Make butterfly Valentines like we did, or just go crazy playing with melted wax!
You'll need:
*crayons
*regular paper (I used blue, standard printing weight paper)
*parchment paper
*old blanket or towel
*an iron
*scissors
*hole punch
*suckers
I did this project with my 3.5 year old daughter and she had a lot of fun with it.
For starters, de-label and chop up some crayons into small pieces. I tried using a chopping knife. It worked, but it was going to take forever so I ended up using my mini food processor to make dust out of them with a few pushes of a button. I made 3 batches: a red/pink one, a blue one, and a yellow/orange one.
Then I setup the work station. I layed an old blanket in the table first. Then I grabbed a long piece of parchment paper, folded it in half, opened it back up flat, and set it on the blanket.
For each Valentine, I cut an 8.5x11" sheet of blue paper in half, then folded the half in half. I placed it on top of the parchment paper for decorating.
I let my daughter sprinkle wax on one half of the folded paper:
Then I folded both the blue paper and the parchment paper with the blue paper sandwiched between the parchment paper:
An important tip:
Show your child to be sparing with the wax. Too much wax leaves a thick and brittle layer on the paper that cracks off easily. A thinner layer stays more flexible. In the above picture, the butterflies on the left are much less messy and easier to handle than the two on the right.
Another tip:
Either leave blank spots on the wings for any writing, or make a second butterfly layer out of a clean sheet of paper for writing on. Most markers and pens will not write well on the now-waxy paper. We went with the second layer option since my girl isn't very good at writing her name in a small space yet.
Here are her folded up butterfly valentines right before they got their suckers inserted. The blue waxy part is inside the white:
We even added a science piece to the whole activity by discussing solids and liquids with hot and cold.