BAZIC Natural Craft Sticks, Wood, 160 Per Pack
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BAZIC Natural Craft Sticks 160 Per Pack Read more...
Popsicle Sticks Craft
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BAZIC Natural Craft Sticks 160 Per Pack Read more...
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Natural Wood Economy Grade Craft Sticks, 4-1/2" x 3/8", 1000/Box Read more...
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Woodsies 1000-Count Natural Craft Sticks are great for use in classroom projects, party crafts, and camp crafts. Craft Sticks measure 4-1/2 by 3/8 inches and are natural raw wood. Ideal for Crafters, Teachers, and Students. Made of Birch wood, non food safe. Read more...
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Use for building, mixing, spreading paste and creating craft projects. Read more...
Best Popsicle Stick Furniture: A Local Artist's 20000 (!) Stick Strong Tables ...
These are not dollhouse-sized sofas or hand-held summer camp crafts, but mahogany-stained, 20000 stick glass-topped dining tables and 2-foot-tall Art Deco table lamps with shirred wood lampshades. A lamp was in fact Hrobowski's first Popsicle project |
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Rochester Public Library Make It and Take It Craft Saturday, October 15 This month we will be making Popsicle Stick Mummies! Kids two and up can drop in anytime between 9:30am and 11:30am. Advance sign up is not necessary. Younger children should be accompanied by an adult. Older children may attend independently. |
Holiday DIY: How to make a faux chalkboard placeholder
1. Cut a piece of 10.5 cm x 10.5 cm square from the heavy cardboard and black art paper. Glue edges of black art paper onto the heavy cardboard using craft glue. 2. Glue popsicle sticks to the four corners of the black card square using a glue gun. 3. |
Build a WiFi Yagi out of popsicles and paperclips
Instructable user Biotele posted a guide to build just such a unit out of craft 'popsicle' sticks and paperclips, using just glue, scissors, pliers and a soldering iron for tools. "The performance was pretty spectacular for this easy to build antenna. |
Scattered across the floor of the Mineola Library community room were a collection of children’s books selected by a handful of teenagers sitting nearby.
In the back of the room was a table of art supplies for making crafts.
Not too much later a throng of children all around the age of three or entering second grade raced away from their parents and into the room, sitting next to their larger counterparts.
The scene is a regular one for the handful of teens who sign up to be Book Buddies each Tuesday afternoon, reading aloud to the younger set for periods of 30 minutes at a time.
Easy! The girls easily found uses for them in their play kitchen/shop. You could turn yours into vases and pencil holders if you made them narrow and tall. Or make different sizes and layer them within each other. Or (as the girls begged me, but we were too lazy) punch holes in the base and twist wires to make handles. Or weave ribbons vertically through the gaps. Please contact me if you want to use the images or text on this site. You are welcome to link to this blog and to any post on this blog and use ONE or TWO photos...