The first is a slot box. Back in February I made Go-chan a box for his Valentines and he still plays with it, dumping out his letters and then sliding them back in through the little slot. I decided to make him a little one that we could pack in our carry on.
Small cardboard box w/ lid (I got mine from Joanns)
Fabric
Mod-Podge
Paintbrush
X-acto knife
Ruler
Pencil
Cardboard (not pictured. whoops.)
1) Cut a slot in the box top
2) Cut a piece of fabric, making sure it's large enough to fold down and cover the sides.
3) Cut out the slot in the fabric -- I positioned my box top on the wrong side of my fabric, traced the slot opening lightly with a pen and then cut it out -- and start mod-podging the fabric onto the box top.
4) To do the corners I cut a small, right triangular notch out of the fabric at the corner, making sure to line up the straight edge with the end of the box top. I then glued down the overlapping flap and then glued down the remaining side (see the 4th and 5th pictures above).
5) Once all your fabric is mod-podged on, let it dry and then apply another layer over the fabric to really seal it and make it durable (this IS for a two year old).
Now, you could obviously stop right there and have your child use coins or old credit cards or postcard scraps or whatever to put in. But if you're crazy like me, you want to make something fun to slip in. So I made some little fabric squares.
7) Cut cardboard into squares, about a good half inch shorter than the slot in your box.
8) Cut your fabric into squares, small enough to fit into the box slot, two squares of each fabric. FYI, I used fleece, felt, and some random picnic print remnant.
9) Sew the two squares together with the smaller cardboard square sandwiched in the middle.
10) Give it to your two year old and watch his eyes light up!
The second thing I made is a little lace-up card. At our home preschool class we had an activity that involved lace-up pictures and Go-chan loved it -- he spent a good amount of time threading his lace through the holes and anything that makes him sit still is a plus.
Materials:
Three or four sheets of cardstock
Hole punch
Mod-podge
Shoelace
1) Cut your cardstock into whatever shape you want your lace-up card to be. I was in a rush so I just did a rectangle. You'll want several pieces of cardstock cut into the same shape (I used eight).
2) Use your hole punch to punch holes into one piece of cardstock. Use this piece as your "template" fur punching holes in all the other pieces. Obviously you need all the holes to line up when you stack the cardstock.
3) Mod-podge the layers together and then give the whole wad of paper another coating. Let it dry! (FYI, I first tried using some foam board I had on hand but my hole punch wouldn't work with it. I didn't have any good sturdy cardboard so I had to improvise. Obviously if you have sturdy cardboard and/or a Cropadile you can use that or even thicker board and skip all the mod-podging.)
4) Once it's dry, your paper stack should be pretty stiff. Mine got a little curved because of the mod-podge so I let it sit under a heavy book overnight and it straightened out.
5) Thread an old shoelace in and have at it!
Here's our whole airplane arsenal, including our