[Nfb-krafters-korner] Craft Ideas for Fine Motor Skills

Dixie cobaltblueheron at gmail.com
Thu Aug 28 02:29:49 UTC 2014


It is wonderful to see you back!

And, will you be my kid's grandma?  You have such fun ideas!

Oh, wait my kids are getting to the age to start thinking about thinking
about having kids...  so, then will you be my grandkid's grandma?




Dixie
@-> ~ <-@


-----Original Message-----
From: Nfb-krafters-korner [mailto:nfb-krafters-korner-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Henrietta Brewer via Nfb-krafters-korner
Sent: Wednesday, August 27, 2014 9:40 PM
To: Michelle Creedy; List for blind crafters and artists
Subject: Re: [Nfb-krafters-korner] Craft Ideas for Fine Motor Skills

I bet playing with shaving cream might be fun for her. Forming shapes would
make them more tactile. 

Remember those candies on a piece of paper that we used for medicine when we
were little? You could cut the paper into a cell shape and remove a candy or
so to make letters.

stringing large beads or the tube type pasta is always fun. You could have
her color them with food coloring just to remind her that color is important
in our world.

I love the game that I used to do with my day care. You get a box, cut a
hole in it's side and attach a sock with the foot cut out. Then place items
in the box and have the kids name them. Using one hand would be the
challenge for a blind child.

Sink and float would be great too. Fill a bucket with water. Find things in
the house that you can get wet. See which things will sink and float. Make a
guess first and log the answers. If you get a bar of ivory soap from the
dollar store that will make the game fun.

Then, dry the soap and on another day. Use tooth picks and bits of sticky
paper to make a boat out of the soap. Float the soap and make waves and find
out where it goes. You might want to add a bell to the sails. lol

If you have other children at the same time. Try the old find your shoe
game. Put all the shoes in a pile and have the children find their own.

Putting safety pins or small buttons or beads in a pan of rice is a fun way
to feel your way through. then if the objects are different shapes sort them
into egg carton spots. this will be a challenge in itself. Finding the same
one for each item.

How about going outside and finding rocks. sort the shapes and find the one
you can paint for a pet rock. Puffy paint might work. But painting doesn't
need vision. Just inner vision.

I like finding a piece of tube. The kind that carpet comes on. About three
inches in diameter. Cut a foot or so section. Use a rope to make a hanger.
Tie it around each end with a good sized piece as a middle loop. Loop that
piece over a door knob. Now use small balls, even tennis balls, and see if
you can make the ball stay in the tube. using the piece of robe on the door
knob you can balance the tube. what about getting a small plastic bowl with
a handle or even a pot and put the ball in one end and get to the other end
before it falls out. If it falls... Well, time to get on your hands and
knees and find it. lol I usually did this in the fall when I could use those
tiny plastic pumpkins as balls.

What about making shapes with the braille writer? Nothing fancy, though that
is sure fun, just enough to feel the project.

If she likes to play with dolls, play nurse and have her put bandaids on the
doll. How smooth can she get it? How straight?

Lacing cards is fun. You can make your own by cutting a shape from an old
greeting card or even poster board or braille paper and punching holes
around it. Make several and sew them together when sewing one piece is easy.
Could you make a house this way? Maybe a fence for plastic animals. 

Put masking tape on the floor and use match box cars to drive on the roads.
Make a city with blocks and keep them in place as the cars go down the road.

Well, that is what I get off the top of my head. If you need more ideas,
write me.
Henrietta
On Aug 27, 2014, at 2:32 PM, Michelle Creedy via Nfb-krafters-korner wrote:

> Hello
> 
> 
> 
> I'm working with a little girl who is blind and we're doing some
pre-Braille
> stuff. Any ideas on fun crafts that are easy but involve some dexterity?
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Michelle Creedy 
> 
> Independent Scentsy Consultant 
> http://michellecreedy.scentsy.ca/
> 
> 
> 
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