
12 Great Homemade
Presents to
Make With Your Kids
By Dr. Laura Markham
Its the thought that counts,
and the love that goes into it. No need to spend a fortune on
gifts, your kids will love making them for grandparents, cousins
and teachers, and the recipients will treasure them. Remember
that your goal is to have fun with your child and give a token
of affection, not to exhaust yourself. Hopefully this list will
get your creativity fired up; more explicit directions are easily
available online.
1. Anything from your kitchen:
Cookies, jams, fudge, quick breads, your famous spaghetti or
barbecue sauce, your special trail mix, or a kit with the makings
for something yummy, tied with a ribbon: your perfect pancakes
or scrumptious seven bean soup.
2. Booklet of favorite memories:
Have your child draw illustrations and rite or type up his or
her favorite memories of/with the recipient and put it into a
binder to make a book.
3: Personalized cookbook: Your
recipes, your childs comments and drawings, in a binder.
4. Personalized Mousepad: Let
your child draw with markers on a white mousepad. Or use flexible
adhesive with any fabric. Or choose a photo and use iron-on transfer
paper. Instructions at: http://desktoppub.about.com/od/transfers/l/aa_mousepad.htm.
Or just do it at a copy shop or cafepress.com.
5. Handmade bath salts: Mix Epsom
salts with essential oils, fragrance, and food coloring in a
decorative jar.
6. Candles: Add crayon chips
to plain paraffin wax and dip wicks in to make hand-dipped. Or
just decorate storebought candles.
7. Canvas bags with iron-on designs
8. Homemade calendars with photos
of the kids
7. Painted picture frames
8. Tie-dyed teeshirts, sheets,
etc.
9. Christmas ornaments with kids
photos
10. Art: For grandparents, a
framed picture drawn by a grandchild is the perfect present.
11. For friends and cousins:
homemade clay, fingerpaints, bubbles, puppets, a kit of dress-up
items, a kit of cool art supplies.
12. Certificates for your services:
A massage, babysitting, dog walking, painting a room, flying
a kite together.
About the author: Dr. Laura Markham is a clinical
psychologist and the founding editor of the parenting web site
www.YourParentingSolutions.com,
featuring a popular advice column and parent-tested solutions
you can use every day to connect with your kids and create a
richer family life. Her work appears regularly on a dozen parenting
sites and in print. She lives in New York with her husband and
two children.
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