“Strive to make everyday the best day of your life, because there is no good reason not to.” Hal Elrod
Try these Hygge Nature Crafts for Children. Some wonderful nature-based craft ideas to inspire you.
Add a pine cone bird - pine cone with feather for a tail and wings
Use homemade playdough or air dry clay to create creatures and faces on the bark of trees.
Create bark rubbings or leaf rubbings then use them in your other craft activities - perhaps on your nature bracelet or wand?
Flower pressing has long been a wonderful nature craft activity. If you don't have a press just use heavy book lined with paper to press your flowers. These can then be used in crafts later in the year - perhaps on a Cosy Hygge Jar with fairy lights inside?
Or, create an air dry clay trinket bowl with your pressed flowers stuck on with a layer of pva on top to protect them.
Or, add them to candles to decorate them.
A cute nature craft using nature.
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Collect fresh daisies with long stems. Make a small slit near the base of each stem using your fingernail then thread the next daisyâs stem through the slit and repeat to create a chain.
Pour a small amount of white, yellow and green paint. Show children how to dip their thumbs in white paint and press them onto paper to create daisy petals. Use a fingertip dipped in yellow paint to make the center of each daisy. Add stalks with green.
Plant some seeds and look after them until they grow. Ox Eye daisies are a lovely alternative as they are much bigger.
Create mud pies and buns in the mud kitchen and decorate with daisies! You could make a daisy potion.
Simply count your daisies on a ten frame or in a line. How many can you count?
Add Daisies to your playdough station.
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Dandelions are beautiful, fascinating plants! Attracting Bees and little hands a like. There is nothing sweeter than blowing a dandelion clock and making a wish! They're known for their bright yellow flowers that turn into fluffy, white seed heads. Despite being considered weeds by many, they have several interesting characteristics. For example, their seeds are dispersed by the wind, which is why you often see them popping up in unexpected places. Additionally, dandelion greens are edible and nutritious, containing vitamins A, C, and K, as well as calcium, iron, and potassium. Some people even use dandelion roots to make tea or coffee alternatives. Overall, they're resilient and adaptable plants that have found their way into folklore, cuisine, and even herbal medicine.
Dandelion Biscuits
Baking together is a lovely activity, working together and sharing what you have made.
Dandelion Playdough
Add dandelions to your homemade playdough mix for a spring dough.
Loose Parts
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I have heard people say:
'Children don't need beautiful set ups in their play. This has only been created for the adult.'
My personal belief here is that like most things in life we need balance.
We need reflection.
We must go back to the child.
We can create invitations to play that pay great attention to detail because we are responding to an emerging interest and we want to captivate the child's awe and wonder even more. We want them to be excited about the possibilities of deepening this learning or fascination so we present it to them in an open ended and irresistible way.
I also know that amazing learning happens when things are a bit more rustic and even messy! Exploring the patterns the numicon plates leave in the shaving foam, the changes to the clay when it's been left outside in the rain or the cardboard box that's been transformed into Elsa's frozen castle with little more than the imagination.
Children and their learning needs can be neglected when we lose sig
...After the birth of our son, I decided to leave my role as a junior teacher to be a full-time mum. Here began my wonderful journey into the world of early years - fascinating! It was during this time that I discovered the importance of open-ended play and the learning environment. Our home quickly transformed to provide beautiful spaces to play, explore and learn in this new way. Eager to learn more, I was led to the âHygge in the Early Years Accreditationâ. A fascination with the Danish lifestyle soon developed and both my husband and I began reading books and incorporating more hygge into our own lives. Based on this new-found knowledge, we decided to home educate our little boy, at least during his early years. The âHygge in the Early Years Accreditationâ has been invaluable in helping me create a beautiful environment in which our son can explore and develop.
Below are some highlights of my journey.
BALANCE - I really enjoyed the first module and ...
Children are so highly creative and learn to express their world and whatâs around them in their own unique way from an early age.
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Yet often we as adults try to stifle this creative freedom.
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Perhaps by showing children how we expect their painting of a pumpkin to look and only offering one paint colour.
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Maybe setting up a craft station where all the children have to make a paper spider with pipe cleaner legs.
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Or
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How about giving children templates, outlines to colour in or pre-determined shapes to use in their craft activity.
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These stop us from focussing on the process of the learning and instead give the child the message that the outcome is whatâs important here.
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Instead talk to the children, âOk so you want to make a representation of the bumblebee you saw outside, what materials shall we use? What colours would work best here? What shape will you make the body? How would be the best way to create the stripes?â
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Consider the creative freedom you offer ...
I'm blown away with how many of you have got in touch over the last week to share some of your photos of how you've made changes to you setting after taking part in my Hygge in Early Years Accreditation or after reading my book.Â
We will be covering some of the fabulous transformations over the next few months on our blog but also in our new magazine Hygge in the Early Years.
Here is a little preview of how Daisy Chain nursery have added foliage to their sand area and made it feel more inviting....
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Chloe and Bridgit at Pebbles Childcare have also made some changes to their provision....
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Before
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After
Grass Roots Day Nursery have been tuning into opportunities to ignite all of the senses...a key feature of hygge...
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