Thursday, June 7, 2012

Popsicle puzzle fun

A few months ago, I pinned some toddler activities to a board on Pinterest, and it hit me that for as many things as I have pinned, I haven't really done much with them. I decided to change that by making something that would be ideal for a trip that we were taking this past week, and it felt so good to be creative. Elle kept saying "Mommy's caft" (craft), and this was about as easy as could be.

I made four puzzles - two for my friend Meghan's son, Ryan (below), and two for Elle. My thought process was that these would be distracting on plane rides, yet not be too heavy or take up much space, and also not be so time-intensive or fancy that a lost piece would be the absolute worst thing ever.

Tim reported that Elle loved the one I made of the three of us (above) and enjoyed it on their flight together to Ohio. She kept looking at the pieces saying "Mommy," "Daddy" and "Elle Belle,"  and more significantly, it kept her occupied.

I used a tutorial that I found here, and I've noted a few things I learned below.

I used wide popsicle sticks that I bought at Michael's. I followed the advice of a few other tutorials and discarded any sticks with warps or curves that wouldn't allow the pieces to lie flush against each other. I taped the popsicle sticks together tightly. This was fine, but next time I won't put them together so tightly because it was hard to use the Xacto knife to cut them apart later on. Just a little bit of breathing room would have helped immensely.



I thought two layers of Mod Podge would be better than one - I tried two on the photo puzzle above, and I ended up with bubbles. One layer on the rest? Worked fantastically.

After the Mod Podge dried, I flipped them over and cut through the slats. I used an old cookie sheet covered with some folded over parchment paper. As I mentioned above, the sticks were extremely tight and it was hard to slice right down the space between the sticks and through the photo. I found it extremely easy to cut little slivers of popsicle stick off. Cuts that were exactly clean or on areas that hadn't glued down well ended in small parts of the photo tearing off of the stick it was supposed to be on. But hey, it was my first attempt and the puzzles were for toddlers - I figured the thought counted more than perfect images.


Aside from the Mod Podge drying time, these puzzles took about 10 minutes to do. I had the Mod Podge from other crafts, the 5x7 photos cost just a little more than $1, and the package of popsicle sticks will make at least six puzzles and cost less than $3. Hello, fun, personalized, easy, inexpensive craft. We'll be good friends.

I had Tim test one of Ryan's puzzles. He passed.

2 comments:

  1. This was such a cute gift and was a life-saver on the plane ride home. You're the best!

    ReplyDelete
  2. This is an awesome idea! Good on you for actually doing something you pinned!!!

    ReplyDelete

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