While a real alligator's meal of choice ranges from snails to
snakes, this toothy reptile will be more than happy to munch on
whatever pens and pencils your child has to offer.
What you'll need
- Two new green kitchen scrub pads
- Scissors
- Red felt
- White felt
- Tacky glue
- Googly eyes
- Green pom-poms
- Black pom-pom
- Green rickrack
How to make it
- Start by trimming two new green kitchen scrub pads into elongated pocket shapes. Then cut two similar shapes from red felt. From white felt, cut triangular teeth and use tacky glue to stick several to the rounded edge of each scrub pad. Glue a red felt piece atop each scrub pad, covering the bases of the felt teeth.
- Next, stack the scrub pads with the red felt pieces face-to-face. Glue all along the straight edges but leave the rounded, toothy edges unglued to create the alligator's open mouth.
- To make the gator's face, glue googly eyes onto green pom-poms, then glue the pom-poms to the top of the head. Finally, affix green rickrack ridges and black pom-pom nostrils atop his snout, and your reptile is ready for the first course of writing utensils.



Print
the template and use the pieces as patterns to cut shapes from the
specified colors of felt. To cut out the hole in the number 9, simply
make a small snip in the felt to access the center; it will be barely
noticeable once you stick the number in place.
Peel
the backing from the yellow lightning bolt. Center the yellow bolt atop
the black one and press down firmly to stick it in place.
Peel the backing from the yellow loop strap. Press the black loop strap onto the center of the yellow one, as shown.
Firmly
press the sticky ends of the loop strap to the front and back of the
lightning bolt, as shown, and the keychain is ready to use.



















Print
the template and cut out the pieces. Create patterns by taping the vest
front pieces together and the vest back pieces together, as shown.
Now
you can embellish the edges of the vest with stitching, if you like.
Simply thread the needle with black yarn or embroidery floss and use a
quick whipstitch, as shown.
For the finishing touch, glue the smaller star atop the larger one to create a sheriff's badge, and safety pin it to the vest.
Lay an orange paper bag on a flat surface with the bottom flap facing up. Glue the jaw just under the flap.
Glue Tigger's head to the bottom flap.
Glue Tigger's mouth and tongue to his jaw.
Add details like eyes and stripes. Finally, glue on Tigger's expressive eyebrows.
Glue on details like Pooh's dark red mouth, pink tongue, and black nose.
Add details like eyes and a mouth with a black marker.
Glue Piglet's head, with ears attached, onto the bottom flap.
Glue on Piglet's pink snout and add details like eyes and eyebrows using a black marker.
When the paint is dry, snip each pants tube, as shown. Then slip them into the bottoms of the larger tubes.
Next, fashion a hat for each elf by rolling a 4-inch felt square into a cone, gluing down the overlapped edge
Trim
the brim, as shown. Fit the hats over the tops of the tubes. If they
turn out a little too snug, don't be afraid to gently stretch the felt
along the brim.
Finally,
shape the craft wire into a pair of glasses for Doc by twice wrapping
the midsection around a pencil, as shown, to create a pair of lenses.
Glue the wire ends to Doc's face, positioning them so that the tips tuck
just under the sides of his beard and the lenses appear to rest on the
tip of his nose.
Create
the doll’s head and torso by hot gluing the two wooden circles to the
wooden craft spoon, with the handle sandwiched between them, as shown.
Make sure the spoon handle extends beyond the circles a ¼ inch so you
can glue the hair to it later.
For
the dress, first fold the largest fabric piece in half to create a
9-inch square (the folded edge will serve as the dress skirt hem).
Scrunch
the top of the skirt around the spoon below the head, and use a rubber
band to hold it in place. Leave a bit of the handle exposed to serve as
the doll’s neck.
Use the fabric bodice piece to create a ¾-inch strip by folding over the long edges and hot-gluing them in place, as shown.
Glue the bodice in place around the top of the skirt.
To
create the doll’s arms, first cut a 1¼-inch length from each end of a
wooden craft stick to use as hands. Hot glue the hands to the pipe
cleaner ends.
Fold over and hot glue the short ends of the remaining fabric piece to create ½ inch sleeve hems.
Then glue the pipe cleaner to the center of the fabric, as shown.
Fold the long fabric edges over the pipe cleaner and hot glue them down.
Glue
the center of the arms piece to the back of the dress bodice. Wrap the
arms around to the front of the doll, bending them at the shoulders and
elbows.
Print the
For
Merida’s long, curly red hair, cut seven 13-inch lengths of bulky yarn.
Gather six of the strands in a bunch and use the seventh to tie them
together at the center. Unravel the individual strands.
Hot
glue the bound portion of the yarn wig to the end of the spoon handle
above the head. Then glue a few yarn strands to the back of the wooden
head. (Tip: To stand the doll upright, simply set it over an inverted
paper cup or a rolled-up piece of thin cardboard or cardstock.)