Skip to main content

Easy Seussian Hats

The boys and I were a little bored the other day so I decided it would be fun to make some hats to go with our Dr. Seuss unit.  


Here's how we made them. 

cut a head hole out of the middle of a sturdy paper plate
*works best if the plate has a little bit of a "bowl" to it*

glue two pieces of large red construction paper together so it's big
enough to fit around the "bowl edge" of the paper plate

cut white paper in to even(ish) size stripes

glue on white strips

cover backside"bowl edge" of plate with glue, fold red paper around it,
glue edges of red paper together

Once our hats were finished we decided the best thing to do was listen to silly music and have a dance/parade.


if like me, you cut the head hole too big - a stocking cap works wonders :)


Looking for more Dr. Seuss ideas? You may be interested in these posts as well: Preschool Syllabus: Dr. Seuss, Cats in Hats and a Parade of Things, Celebrating Dr. Seuss, & Green Eggs, Two Ways

You can also find other units and crafts can also on our homeschool page

Comments

  1. Wow, those turned out great and they look so cute on!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I love these Dr. Seuss hats! Very cute indeed and so manageable to make with little ones!

    ReplyDelete
  3. love this!

    Thanks for sharing on Hey Mom, Look What I Did at Adventures In Mommy Land...hope to see you again soon!!

    ReplyDelete
  4. The hats look great. Thanks for stopping my blog.

    ReplyDelete
  5. So cute. I hope you don't mind that I pinned it:
    http://pinterest.com/pin/259590365991377855/

    I am excited to follow you over on Pinterest. Thanks for sharing this adorable idea! :-)

    ReplyDelete
  6. great idea! my daughter has a dr suess dress up day at school this week and i think this paper hat would be perfect!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Cuties!! Stopping by from Happy Housewife Seuss Round up!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Thanks for taking the time to leave a comment - you make me smile :)

Popular posts from this blog

A Little Red Cardboard Barn

We've finished our farm unit and are moving on to a new theme tomorrow - but before we do I wanted share the barn we made. The wooden farm animals came with a beautiful handmade ark that we gave Big Buddy for Christmas a couple years ago.  I would someday love to have a wood barn but it's currently not in the budget. So in the mean time we decided to improvise and make our own.  I stumbled upon this perfectly sized milk box (4 gallons per box) while subbing and thought it would be sturdy enough to handle play. Hubandie and the boys used an x-acto knife and wood glue to build a barn shape. to get the doors to fold out hubandie used an x-acto knife and scored the inside of the cardboard We then painted with a basic primer and outlined a window and a door with painters tape. cardboard is very porous so priming is a must if you want decent coverage Big Buddy however insisted that we add more windows so it looked like the barn in our book The Big

Preschool Syllabus: Dr. Seuss

Normally I'd do a Dr. Seuss unit in March around his birthday. We had to do one now though because on Saturday Big Buddy and I going on a date to a  Dr. Seuss exhibit . The exhibit is only at the museum until January and I'm afraid if we don't go now we might not get the chance. We are of course reading lots of Dr. Seuss's books. A great advatage to studying Dr. Seuss in November rather than March is that all his books were available at the library. I also found a great children's biography which is perfect for preschoolers. Pebble First Biographies: Dr. Seuss  We've read it a couple times and Big Buddy loves reciting all the facts he's learned WRITING CENTER ADDITIONS big buddy's name in sand paper letters, coloring pages  & mazes from seussville.com skills practiced: fine motor, letter recognition, creativity,  reading comprehension LEARNING "TRAYS" -   I rotate these, setting out about four a day from which the boy&#

Jack-O-Lanterns on the Fridge

Last fall I saw the idea for refrigerator pumpkins with face pieces in FamilyFun Magazine  and have been anxious to recreate them ever since. It was pretty quick and easy and since the only thing we didn't have on hand was magnetic sheets ($1.50 with coupon at Joann's) it was also very cheap. my supplies: magnetic sheets, orange & black construction paper, white pen, tacky glue *i know they have self adhesive sheets but my Joann's didn't carry them   glued (very messily) and ready to cut Both the boys were quite enthused when they discovered them after rest time :) Hopefully it will keep them entertained until we carve real pumpkins.