Archive for the ‘Sunflowers’ Category

A new house

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

We had a wet summer this year, but since September we’ve had almost no rain and when M has come home after school we’ve been able to play outside, much to everyone’s delight. With our sunflowers well and truly past it the time came to uproot the giant stalks, but instead of immediately chopping them up for the compost bin we used the giant stems to make a tipi, our home for the afternoon.

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We leant the sunflower stems against each other and then tied them together with string. We covered the basic frame with various large pieces of material from my stash including a couple of saris (I’m a huge fan of saris for building dens – they are easy for the kids to use as they’re light, drape well and are easy to clip on to things, plus being slightly see-through they let in light, and of course they are often beautiful! Apologies to those of you who think this sounds like I’m repeating myself ;-) ). We used butterfly clips to fix the material to the frame – butterfly clips are relatively easy for M to use by herself and and J for some reason finds them intrinsically desirable. I like them because they are *strong* – much better than normal washing pegs/clips – I definitely recommend having a bunch of them stashed for making dens.

sunflower_tent_inside

I put a tarp down on the grass inside the tipi and then we made our afternoon abode a whole lot comfier with various quilts, blankets and beanbags. Despite the autumnal nip in the air, you can see why the girls insisted on having their supper in the tent!

sunflower_tent_supper

Unfortunately our beautiful home-from-home was a fleeting beauty as we are already getting heavy dews overnight with the cold air and so everything had to be dismantled before bedtime, but it was definitely worth the effort!

sunflower_tent_at_end_of_day

Whilst a supply of outsized sunflower stems may not be locally available to you, you could do this with bamboo stems (the tall ones you can get from garden centres), or anything else you can find about 2m tall (?pieces of downpipe, real tent poles, narrow planks of wood…). A few bed sheets would suffice to cover the frame and if you don’t want to use your regular sheets, you could get some second-hand ones very cheaply from charity shops (then keep them safe as part of your den building stash!).

Of course some reading also got done in our cozy tipi, including a new book for us – A House Is a House for Me by Mary Ann Hoberman, illustrated by Betty Fraser. This book was first published 31 years ago and yet I only came across this book thanks to a comment left here on the blog (Thanks again Chrissy!) – and boy am I grateful for that comment because this book is absolutely wonderful, one that I think every family and school should have, and one which I’ve now recommended to our public library too as they didn’t have a copy. I don’t know how it is that I had never come across this book before – I can only suppose that it is because it is an American book, and because we’ve got a fairly vibrant kids’ lit scene here in the UK, books from elsewhere often don’t get the publicity they warrant.

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But back to this gorgeous book which is wonderful to read, great to listen to, and utterly delightful to look at. (Yes, I know I’m gushing, but it really is that good!). Mary Ann Hoberman has written a bouncing poem with strong, effective rhymes about all the different types of homes and houses one can find. She starts with the names for different animal homes, for example in the opening lines:

A hill is a house for an ant, an ant.
A hive is a house for a bee.
A hole is a house for a mole or a mouse
And a house is a house for me!

As the book progresses Hoberman widens her interpretation of “home” to include all sorts of containers and their contents, for example:

Barrels are houses for pickles
And bottles are houses for jam.
A pot is a spot for potatoes.
A sandwich is home for some ham.

This imaginative redefining of “home” brings a great deal of (slightly zany) humour to the poem, which eventually ends a reminder that “Each creature that’s known has a house of its own / and the earth is a house for us all.

This poem is a great vocabulary builder, with its inclusion of a wide variety of animal homes (eg. coop, sty, fold, hutch), but over and above this educational aspect, Hoberman’s text is simply great fun. Her creative take on “home” is really stimulating – it keys into a childlike/fairytale belief that apparently inanimate objects can have lives of their own, and before long M and I were laughing as we thought of other “homes” (”My mouth’s a home for some chocolate! or “My bed’s a home for my ted” “Your armpit’s a home for a tickle!”). The rhymes always work well and make the book a pleasure to read aloud, as well as appealing to young ears (I think the sing-song rhythm is why J, at just 1, enjoyed listening to this book with us).

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So the text is definitely a winner… but then there are the illustrations… and they are so very lovely, detailed and beautifully coloured, creating a world that I simply want to step into and be part of. Each time the line “A house is a house for me” is repeated, Betty Fraser has drawn a different childhood den – the stuff of dreams – from tree houses and seaweed shelters at the beach, to under-the-table retreats, or a blanket thrown over the washing line. M has spent quite some time pouring over the images, enjoying finding tiny details (like the inclusion of a small owl and pussycat in a pea-green boat sailing on the ocean which is home to a whale) in the illustrations which fill each page to bursting. Betty Fraser’s style reminded me of some of the Little Golden Books – her use of colour in particular gives her images a vintage feel.

One final point I think is worth making is that with A House Is a House for Me you get quite a lot of book for your money – over 40 pages – which seems to be a lot for a £5 picture book these days.

a_house_is_a_house_for_me_frontcoverA House Is a House for Me: 3star

Whilst outside we didn’t listen to any music, but we have recently had on some goodies: Elvis Presley’s version of There’s no place like home, Home on the Range sung by Roy Rogers and Build My House by Woody Guthrie.

For some more den inspiration take a look at this great round up of outdoor dens from The Crafty Crow – check out the link to Ikat Bag in particular as she has a really inspiration list of links for table tents – I have drooled so much over these I think I shall now have to make one for a christmas or birthday present for me the girls…

What good memories have you got of making dens as a kid yourself, or with your own kids?

Sunflowers

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Despite the rather rainy summer we’ve had in this neck of the woods our sunflowers have done amazingly well.

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This is only our 3rd summer of having a garden and it's the first time we've managed to grow sunflowers really successfully - in previous years they've provided feasts for the slugs and never really got going.

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This year, however, we were helped by a pretty cold winter (by UK standards) which killed off a lot of those horrible slimy things, and then by some serious nurturing of our sunflower seedlings, including giving each of them their own copper necklace (actually short lengths of copper with the widest gauge I could afford from a plumbers’ merchant) to try and keep the slugs off them as they grew.

sunflower-collars

Sunflowers are great to grow with the kids because the seeds are so easy to handle. And they’re fantastic to have in the garden – kids love outsized plants – and 4.5 metre tall sunflowers definitely fall into this category. Once the flowers are past their best we keep the heads for the birds and squirrels, and seeing them feast off the seeds is always a lot of fun.

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A fair few heads also become garden toys for the girls – they love pulling out all the seeds (learning about the Fibonacci sequence in the process?) and making soup with them.

learning-about-fibonacci

The only problem with having such wonderfully tall sunflowers is that several of them have succumbed to the wind. The silver lining, however, is that we’ve been able to bring the flowers inside and have had a vase almost always full with a flower or two. This has allowed the girls to get up close and personal with the flowers, to explore their petals and stamens and, most interestingly of all for them, to sprinkle the pollen everywhere.

close-inspection

Looking at the sunflower from so close up inspired us to try drawing it. To encourage M to keep looking for new aspects of the flower we tried to draw it with as many different art materials as possible. My idea behind this was to keep M’s interest in drawing the sunflower for as long as possible by looking for new details and for her to experience how using different art media can impact what and how you draw.

Under normal I-can-only-handle-so-much-mess circumstances, the girls will typically have just the paints or just the felt tips, so when I got out (over 2 sessions) the yellows/browns and black for thick felt tips, thin felt tips, wax crayons, thin oil pastels, thick oil pastels, pencils, regular paint and printing ink M was pretty excited! I think she thought her mum was going a little bit crazy.

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paints-and-watercolour

still-life

Nine sunflowers later we stuck our favourite examples in each media on construction paper and set up a little gallery of our own.

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My favourite images were M’s watercolour sunflower and the one she did using this printing technique we learned from The Artful Parent (we used these water based printing inks and they worked, and cleaned up, a dream).

watercolour-sunflower

printed-sunflower

Now with so many sunflowers in our house, our garden and our heads of course we turned to find a good sunflower book. There is a great sunflower in Eddie’s Garden by Sarah Garland, perhaps our favourite children’s book about gardening, and we also like Sam plants a sunflower (and its companion book Ben plants a butterfly garden) by Kate Petty, but this year we looked for a new book with sunflowers in it and decided upon Katie and the Sunflowers by James Mayhew.

“Grandma was helping Katie plant some seeds in the garden when it started to rain.
“Never mind,” said Grandma. “The rain will make everything grow.”
“But what shall we do now?” said Katie.
“Let’s go to the gallery,” said Grandma.
“You always have fun there.”

Once at the gallery Katie goes off to explore on her own whilst her Grandma sits down for a rest, and soon she has found a sunny picture she particularly likes, Sunflowers by Vincent van Gogh. She imagines gathering the seeds from the sunflower heads in the painting and planting them in her own garden and then discovers that she can put her hand right into the picture and feel the flowers themselves. But then disaster strikes, and Katie accidentally knocks over the vase of flowers, which fall out of the picture onto the gallery floor.

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Katie looks around for someone to help her tidy up the spillage but can’t see anyone. She can however hear some laughing and it turns out to be coming from another painting, Breton Girls Dancing by Paul Gaugin. Katie climbs inside the painting to find out why the girls are giggling and thus begins an adventure for Katie, accompanied by one of the Breton girls as they jump in and out of other pictures in the gallery chasing a dog who has run off with the spilt sunflowers. After quite a chase, some quick thinking on Katie’s behalf and the discovery of chest full of treasure beneath the sands on a Tahitian beach (in another Gauguin painting) the two girls finally manage to restore the vase full of sunflowers to its rightful place, just before Katie’s grandma wakes up from her rest.

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I’m usually a little wary of “edutainment” books as I find often the drive to “teach” the reader something results in a loss of beauty and imagination in text and illustration, but this was definitely not the case with Katie and the Sunflowers. The story is wonderful – full of imagination, told with great pace and excitement, and full of interesting characters. Along the way we do get to see some beautiful art and find out a little bit about the painters and subjects but this information comes out naturally and does not interrupt the flow of the narrative. The colourful illustrations woven throughout the text don’t disappoint given that this is a book about art – there is a mixture of reproductions of the original paintings and Mayhew’s illustrations in the style of the given artist, as well as his own style, which (funnily enough) reminds me a little of that of (the abovementioned) Sarah Garland, in his use of colour and the warmth and homeliness of the images.

Whilst I was really pleased to have read this book, the same was definitely true of M – she *loved* the idea of jumping into pictures and paintings – indeed she took me round our house looking at the pictures we have on our walls telling me what adventures she had had when she had jumped inside our pictures. She also thought the character of Katie was great fun – an independent spirit with a sense of adventure, interested in everything around her.

This book is a great way to introduce the idea of going to an art gallery to a young one – in fact I’m really looking forward to our next gallery visit now we’ve read this book, but please don’t think it is only for reading if you’re interested in great painters or visiting art galleries – it’s a fantastic book for sparking the imagination in all who read it.

Although this is a book from a bigger series where Katie learns about other artists and paintings, Katie and the Sunflowers reads wonderfully well on its own. There is certainly no need to have read any of the other Katie books to enjoy this one, though we will now be reserving the others in the series from our library, given how much M has enjoyed reading this one.

katie-and-the-sunflowers-frontcoverKatie and the Sunflowers:2star (or 3star if you are going to an art gallery)

Whilst we’ve been drawing / painting / printing sunflowers we’ve been listening to Sunflower by Beth Mclaughlin. I’m also hoping that we might get around to setting up our own (toy) seed company using the gazillions of sunflower seeds we now have – there are some fun pointers for this at Daniellesplace (you’ll need to scroll down just over half the page to find the seed company project). We might also use the seeds to do a mosaic, this this one from KinderArt, swapping pumpkin seeds for sunflower seeds. There are also loads of different ways you can make your own sunflowers if you haven’t been lucky enough to grow your own:

  • That artist woman’s sunflower
  • No time for flashcard’s giant sunflowerNo time for flashcards also does lots of book reviews and book related activities – definitely a good blog to check out!
  • Live n’Learn’s bendy sunflowers
  • Imagination Station’s sweet sunflowers
  • Fingerprint sunflowers from Preschool Daze
  • One final sunflower from 4 Crazy Kings