Create Crafts with Recycled Materials
Movie Theatre
For movie night, try something new! Have your kids construct a cardboard box imitation theatre and embellish it with drawings, buntings, and banners made from recycled paper. then play a movie within the “theatre” on a tablet or laptop. If the screening is outside, make sure to give your children mosquito protection or arrange for them to watch from within a screened tent. All kids love building a movie theatre in the style of a fort, so get inventive and consider building one out on a balcony, inside a cabinet or beneath a table. You can set up a white sheet and project the movie onto it if you’re fortunate enough to have a projector. Have the youngsters create popcorn containers,
Kite Making
For movie night, try something new! Have your kids construct a cardboard box imitation theatre and embellish it with drawings, buntings, and banners made from recycled paper. then play a movie within the “theatre” on a tablet or laptop. If the screening is outside, make sure to give your children mosquito protection or arrange for them to watch from within a screened tent. All kids love building a movie theatre in the style of a fort, so get inventive and consider building one out on a balcony, inside a cabinet or beneath a table. You can set up a white sheet and project the movie onto it if you’re fortunate enough to have a projector. Have the youngsters create popcorn containers,
Styrofoam Boats
Allow your children to engage in activities that will give their water play a new dimension if they are happily splashing around in monsoon puddles or waddling in backyard pools to escape the heat. Teach them how to recycle household items, such as how to construct boats out of Styrofoam. On cut-out pieces of polystyrene, kids can draw or paint, and then adorn their boats with vibrant sails. They can also serve as useful bathtime toys and keep kids occupied for a very long time.
Gardening
Create a scooper or spade out of a plastic jug, then start having fun! Such instruments can be customised by children by applying stickers, paint, or their own artwork. When they are done customising their garden tools, you can do yard work together. If you don’t have a garden, you can always grow seeds into miniature plants in old yoghurt containers, or you may construct your own DIY seed wall charts using recycled zip-lock bags and lollipop sticks. Kids enjoy taking care of plants and watching them grow; it’s a terrific science lesson that is sure to keep them engaged and intrigued. Another smart move is to remove the stem from your vegetables’ leaves or a clove of garlic.
Back to School Picture Frames
What’s not to love about a picture frame that reads “back to school”? Many parents, I’m sure, have a tonne of keepsakes from meticulously assembled bits and pieces hidden away in their cabinets. This is an excellent way to reuse used lolly sticks, buttons, and ribbon while letting the kids express their creativity with paint pots and glue sticks.
Remember to Recycle Every Day Items
It’s a great idea to use plastic bottles as the primary component of outdoor crafts. By recycling these items, you foster creativity in addition to recycling them. As well as papers, glue, and accessories (buttons, rhinestones, glitter, etc.), make sure you have some markers, paints, or water colours. From empty soda bottles, kids can create coin banks, decorative bowling pins, and rocket toys. You can utilise a variety of commonplace items to educate children the importance of reusing goods that might otherwise be easily thrown away. Give the kids a pile of used cardboard toilet paper inners, some yoghurt pots, some scraps of fabric, and a set of paints, and you’ll be shocked at what they come up with!