Christmas Mice with Candy Cane Tails
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Felt and glue are two of the best things to have on hand during Christmas time with your kids. I can’t even begin to count how many different ornaments and crafts we made up as kids to hang on our tree or give to friends using mostly those two simple supplies. It’s so important to let kids make gifts for friends because it really teaches them that the best gifts, the ones they should get excited about, come from the heart
These little mice are a great place to start with your kids. I know its difficult to find red and green felt this time of year so don’t worry about those colors, just think outside of the box. Why not make them in your favorite colors or school colors even? Think of your sports fan and how much they would enjoy a gift from your child in their favorite team colors!
Either way you go, you’ll have fun and your kid will be proud at the results. I’m including a template you can print off to trace onto your felt to make this a breeze. There ya go, excuses are gone and its time to get crafting with your younguns!
This is a fun little craft for kids and adults alike.
You’ll need: felt, little pom poms, googly eyes, scissors, glue, and the little template I’m using.
I am using Tacky glue but a glue gun and even good old school glue would work.
You really should print off the template if only to see what happens when you draw two shapes on a piece of paper, hand them to a mechanical engineer, and say “Can you make me a template of this in a pdf file so I can upload it to the website?”
~blinks~
Methinks he gets a bit technical!
(You can also click on that photo up there to print it and it will pop right up on your screen)
Cut out the mouse body and ear templates and trace them onto your felt. I like to use two different colors for ears and body but there isn’t a rule that says you have to!
Here is my little army of mice just waiting to be made.
All of my photos are a little off tint here because I did this tutorial indoors at night and because I haven’t a clue how to work photoshop or any other fancy schmancy program. And I’m cool with that…
Then cut two little slits for the ears to go through.
I have these marked on the template to give you an idea of where to put them and about how big they need to be.
Then you just slip the ears through the holes of the mouse.
Doing this creates a little pocket on the back that the candy cane slides through.
Then glue on little googly eyes and a pom pom nose to each one.
Katy Rose has been having fun gluing three eyes and two noses to some of hers. Let your kids have fun and create three eyed mice if they want!
It’s quicker if you just set up an assembly line, dotting little bits of glue for eyes and noses as you go along and then placing them.
Here are the little mice babies as they dry
Then turn all the little guys over and insert a little candy cane in the pocket the ears made.
They make cute little set! Don’t forget to make some in your school colors!
You can hang them on the tree or use them as little favors.
These are great little gifts for your kids to make for their teachers and friends.
Print the template for making the mice by clicking here.
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It isn’t the size of the gift that matters,
but the size of the heart that gives it.
~Quoted in The Angels’ Little Instruction Book by Eileen Elias Freeman
My favorite homemade gifts are two from my children when they were in garde school.
One ornament was made in school. They took a rounded top oldtime clothespin/seashell angel with a halo. Another ornament (from a different child) that was the gingerbread dough tree.
Both these are carefully wrapped and unwrapped each year and are priceless to me. They were so proud of their creations. They continue to make me smile and give me joy each time I spot them on our tree year after year (14 years and counting)! Teachers and crafters helping children all should be told, that the memories they help create truly last a lifetime! Thank you.
Homemade preserves!
I like to make our family’s cranberry bread and make into gift baskets and deliver to our friends, family and neighbors. I think homemade gifts are the best! Love the idea will try to make with my daughter this year. Thanks Christy!
I remember my mom always making little loaves of bread for my teachers around the holidays! I am also starting that tradition this year!
Our cousin gave me a mouse made of a handtowel and washcloths the first year we were married. I still have it in my bathroom. I love that dang thang!
We always take a puzzele that has pieces missing and pick out three that look like a head and two horns. Glue the ‘horns’ behind the head piece, paint them brown and glue two eyes and a fuzzy red nose on for Rudolph! You can glue a pin to the back or a piece of ribbon for a hanging decoraction. I alwasy have the kids sign and date them on the back. We have made hundreds of these in all sizes. My son said that when he gave Rudolph pins to the lunch ladies at school they cried because no one ever includes them, just the teachers got gifts. I believe that the cooks keep the soul and body together!
Ummmm…Hello!!!!!!!!! I distinctly remember you saying something about posting a RED CHRISTMAS DRESS PIC on here for us!!!! 😉