Showing posts with label baby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baby. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 September 2013

Shredded Paper

 

Just what it sounds like really. Inspired by the shredded paper sensory activity onboard the Play Talk Read bus, I made our own one at home. I filled up a box with shredded paper and added a pack of artificial pink petals and some 'treasures' to find in amongst it all (just some small toys). As it turns out, the petals and treasures were completely unnecessary as they were completely ignored. Honestly, all the girls wanted was a big box of shredded paper. 



Over the last three days they have come back to this box time and time again. We did start off with a smaller plastic box but have gravitated towards the larger cardboard one because they like to get in with the paper.

It has become a car, a bath and a bed. They don't seem to be getting bored with it! Sometimes I find piles in places, like in the back of Poppet's car, or neatly placed on top of the sofa, and wonder what they were thinking of. 



It invariably ends up everywhere but Poppet is quite helpful in tidying it up (Little, not quite so), and it is not so hard to gather together in handfuls and pop back into its box as it is in long strands and not little pieces. So, in conclusion, it makes your house looks very messy but is quickly rectified.  

I do have to spend quite a bit of time pulling shreds out from Little's mouth; her tendency to eat anything and everything is showing no sign of waning yet. 


Poppet: 2yrs 8mos
Little: 11mos



Tuesday, 11 June 2013

Baby Play Space


Little started crawling a little while ago and pretty much straight after she also figured out standing and is now pulling herself up at every opportunity......we have laminate wood flooring downstairs so needed to make the family room a bit more baby friendly to allow for this newly mobile baby!

Inspired by some amazing posts on baby play spaces here and here, I set about creating a space that would allow Little to have some fun and explore her environment. I gathered all of our rugs together  along with an alphabet foam playmat and covered the floor, this gave a variety of textures and colours for her to crawl/fall on.


I ordered some acrylic mirrors (from an Ebay shop called Adult Passions, ahem) that I just blu-tacked up at floor level.  These have been the favourite addition to the room. If you get one thing for your baby I would really recommend some mirrors. Little loves staring at herself, reaching out to grab her reflection, lunging in for kisses and head-butting herself. She makes a beeline for them as soon as she is in the room.

Mirror fun!

There is a little reading nook in the corner to encourage Little to become familiar with books and hopefully she will love them as much as her big sister when she is older. I put out a padded blanket, some pillows, a soft toy and a collection of board, textured and cloth baby books.


Little having a read
I also put out the treasure basket we made earlier, and about 3-4 other 'play centres' to encourage Little to crawl and engage with her toys. I usually put out a select few different toys every day which keeps them novel and ensures she doesn't get overwhelmed. It's nice to watch her crawl over to investigate each toy and figure out what she can do with it!

Treasure Basket
Play centres dotted around the room
Every day I get out the wooden toddle truck and pile the blocks up into a few small towers as Little loves to knock them over and pull up on the truck. Sometimes Poppet will build up the towers for Little which is lovely to watch as its the first time the two of them have started to play together. Although Poppet gets quite annoyed when her little sister attempts to knock them down too early!


The room makeover has been a real improvement and has made it much easier for me to get things done as Little can happily occupy herself here for a stretch of time. I've been surprised by how much Poppet likes playing here too!

Poppet: 2yrs 5mos
Little: 8 mos





Friday, 31 May 2013

Playing with bubbles!

   

The girls were given a tube of bubbles by their Grandad at the weekend so yesterday we had lots of bubble related fun! Poppet was so excited and amazed by them, and Little was very cute staring intently at the bubbles floating around her as her sister flew around the room catching them all.


Poppet loved trying to pop (or eat) them all and was so fast that Little rarely got anywhere near one. Only twice did one get near enough to her that she tried to touch it. And the only way I could make that happen was by first quickly blowing lots of bubbles in the opposite side of the room to keep Poppet occupied and out of the way!


Of course monkey was brought in on the action, apparently he liked popping them too. So lovely how she wants to involve monkey in everything nice that she does.

Little finally managing to pop a bubble!
Every now and then I managed to make a really big bubble which Poppet loved - 'that's a big one mummy!'. She wanted to catch the bubbles but they kept popping so we added some glycerine to the mixture as apparently that makes them longer lasting. Then we made a 'bubble catcher' from a pipe cleaner and a lolly stick. She really loved catching the bubbles and holding them for a while.

    
    

Poppet of course insisted that Little also got a bubble catcher but this really only got chewed.


We mixed the leftover bubble solution with some red paint in a bowl and I showed Poppet how to blow it to make bubbles (quite anxiously telling her 'it's not milkshake it's paint OK? Blow don't suck!). But she managed fine.


Once the bubbles were overflowing we pressed a sheet of paper against them to make bubble prints.....

 

We are going to use the resulting painting as wrapping paper for a certain aunties upcoming Birthday!


She is so proud of it she was still pointing out her 'bubble painting' to me this morning at breakfast. Later in the day Poppet asked me for some water in her little pot, then she did this with it, so the activity obviously stuck with her! 


Poppet: 2 yrs 4 mos
Little: 8 mos





Tuesday, 28 May 2013

A Treasure Basket


I created a treasure basket for Poppet when she was a baby, much to my mum's amusement who assumed I think that I could not afford proper toys and rushed off to the Early Learning Centre to buy some for us. Now Little is sitting well (and crawling and pulling herself up to standing, yikes!), I set about making one up for her too. Treasure baskets provide rich mental stimulation and are a really enjoyable experience for babies. I find that a treasure basket occupies the girls for far longer than any bought toy, and they are far and ahead Little's favourite past-time.


Treasure baskets are based upon the concept of heuristic play. This was a term coined by child psychologist Elinor Goldschmied and describes the exploration of the properties of everyday objects through the use of the senses. It is a type of play that comes naturally to babies - their instinct is to explore objects by mouthing them and touching them in order to find out about their physical characteristics.


A treasure basket is simply a ridged low sided basket, easily accessible by a sitting baby, that is filled with a large number of different everyday objects (about 50). The baby is allowed to play freely with the basket without adult intervention. They should be allowed to explore the objects in their own time, and make their own decisions about what to play with. In fact that is the best part - observing what objects capture your baby's attention and which they discard!


The objects can be any small object from everyday life, providing they are not choking hazards. Plastic should be avoided, as all plastic looks, tastes and feels the same so does not offer much in the way of sensory exploration. The baby should never be left alone with the basket and an adult should always supervise the play. Importantly, the basket should not be left out 24/7, or the objects will become boring. To keep it novel, present it to your baby once a day or every couple of days, and regulary update objects.


Our treasure basket contained the following:

Metal
a teaspoon, a whisk, an empty golden syrup tin, a dessert spoon, a metal lid, a little sieve,  an egg cup, a tea strainer ball, a set of bangles

Plastic
a large comb, a small comb, a plastic measuring cup, a frog bath toy, a toothbrush, a plastic cup

Wood
a wooden train track piece, a wooden orange toy that splits into segments, a wooden spoon, a small wooden dish, a wooden train, a wooden spatula, a wooden cube, a little wicker basket, wooden cubes on a ribbon, a large wooden bead, a toy wooden mallet 

Misc.
an empty glass spice jar, a toy mirror, a CD, a silicone pastry brush, a make up brush, a soft toy flower with little mirror, ann egg box, greaseproof paper

Textiles
a crochet coaster, a dishcloth, an organza sash

Natural
a large shella pine cone, a cork coaster

We had too many plastic and metal things but I tried to make sure they were different colours and shapes. At some point I am going to make a trip to Poundland and add a loofah, some brushes and more wooden bits and pieces to balance things out.


At first Poppet was rather too helpful and wanted to 'tidy up' whatever Little took out of the basket. She doesn't like the mess you see. Eventually I convinced her to let Little play freely. One of her favourite objects to fish out and put in her mouth was the sieve - I find this funny because it was Poppet's favourite thing too - what is it about sieves that babies like so much?! Her other favourite thing is the silicone pastry brush, she just loves sucking on that, and makes very loud noises with it.


When she got a hold of the wooden spatula, she started to bang her forehead with it repeatedly - now I didn't know how far I should be abiding by the 'don't interfere' principle of heuristic play - did that include not intervening when baby starts walloping themselves on the head with a wooden instrument? She did not look to be enjoying it but wasn't cottoning on to the fact it was her own actions that were causing it. Anyway, I just observed, and she ceased soon enough, so an important lesson was learnt. Don't bang own head with spatula.


Poppet : 2yrs 4mos
Little: 7mos








Friday, 24 May 2013

Textile Basket

In Little's baby play book that we were given by the Health Visitor, there was a suggested play activity of giving your baby different materials to feel and explore while you are doing your ironing. As a variation on this I gathered a selection of different textured fabrics from around the house, filled up the washing basket with them, and gave it to both girls to play freely with. There was a crochet coaster, a teatowel, a rough dishcloth, a chamois, a mosquito net, an LCD cleaning cloth, a set of rainbow scarves, a silk pillowcase, a muslin cloth and a woollen hat.

The rainbow scarves were a big hit, Poppet took great delight covering her sister in them. Little found this hilarious.


Poppet loved trying out all of the different colours .It was great practice for her learning her colours, she knows 'pink' (oh how my mission to not gender stereotype has failed!) but her other colours can be hit or miss.


Little modelling the mosquito net, which, for some reason, Poppet says is 'mummy's dress'. I don't own any white dresses, but I am guessing she is saying that because of our wedding photos that she has seen! Not very complimentary of my wedding dress though. But it's amazing what they observe.


Poppet also loved throwing the scarves into the air as they floated to the ground very slowly.


A whole morning was spent playing with the basket. Mostly the rainbow scarves although Poppet also spent quite a lot of time using the crochet coaster as a breastpad. Ahem.


Little wearing the woollen hat (placed there by her sister).


Poppet:2yrs 4mos
Little:7mos

Thursday, 16 May 2013

Spaghetti Messy Play

This was our first ever messy play activity in our Tuff Spot. I first read about Tuff spots over on Edspire and was inspired to get one as part of the messy play legacy of Matilda Mae, a beautiful 9 month old little girl who was taken from her family too soon. Hopefully it will encourage us to engage in more messy play and make lovely messy memories.


They are great for messy play activities indoors and outdoors, making cleaning up a lot easier!  I cooked up a batch of cheap spaghetti, dyed it green and put it on the tray along with a selection of things - a yoghurt bucket, tongs, dustpan, knife, doctor's scissors things, a car, horse and mini wok.


Now I should probably mention that Poppet is not the biggest fan of getting messy! Even as a baby she didn't like her feet in grass or sand, and hates having 'dirty' hands. She was quite cautious when faced with the pile of spaghetti but was definitely curious..... Anyway I left the room for a second and when I came back Little had a pile of spaghetti on her head that I am pretty sure she didn't put there by herself so Poppet must have overcome her fear.


Little displays none of her older sister's mess aversion and got stuck in. Everything goes into her mouth at the moment. Poppet was really concerned about this, shouting "don't eat it it's dirty!" at her.


Poppet preferred using the utensils to pick the spaghetti up, and fill the bucket with. She really hated it if any spaghetti got stuck to her feet and wanted it taken off immediately. We talked about what it felt like and decided it was 'cold' and 'very sticky' and 'not nice'. Fair enough!





She finished up by making dishes and plates of spaghetti pizza and spaghetti pie and spaghetti cake.


Poppet: 2yrs 4mos
Little 7 mos

Sunday, 28 April 2013

Toys from the recycle bin

These simple free 'toys' go to show that you don't need to spend money to keep little ones entertained. I collected a variety of washed out containers - a golden syrup tin, miniature jam jar, milk carton, soft cheese carton, yoghurt carton, spice jar etc... and put them in a cake tin along with little kitchen things like an egg cup and ice cream scoop. Little loved exploring them all, and Poppet uses them as props for her play kitchen, especially liking prising the lid off of the golden syrup tin with her toy kitchen utensils, and sprinkling pearl barley everywhere when I fill the spice jar up with it.


Exhausting work!