I saw
this really cute idea on Pinterest and had to do it. Here's our spin on Turkey Snack Cups:
I started by stacking five pieces of multicolored construction paper so that I could cut five feathers at the same time. Once stacked, I cut out a feather shape, fanned out the feathers, and got this:
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A piece of tape on the front and a piece on the back did the trick. |
Then it was time for the face. I used a circle punch to get a brown face and then put on eyes using a black marker. Googly eyes would have been cute (like in the original picture), but we didn't have any. I then cut out little yellow triangles for beaks and pieces of red yarn for the red, stringy, turkey thingy. What is that called? I don't know, but I am pretty sure it's not called a turkey goiter, which is the only name I can come up with. Here's how I put the face together:
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After some deliberation, I decided to use one bigger piece of tape, putting the beak and turkey goiter on it first. The whole big piece of tape then went onto the face, with the excess tape being wrapped to the back of the face. |
Putting it all together:
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One piece of tape secured the feathers to the back of the cup and then another piece for the face on the front. I did not use any glue, only tape, for this project. |
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Done. We filled our cups with raisins, but anything brownish would do. We have, however, "stuffed" our turkey cups with goldfish, animal crackers, cucumbers, water, and orange juice and they still look pretty cute. I did realize, after the fact, that these could be made with brown cups, which I do think would work nicely.
In an ideal setting, I would have drawn feathers on the construction paper and my children would have cut them out, using those fine motor skills. We would have discussed shapes, while we happily worked away together...circles for the face, triangles for the beaks. We could have made patterns with the feathers or read books about turkeys. We did not do any of this. Since I was making these for Eli's class, I was in mass-production-turkey-cup-mode. There was no time for learning, teamwork, or collaboration, and, 18 turkey cups later, I knew it was the right way to go. Sometimes, kids crafts are a little easier to do when there are no kids involved. The kids did get to use them, however, so I don't think they felt cheated in any way.
Cheers
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Fun! xoxo
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