Arts and Crafts for a two year old?

Hi everyone! I'm looking for any ideas anyone may have for any arts and crafts activities I can do with a very, very active and curious 28 month old! It's hard to hold her attention (as it is with all two yr. olds) but I want to start doing some easy arts and crafts with her to start getting her to follow directions, focus, etc. (at least try!) I'd appreciate any suggestions!
Thanks!

Hi Jana!

I have an alomst three year old myself and I am asking you to please pass on any responses you get on your request because I too would love to do crafts to get her to follow directions. Thanks so much.

Cristina Smith Crissy@gsmith.com

Hi Jana,
My 2 yr. old loves the basics- crayons, coloring books, painting (washable tempera), sidewalk chalk, etc. We've recently started "cutting" (mostly me) pictures from magazines and circulars and gluing them on construction paper to make cards or pictures for family members. She can work the glue stick by herself. She also likes to decorate boxes (any sm. ones that come in the mail) with stickers and markers. Recently, I let her paint her hand and feet and make prints with them on construction paper.......it was a total mess but she had tons of fun and the hand and foot prints are in her scrapbook along with the pics I took of her painting.....might be a tough one to do with a 5 month-old in the mix!!

I've always found that Gymboree or Kidzart programs are really good for toddler arts and crafts.Plus you don't have to worry about clean up.If you are talking about doing projects at home there are crayola products that are only visible on their crayola paper.Keeps those little ones from experimenting on furniture.Plus the standard crayons on white paper really amusing those little ones.Kinda lets them explore and they can really learn their colors that way.

dltk-kids.com is a great site for arts & craft ideas. i've been using it since my daughter was 2 and she's 8 now. a lot of the supplies are things just laying around the house. good luck to you.

Contact paper collages!! You need 2 pieces of clear contact paper, the same size. Lay one down, sticky side up. Let your daughter stick all kinds of stuff to it. Leaves, ribbon, photocopies of family pics, things she's colored, magazine clippings, material scraps, really anything reasonably flat. Lay the second piece of contact paper over it, to seal the stuff in. Bind the edges with masking tape or colored tape. This is my favorite.

Painting with bingo markers are great and it's not messy. Also try some of those paint wiht water water books. Why don't you let him or her use a spray bottle filled with water and let her clean the bathtub. That will keep them busy for hours! good luck. Penni

We do finger painting outside right now, becaus einside it turns into a zoo quick.

Her eis another great idea: Give construction paper and have her shred into large peices, give her asmall plate with glude on it and let her dip her peices in, or work a paint brush and add glue to the contruction paper and allow her to glue to a piece of paper or paper plate....

Hey Jana. My son loves to put things on a string. He thinks he is making necklaces and bracelets for his mom and sister and other family members. You can use cherrios or different shaped noodles, and paint them. Not messy and it develops the hand eye coordination from having to put the items on the string.

Hi Jana

I'm a mom of 2 (18 and 35 months). I was a kindergarten teacher before the munchkins came along so i've done a few munchkin crafts. You talked about wanting your daughter to follow directions. At this point, art is the process, not an end product. You can help your child learn guidelines and procedures for using different materials, but she won't be ready to do a step-by-step activity and have a recognizable finished product. You want to let her explore and try a variety of textures at her own pace. Don't feel like you need to have a ton of different projects set up for her at this point.

Here are some different activities we've done at varying times... easel painting - actually this works well pretty early. It's one of the tidiest painting options I've found. I have no spill cups that have matching colored lids to the paint and paint brushes - it helps them not mix the paints up too much. Fingerpainting is good - my son is sometimes funny about the texture, but good for exploring and experiences still. Playdough is good too. Show your child how to roll it between her hands and make balls or roll on the table and make worms. As others said basic crayons are great - try with plain paper sometimes and pictures they can "color" other times. As your daughter gets a bit older and gains more finger control, you can let her try using safety scissors. Don't expect her to cut anything out at first - my nearly 3 year old loves to "snip" construction paper. She basically just shreds it into tiny pieces. It's great for developing strength in the fingers and coordination too.

Have fun!

Check out the website perpetualpreschool.com It was a lifesaver when I was teaching young children! There are so many activities, projects, and games that you'll never get bored! Enjoy!

I would love to see what you get as responses to this. My son goes to the library for story time and they do crafts with them there. It usually involves a paper plate. They made masks of different animals (glued popsicle sticks) cut the plate in half, put a black nose on the bottom, cut out eyes, color, and its a pig or elephant, depending on the nose.

Two words: Sidewalk chalk! My son loves it! I would take him out to the front steps and let him go to town on the walkway.

I also started getting him interested in cooking when he was around two. I'd sit him on the counter next to me while I'd mix up something (nothing hot) and either let him "help" or give him his own bowl and spoon to stir flour, dry beans, etc.

Another fun activity is making your own play dough - your child can help make it, then you can play with it! We always played with it outside for ease of cleanup ;)

I've found the general rule is the messier, the better. Take advantage of summertime and let your kid really get messy (outside of course)! Soap, paint, glue, all fun and squishy things.

I was a toddler teacher and keeping 2 year olds busy is a challenge. You can incorporate anything into a craft. You can make a cloud cut out and have her glue tiny marshmellows to the paper. It is a good treat too! Cut stripes of paper and make tears in the paper for her to tear. THis is help with her fine moter skills. I made a sun and used red, orange, and yellow paper to tear. I hade them glue the torn paper to the sun. You can also use a breakfast tray and put cool whip on it. They love to put their fingers in icky things. THen the usual finger painting, bingo doobers, noodles etc. Alos google toddler activites. You can find lot of useful infomation on the web.

Hi, I have a pretty active little boy. When he was younger we took him to a place in Severna Park called Rolly Pollies. They have music, gym, and art. He loved it, and it really did hold his attention. You might want to try it. We loved it soooo much hee took all three classes they offered.

Hi there Jana,
I love doing crafts with my children, and we started early on. We actually have set aside Monday nights for arts and crafts nights. I have gotten much of my inspiration from sites like www.familyfunweekender.com, www.marthastewart.com and a few others. I actually started out by googling childrens arts and crafts and found the sites that fit our family. It's worked very well for us. They also have some great books at either a book store or even the local library (which is great for saving money, jsut copy the ones you like hehehe) I have found that the best way to start these activities though is to make sure you have plenty of different types of materials, so that if soemthing looks fun, you'll alreayd have it on hand. Please don't dismiss every day items in your house as craft supplies either, things such as milk cartons...egg crates...cereal boxes (for hte backs as cardboard of different sizes)...also things like plastic butter tubs and icing tubs. Just try to think of something that you would think would be fun to do with it and you'll both have TONS of fun over and over again. Good luck and send some reports on some of your fun. Maybe you'll give me an idea hehehe. Have a great experience with your daughter, and son as he gets older.

My son and I have had a lot of fun with The Little Hands Art Book/Exploring Arts & Crafts With 2-To 6-Year-Olds (Williamson Little Hands Series). You can buy it used through Amazon. It has lots of ideas as well as recipes for play dough, finger paint and more.

Have fun.

Well this one is kinda messy and will need bath time after as long as you don't mind. Set up paper plates with different colors paints in each one. We would roll out 8-10ft of wrapping paper with the white side up. My son would then step one foot into a paint color and one foot in another then run across the paper. (we did this outside) He would do this over and over and then start with his hands and paint brushes later. Most people(inlaws) thought I was nuts, but he absolutely loved it. He would have huge mural pictures to show dad when he got home. And the best is it would be an hour or more just painting, which was the longest I have seen my son focus on anything. Then he would help me hose down the porch or driveway and his body.

Just 3 quick ones....

Play-dough
Silly putty
Use a shoe box and decorate a little house for her toys

For your two year old to get the most from arts and crafts make it as stress free as possible for both of you.

Choose a project and do as much preparation before hand as possible, i.e. buy a larger sized glue and pour it into a shallow container with an air tight top, precut shapes and objects and store in ziplock bags - it will make for easy set up and fast clean up.

If you are making something like masks:
1. Use precut paper plates
2. Begin by telling her "today we are going to make masks."

3. Put the plate up to your face so she can start to form an idea of the project goal.
4. Have things like glitter, feathers, dried pasta, etc. laid out on the table, and start decorating your mask.
5. While you are decorating your mask talk to her and explain what you are doing, i.e. I am making eyebrows on my mask. First I put on glue and then I put on glitter, see how the glitter is sticking to the glue...
6. This should prompt her to constructively participate in the craft.

Keep in mind:

Two is still a very tactile age, so she will want to get her hands on and in everything...Messy is ok.

Talk about each step as you do it, but also allow for banter and questions...keep it loose. Sing songe while you work.

She will be looking to you for approval and reassurance make sure you praise her in abundance but be sure to be genuine.

When her interest starts to wane do not try to keep her engaged in the craft, use it as a signal to wrap up.

Make sure to have her cooperate in the clean up process! By directing her in the same conversational tone you used while you were crafting cleaning up will be part of the activity.