Posts Tagged ‘Christmas Gifts’

The best, most memorable gifts are often the most humble. Although lavish displays can please kids and be rewarding for some parents, families can only benefit from fostering an appreciation of all gifts, all givers, and the time and thought someone takes to prepare something special. Remember, to a young child, a large television box made into a boat can be just as much fun as an expensive remote-controlled boat. One five-year-old who asked Santa for real bricks and a trowel was thrilled to receive them and spent many contented hours stacking and re-stacking his treasure. So consider creating simple gift-giving traditions in your child’s early years that set the tone for holidays present and future. Refocus on the most important parts of your own holiday traditions — the true meaning of the holiday, the celebration, the symbols and rituals, the fantasy and surprise, or the gathering of family and friends. Simple gifts embedded in these warm traditions are sure to become the fondest memories.

 What follows are directions for creating simple gifts (kodak camera batteries ) for two to six-year olds. All require giving a little of yourself in preparing them, but remember that the time and care you spend become a part of the gift you give to your child. After assembling a gift, wrap it up in a fancy way, and it is sure to please your little one!

1. A BELOVED VOICE
      Record you or someone else your child loves reading a book, storytelling, making jokes, recalling memories, or singing. Include a photo of the person who made the recording. If a new story is read, wrap up the book with the recording for a special book/tape gift.

2. SOMETHING FANCIED
      Give something of yours that your child has always fancied: a scarf, a necklace, a special tie, goofy socks, etc.

3. SOMETHING TREASURED
      Wrap up a keepsake from your childhood that can be stored in a special place or on a wall or shelf in your older child’s room for viewing pleasure and safekeeping: one of your favorite childhood books, olympus li-40b battery, or a wall hanging, poster, knick-knack, or anything that you treasured. Tell your child the story behind the keepsake, or write it down.

4. TIME WITH YOU
      Create a coupon for a special time for just you and your child. Chose something you think they would love and include a picture of it: sledding, walking on the beach, a visit to the ice cream store, a free concert, etc. Consider adding a trinket or object that symbolizes the time: a toy sled or a seashell. More simple gifts to give a young child ahead–keep-a-going!

5. AN INDOOR SANDBOX AKA THE SCOOP, SHOVEL, AND POUR KIT
      Fill a large plastic storage box (28 gallons or larger) with: birdseed,  sand, rice, packing peanuts, or dried beans. Add: colorful ladles, scoops, cups, funnels, spoons, shovels, pails, pitchers, plastic measuring cups, measuring spoons, pots and pans, pie tins, animals, cars, or anything with which to scoop, shovel, pour, and play in the “sandbox.”

6. UNIVERSAL LAPTOP AC ADAPTER
 Purchase Universal laptop ac adapter from www.global-battery.co.uk . Universal adapters are specifically designed for each laptop brand and model. Universal ac adapter can compatible replacements for most laptop models. Universal laptop ac adapters (AC Adapter) could save you money and let your laptop keep working for longer.With a spare Universal AC Adapter you can achieve more with your laptop.Universal laptop AC Adapter with Adjustable Output Voltage, brand new and high efficiency,and 8 most common connectors that can be used with almost all notebook computers.

7. AN EXPLORER KIT
      Buy a colorful plastic bucket and fill it with tools for exploring the great outdoors: magnifying glass, tweezers, specimen jars, bags, etc. Add some inexpensive rubber boots in your child’s size for exploring in the rain and mud too. Consider adding an “explorer hat,” which could be an old or new hat of any kind, to complete this adventuresome kit.

8. BATHTIME FUN
      Collect bathtime universal laptop car adapter items and toys and put them in a mesh bag: fun soaps, shaving cream, and a shaver without a blade for pretending in the tub, goggles or a diving mask to wash hair tear-free, a doll with hair to shampoo, bubbles to blow, boats, sponges, and of course, a rubber ducky or two.
9. PLAY DOUGH KIT
      Make your own superior play dough with the easy recipe below, then locate some tools that your child can use to mold, cut, shape, and play with the dough: a small rolling pin (you an make one by cutting a 1″ diameter dowel to a length of about 7″ and sanding the edges), colorful plastic (not sharp) cookie cutters, a wooden mallet, a dull pie-fluting tool, straws, plastic hair rollers, garlic press, etc.

SUPERIOR PLAY DOUGH RECIPE
Ingredients:
2 cups flour
1 cup salt
4 teaspoons cream of tartar
2 cups boiling water
2 tablespoons oil
Food coloring

Directions:
? Mix flour, salt,  and cream of tartar.
? Add food coloring to boiling water and mix with oil.
? Combine the flour mixture and the water mixture.
? Knead the dough until it cools.
? Store in a covered airtight container or zip-lock bag.

10. Handwriting Fluorescent Board 

1. Rewritable:
The screen is scratch resistant acrylic, it is easy for write and erase with a wet towel or a dedicated microfiber Wipes.
2. 22 different kinds of flash mode
Second generation of fluorescent illuminated board With 4 Colors of LED inside, red, green, blue, white, there is 22 kinds of flash mode. Background light is a LED light source, save power, good quality, 5V voltage security, but also a LED light source a variety of colors, different monochromatic light source on the market, they are only the white of a light source is not a true sense of the Bright dimmer. Every time you press the red button next to, you can convert a flash mode.
3. Safe and energy-saving
Safe voltage with 5V DC power supply.100,000 hours of continuous light.Continuous light at 500 hours, only about a degree of power. Using the 5V power adapter.
4. Two kinds of fluorescent board installation methods
I. Can be hung on the wall.
II. Can be put on the tripod.
5. Using a dedicated Highlighter Writing (Fluorescent marker pen)

11. SPIN PAINTING
      Buy an inexpensive salad spinner or find a used one. Add some paper plates and a few bottles of tempera paint. After your child opens the gift, show him or her how to make a spin painting by putting a paper plate on the bottom of the spinner, adding a few tablespoons of different colors of paint, and giving it all a good spin.

12. TILE PRINTS
       Buy a few 12″ X 12″ squares of 1″ X 1″ or 2″ X 2″ plain white ceramic tile squares from any flooring or home improvement store. Leave them joined by the backing material that holds them together. Add a child’s paintbrush, a few bottles of tempera paint, and a pad of paper. After your child opens the tile print gift package, show him/her how to create tile prints. First, place paints in a muffin tin or on any palette, and ask your child to paint each small tile square, mixing colors as he or she paints. Next, press a blank piece of paper on top of the tiles, and peel it back carefully to uncover repeated prints in a pattern of squares, each with different colors and designs. Wash the tiles and use them over and over. This works great with fabric paint to create tile prints on cloth placemats, potholders, T-shirts and more.

13. ART GALLERY
      To begin an “art gallery,” locate a bulletin board, some inexpensive frames, or a blank scrap or memory book. Add one or two pieces of your child’s artwork and then wrap the “gallery” for a special gift that shows that you notice and value his or her art.

14. ART STUDIO
      Create your own art studio for a budding artist by first filling a portfolio (that can be used for storing artwork later) with different types of paper: white and colored paper, construction paper, grocery bags, used manila envelopes or folders, newsprint, tag board, or any other “canvas” that a child can fill. Next, add a box filled with paintbrushes, a muffin tin for a pallet, tempera paints, water colors, crayons, markers, glue, chalk, or other non-toxic materials for drawing and painting. The portfolio and artist’s box together make a gift worthy of the next Michelangelo.

15. GLUE ART
      Collect supplies to make a wealth of collages. Locate a storage box and fill with: Treasures for gluing: cotton balls, feathers, buttons, sequins, beads, scraps of fabric, paper, lace, wallpaper, ribbons, pictures from magazines, or anything that young hands can easily glue. Backgrounds to glue onto: paper plates, old cardboard, wood scraps, boxes, or anything on which you can glue items. Glues: school glue, colored or glittered glue, glue sticks, or paste–non-toxic, of course.

16. MICRO SD Memory Card 
      -Built-in security features enable users to download, store, and play secure content just like an SD card.
-Mostly used for cameras, computers, mobile phones, and many more devices.
-Optimal speed and performance for microSDHC compatible devices.
-Low Battery Consumption to Maximize Battery Life in Small Protable Devices.
-Easily transfer files between your digital devices and computer.
-Comes bundled with an SD Adapter for use with microSD or TransFlash cards.

17. TREASURE HUNTS!
      Set this up to lead to a holiday gift, then use it over and over again throughout the year. On index cards, draw freehand, glue pictures from a magazine, or print computer-generated dell inspiron 1525 battery pictures of things in your home. Make about a half a dozen for youngest players and a dozen for kids ages five or older. Draw on each clue a directional arrow to indicate on top of, under, beside, etc. Wrap up the first card to give to your child as the first clue. Hide the second clue near the item pictured on the first card. Hide the third clue near the item pictured on the second card, and so on, until all the clues are hidden. Make sure to hide a treasure (a gift, a coin, small toy, food treat, etc.) near the final item. Send your child on the hunt with the first clue! You may need to help a young or first-time hunter “read” the clues and follow the directions, but soon, she or he will become an expert.

18. COLOR AND SHAPES GO FISHIN’ GAME
      To create a game where you child will “fish” for colors and shapes, first cut paper of various colors into different shapes. Consider laminating them, or pressing them between two pieces of clear contact paper. Glue paper clips to one side of each piece. Make a fishing pole by tying a string to a stick, and attaching a magnet to the end of the string.

19. OBSTACLE COURSE
      Wrap up the materials for an obstacle course, or go ahead and set it up as a surprise. To make a course, create a path of things to give your child a chance to run and jump off some steam: a cheap camera batteries hula-hoop on the floor to jump into, colored masking tape in zigzag lines on the floor to walk along, hurdles made from blocks to jump over, felt squares and one or two squares of bubble wrap taped to the floor for stepping stones, large boxes lined up in a series on their sides to crawl through, etc. Mix all of this with pillows and cushions from your home to jump over for a grand course!

20. TUBES AND BALLS
      Collect colorful scarves, a wrapping paper or other long, cardboard tube with diameter of about 3 or four inches, and lightweight balls (Ping-Pong, foam, whiffle) and toy cars that are small enough to fit inside the tube, but big enough to not be a choking hazard. Cover the tube with colorful contact paper. To play Tubes and Balls, tie the tube at an angle to your stairway banister or the side of a clothesbasket with the scarves, and then have your child put the balls and cars in the top of the tube and watch them come out the other end. This is a real pleaser for the youngest kids.

21. BLOCKS
      Make homemade blocks from: sponges, diaper wipe boxes, cereal boxes, milk cartons with the tops folded flat, grocery bags filled with crushed newspaper and taped shut, tissue boxes, scraps of wood with the edges and surfaces sanded smooth. Cover with contact paper or decorate them as you like.

Help kids take their focus off of the “getting” by helping them learn about the joy of giving. Even very young children enjoy creating, selecting, wrapping, and giving gifts. By helping kids focus on their own giving, you’ll be teaching them to be generous and thoughtful, and they will experience the rewards of seeing someone they love light up when opening their gift. Also, when adults open a special gift from a child with expressions of pleasure, they model showing how important these simple gifts are to them. Whether working on something handmade or selecting a small gift, encourage your child to think about the recipient of the gift, and what they would like. When making gifts with your child, let go of perfection and have fun with the process of creating something and being together. Consider wrapping a gift in a piece of your child’s artwork to give the gift an extra-special touch.

      Here are some ideas to help kids catch the spirit of giving while having fun with you at the same time!

22. Express Card Converter Adapter
    This USB (4P) Express Card Adapter adds four USB 2.0 compliant ports to a host computer using an available ExpressCard slot, and is backward compatible with the USB 1.1 specification, for use with older USB peripherals. The ExpressCard adapter can be installed in seconds, and offers combined hi-speed USB 2.0 data transfer rates of up to 480Mbps – ensuring a reliable and efficient connection with MP3 players, digital cameras, external CD/DVD-ROM drives, or virtually any USB device you need to connect to your laptop computer.

23. SIMPLE SHOPPING
      Take your child to shop for small gifts for just a few of his or her favorite people at a store or section of a store that specializes in inexpensive items that fall within your budget. One key to success is shopping in a place where any choice your child makes is affordable, and another is giving up your preconceived notion of what gifts are right for the recipients. Offer a few suggestions about what each person likes just to get the process going. Then let your child make the selections, and once sure of his or her choices, go with them. It may be a flashlight for a teacher and a tennis ball for a grandparent, but they will be gifts that are truly from your child’s heart.

24. ORIGINAL AND PRICELESS STORIES, POEMS, AND WORKS OF ART
      Suggest to your child that writing a story or poem for one of their favorite people would make a great APPLE PowerBook G4 Battery gift. You may need to help think of an idea or get your child started, but then write down your child’s words exactly as your child dictates, being careful not to embellish or “fix” them. Consider having siblings work together on a piece–one could tell the story or poem, and one could draw a picture to go with it. Then frame the work, or create a book by arranging the work into a folder or scrapbook.

25. THE GIFT OF TIME AND CARING
      Have your child join you to take on small parts in helping an elderly person you know prepare for the holidays by putting up decorations, baking cookies, addressing cards, reading cards, etc. Or consider sharing money, gifts, or time with someone in need that you don’t know personally through the many giving agencies in your own community, and include your child in the process as part of your holiday tradition.