Saturday, November 21, 2020

Window stars

In November, we fold stars to decorate the windows of the school for the holiday fair. They are not difficult! Come learn and fold for yourself. You need waxed kite paper (sold in large sheets or in 6" square pads) or tissue paper you can cut into squares or rectangles.

Beautiful instructions: https://denverwaldorf.org/wisdom-of-waldorf/waldorf-window-stars/

    Two different videos of making that star: 
 
 
Star by Andrea & Fenton 2020
Helpful videos on how to fold two types of stars using rectangular paper.
9:00 she begins gluing points together
12:00 she does the tricky part of attaching the last piece to the first. 

Her video for 8 pointed star:
 
 
16-pointed rainbow star by Andrea & Fenton, 2020


Another post with links to many beautiful patterns: http://andamentoblog.blogspot.com/2013/12/window-stars.html

A wreath of five pointed stars! http://invitationtothebutterflyball.blogspot.com/2014/02/new-window-star-tutorial-with-printable.html

Beanbags

Holiday Fair-in-a-box craft activity for children 8+

Materials:

  • 2.5" x 5" pieces of felt or fabric
  • Needle
  • Floss
  • Filling: beans, lentils, rice, or flax seeds
    Note: If you have a fine filling, stitches will need to be very small


Paper birds

Holiday Fair-in-a-box craft activity for younger children

Materials:

  • 2 mirror image birds
  • Wings material
  • String
  • Glue
  • Scissors (optional)

Instructions:

  1. Glue the birds together.
  2. Put yarn through the hole and knot into a loop.
  3. Gather the end of one wing and put it through the whole.
  4. Arrange the wings and use scissors to trim to the shape you would like, and adjust the yarn so the bird is balanced.
  5. Enjoy!


Virtual Holiday Fair 2020


This year our crafts are packed up for you to make at home! You can order a fair-in-a-box from The Hartsbrook School. Activities include:

https://www.hartsbrook.org/community-events/holiday-fair-crafts/

 

Thursday, November 12, 2020

Sharing the Warmth and Spirit of the Hartsbrook Holiday Fair


Dear Hartsbrook Families:

We hope that this note finds you and your family well and looking forward to the Virtual Holiday Fair on December 5. 

For those of us who've attended a Holiday Fair in years past, you know that invoking the warmth and festive spirit of our community is a hallmark of the event but doing so also requires a significant amount of planning and coordination—and that's during a typical year. Going "virtual" with this year's event has presented different logistical challenges and programming changes, but one thing that we want to remain unchanged is that sense of communal spirit and warmth. 

The planning committee has been hard at work designing a program that embraces and encourages community participation, and we need your help. Understanding that the current reality has us all stretched thin, with competing priorities and the needs of our children tugging (often literally) at our pant legs, our hope is that you receive this as more of an invitation than a request.

In the days ahead we will be preparing a take-home "Holiday Fair in Box." The box is designed to be a companion to the virtual event on December 5 and it will contain craft projects, recipes, and surprises for the family. While these little care packages can't possibly duplicate the real-life experience of the fair, our hope is to bring a little of the experience into your home. As in years past, and in an effort to encourage community participation, we are inviting Hartsbrook families who wish to do so, to contribute several small, simple, handcrafted items for the Fair in a Box. These items could range from hand-crafted mementos to thoughtful notes, poems, or drawings. (Additional craft item ideas here.)

Whether your family participates in crafting these items, buying a Fair in a Box for your family and having a festival day at home, or simply joining us online, we look forward to celebrating the spirit of the season with you and yours on December 5!

Saturday, March 21, 2020

Crafting at home and for the community

Sewing masks for medical staff (such as over their surgical masks so those could be reused, as there is a shortage). For more information about the medical/CDC situation  and pattern/instructions see:
Note: Check with local medical establishments for their needs before you start sewing!

Crafting at home 
Chatting around the crafting table is what some people show up for, but these days you might just be looking for ideas of crafts to do with children at home.

Crafts and games for at-home days:

10 crafts with descriptions 

Making a pocket doll

"Sundays with Sarah" videos:
Waldorf-inspired multiplication learning crafts

The Waldorf Handwork and Craft Curriculum

Please share more crafting links in the Comments!







Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Hearts for community

Ongoing through April 30, 2020

For a couple years we hand-crafted hearts and put them up in our community on Valentine's Day, but this year we will again distribute them (and other items) as our contingent marches in the Northampton Pride Parade on May 1, 2020.

2019: These hundreds of hearts, with The Hartsbrook School paper tags attached, were warmly received by parade audience. Thank you all who helped make them and the rainbow finger-knitted garlands!

2018 hearts still on tree outside sanctuary church in Amherst 

Because making the hearts is heartwarming in the middle of winter, and heart-shaped things appear in January everywhere we look commercially, we are making them now and will continue to make them until May. Hearts made of wax, wood, jute, wire, beads, etc. as well as yarn, felt and fabric... anything that is relatively sturdy for storage and handing out would be wonderful.


If you can donate fabric, felt, yarn, wool roving for felting, or other natural materials for making hearts, please leave in the box in the Hartsbrook Hall foyer. If you need materials to make hearts, please help yourself from this box! There are some paper patterns for shapes.

Feel free to make hearts at home and place in the basket by the main office anytime on or before May 1, 2020.

For reference: Hartsbrook heartburst

Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Waldorf dolls

Louise Spear, long-time Hartsbrook handwork teacher, will be giving a 3-session workshop on making Waldorf dolls, which is also taught in middle-school handwork classes.

When: Thursdays 8:30-10:30am February 13, 27, and March 5, 11Where: Hartsbrook Handwork room
Cost: Lessons are free to the community, materials and supplies estimated $15-20

RSVP BY WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29, 2020 to join group order for doll fabric and stuffing materials. You may respond after that date and still participate in doll making if you have your own materials.


Materials:
= Special doll fabric (group order to save on shipping, specify color)
= Stuffing and tubular gauze (group order for bulk stuffing)

Supplies to bring: Needles, thread, embroidery floss, hair (yarn)

In the first session we will create the inner head and torso and add the skin fabric to the head and sew this down, as well as do facial features if we have time. The last step could be done at home once everyone has an idea of what to do.

In the second session, we can create patterns and cut out the body and arm pieces. These then need to be sewn before we can stuff and attach to the body.

As most of the crafters can probably crochet, starting a wig for the doll can happen anytime after we have made the heads. I have always sewn on hair at the end but it could be done earlier by careful adults.

In the third session, we would stuff the body pieces and sew them all together. Fast workers could also work on hair or clothing but these last two items could be done at home.