is glued down, brush glue on this tab, plus some on the underside edge of the next segment, where they'll overlap, and so on.



If the pieces start popping up, don't worry - when you've got to the last segment, place something heavy, like a book on top, to weigh it down while the glue dries.

7. It may have stuck to the newspaper, but that's okay, just pull as much as you can away. It should be nice and sturdy, because of all those tabs - but if you want some extra strength then put sticky tape along the back.

8. We cut the eyes out of cards too as we just happened to have lovely sparkly yellow and green, but an easier option would be to draw the eyes on a piece of plain paper using bright yellow and green felt tips, then cut out and stick in place.


9. The antenna and small round mouth are cut from a card too - use sticky tape to attach the antenna to the back of the head.


10. Cut the stands from one of the thicker cards in your stash - use the plain half, and draw and cut out an arch shape. We made four, but the Caterpillar stays up fine with two.


11. Snip halfway down the stand from the top of the arch. Snip an extra sliver out to widen the slot. Then make the same size slot in a lower body segment - again snip out a bit extra so it's easier to push the stands into place. Sit it up on the stands. Push the stands up or down if you need to, to get the caterpillar to to sit level.



One other thing you could do that I haven't, is draw little legs on the stands with a black felt tip pen.


And there you go, a very hungry caterpillar, and a small dent in the old Christmas card collection...


19.7.12

Day 247 - The Art of avoiding the obvious #TheVeryHungryCaterpillar

I've had the time and space to get on top of things this week before we go away on sunday.
So I knitted a butterfly.
Yes, I know. Not that sensible with five weeks worth of packing to sort out, holiday shopping to do and admin to finish up, but definitely a lot more fun. I am seriously good at putting things off.

I think the idea for this random knit started when we joined the Big Butterfly Count - it's not been going that well due to the lack of butterfly weather. Then I read a lovely post on Jennifer's Little World about celebrating Eric Carle's work with lots of creative ideas and stuff to make based on The Very Hungry Caterpillar. I dug out the book and had a look at his beautiful butterfly.


It really is such a gorgeous butterfly. And that's when I thought I'd have a go at knitting it. Made perfect sense at the time. So the packing went on hold...
I have a rainbow of colours thanks to my wool-buying addiction, so knew I could make the butterfly nice and bright.

 In the picture each wing is made up of four individual strips. I knitted each one so they tapered in the middle....


...and then folded them over and sewed them up. It was more fiddly and time consuming than I thought, but by this stage I was on a mission and curious to see how it would turn out.


I mirrored the four I'd done, roughly based on Eric Carle's butterfly and then sewed each wing together. The body was just a small rectangle, mostly brown with red at the top for the head. I stuffed it with dried lentils, to give it some weight - and added a small bell, from my Lindt bunny bell collection for a bit of interest. Then sewed the sparkly pipe-cleaner antenna into the head and a few crocheted rossettes for the circles on the wings, though it probably would have been just as easy to embroider them on.
I'm sure I'll pay for using up my valuable child-free packing time, but I am very happy with my butterfly!