Simple and fun ideas for parents to keep kids busy with creative indoor play.
Simple and fun ideas for parents to keep kids busy with creative indoor play.
Dry Erase Canvas
Laminators are a perfect tool for creating reusable cards and games that are dry-erase friendly and easy to put together. Try making your own custom BINGO cards, colouring sheets, counting games
word puzzles or print out photos that kids can color on again and again. Save your creations and bind them with a metal ring to bring to restaurants or on long car trips.
Getting Active
When you’re playing indoors, there are plenty of ways to stay active without putting your windows and glassware in danger, using simple household items. Scotch® Expressions Masking Tape removes cleanly within 14 days on most surfaces.
Spider Web – Use black Scotch® Expressions Masking Tape to set up a spider web in an open door frame or a hallway. Apply tape sticky side out, and see if you can get a crumpled ball of paper to stick.
Spy Games – Use strips of Scotch® Expressions Masking Tape to string up lines of yarn between the walls of a hallway, making a 'laser beam' obstacle course to crawl through.
Investigative Fingerprints (Grades 2-6)
Have some little detectives in your house? Here’s a fun activity that will keep them busy learning about fingerprints.
Materials: Baby powder or corn starch; Scotch® Magic™ Tape; A small brush, like a paintbrush; A piece of black construction paper; Pencils.
Have your kids press their fingers onto a clean surface, like a kitchen countertop. Then have them sprinkle some baby powder or corn starch over the area they touched. Use a small brush and gently brush away the powder.
This should reveal the fingerprints. Place Scotch® Magic™ Tape on top of the print, lift the tape off, and then stick it onto a piece of black construction paper.
Try a variety of surfaces in the kitchen and around the house. Challenge kids to see how many fingerprints they can collect. Have everyone in the family touch a different surface, and then your kids can figure out who touched which surface.
This idea comes to us from our friends at Post-it® Brand. Check out their website for more fun science activities.
Cardboard Creativity
Julian McFaul is the founder of Adventures in Cardboard, a summer camp in Minnesota focused on crafty construction and serious creativity, where kids learn to give used boxes a new life. Each year, his campers explore everything from theatrical role playing to character development to field games, whilst they build arms, armour,
and giant castles entirely out of cardboard. Reuse your boxes and download his instructions for building a Knight’s Helmet or Cooktop Oven. For more information about Julian and Adventures in Cardboard, check out his website.
Whether you’ve got a dragon to slay or a fortress to protect, every warrior needs reliable—and fearsome—headgear. Click here to get Julian's step-by-step instructions for building a great horned helmet using little more than cardboard and Scotch® Heavy Duty Shipping Packaging Tape.
There are lots of things you can do to encourage independence in kids, at just about any age. And getting out the door in the morning is a great time for kids to practise this skill. The out-the-door tip below is from our partner, Clever Kate. Kate O'Reilly was a stay-at-home mom for eight years before starting her consulting business, Clever Kate, and lifestyle blog, Living Modern Life Well. She is unstoppably curious and constantly creating and sharing new and easy ways to make daily modern life better for all. Learn more about Kate and our partnership with her on her blog.
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