4 Fun Father's Day Gifts That Kids Can Make And Dads Will Love

4 Fun Father's Day Gifts That Kids Can Make And Dads Will Love

Sure, you could get dad that grill he's always wanted, but nothing says "I love you" like a handmade paper boat or drums.

Amanda Kingloff, author of the new craft book PROJECT KID, developed Father's Day DIY projects that kids can make just for them. Here are four adorable options with instructions on how to make them:

Golf Tee Top
Alexandra Grablewski

Forget poker as a game, dads can go back to their childhood roots with a homemade tops. Just make sure you re-stock dad's tees before his next golf game!

What you’ll need:Crayola Model Magic (available at Michaels Stores), Food coloring, 1 golf tee, Tacky glue, 1 wooden bead

1. Break off walnut-size chunks of Model Magic and add a drop of food coloring to each. Mix, adding more food coloring until you achieve your desired color. (Yes, prepare to have messy hands.)

2. Flatten the clay into disklike shapes, spheres, and pyramids. Stack on the golf tee, then remove, keeping the pieces together.

3. Let the pieces dry (per package instructions), still as one unit, and then slip them back onto the tee and secure at the top and bottom with a dab of glue.

4. Glue the bead to the top of the tee.
Bangin Bongo Drums
Alexandra Grablewski

With these bangin' bango drums dad might lose out on some quiet, but he gains an awesome instrument to rock out with.

What you’ll need:One 42-ounce oatmeal container, Scissors, White paint, 1-inch foam brush, Blue- and green-tinted clear plastic vinyl (available from TheFabricExchange.com), ⅛- or ¼-inch hole punch, 2 rubber bands, Green and orange stretchy lanyard (available at Michaels Stores), Tacky glue and 2 cups of dried orange lentils

Step 1: Cut the oatmeal container in half. This will make two drums. Paint the inside and outside of each drum. Let them dry.

Step 2: For each drum, cut two 7-inch circles from one color of the vinyl. Punch eight evenly spaced holes around each circle. Center one vinyl circle on top of the cylinder and secure with a rubber band. Flip the cylinder over and secure the second vinyl circle, making sure to stagger the holes with those of the first one.

Step 3: Cut a 4-foot-piece of lanyard and weave it in and out of the holes, from top to bottom. Pull taut and knot the two ends together. Remove the rubber bands.

Step 4: Squeeze glue into a triangle shape in between each lanyard line and cover with dried lentils.

Rock on.
Newspaper Pirate Ship
Alexandra Grablewski

Grab some bamboo skewers, string, a hot glue gun and dad's old newspapers and turn it into a boat he and the kids can play pirate with. That will really float his boat.

What you’ll need:
Newspaper, Scissors, Clear contact paper, Hot-glue gun, 1 large wooden bead, 1 tongue depressor, 2 bamboo skewers, Tacky glue, 3 small wooden beads, 2 pieces of black-and-white, patterned paper, ⅛-inch hole punch, ½-inch-wide ribbon, String

1. Cut an 11 ½-by-15-inch piece of newspaper and cover one side with clear contact paper.

2. Fold it into an origami boat (see instructions below), being sure to make the first fold with the contact paper side in.

3. Hot-glue the large bead to the center of the tongue depressor and hot-glue a skewer into the middle of the bead.

4. Cut the tip off of the paper peak that pokes out of the center of the boat and insert the skewer through that hole. Glue the tongue depressor to the bottom edges of the boat.

5. Break or cut another skewer so that one side is about ½ inch shorter than the other, and glue the shorter piece into the front crease (the bow) and the longer one into the back crease (the stern). Glue a small wooden bead to the exposed end of each skewer.

6. Cut two rectangles from patterned paper, one 3 by 5 inches and one 2 ½ by 4 inches, and punch two holes centered about 1⁄8 inch from the top and bottom edges. Slip these patterned-paper sails over the center skewer, beginning with the larger one, and glue a bead on the top point.

7. Cut nine 1- to 2-inch pieces of ribbon and an 18-inch piece of string. Fold the ribbons over the string, evenly spaced, and glue them back-to-back. Trim them into triangular flag shapes.

8. Attach the string to the ends of all three skewers, tying it to the skewer on the back of the boat, then gluing it to the top of the sails, and finally tying to the skewer at the front of the boat. Secure at bow and stern with a dab of glue.
Reversible Felt Crown
Alexandra Grablewski

Dad may be a king for the day, but that doesn't mean he can't have royal princes, princesses or dukes. All you need is some felt, tacky glue and acrylic paint to give them the ultimate royal look for Father's Day.

What you’ll need:White wool felt (available from MagicCabin.com), Scissors, ½- to ¾-inch-wide metallic velvet ribbon, Tacky glue, Acrylic paint, 1 wine-bottle cork

1. Cut a strip of wool felt long enough to fit the circumference of your child’s head. The width of the piece should be between 4 and 6 inches. Cut crown points along one edge.

2. To create the crisscrossed side, glue ribbon from the top of the first point down to the bottom edge of the strip, in a straight line along the edge following the point. From the same point, glue ribbon down the adjacent slope to the bottom edge. Trim off the excess at the bottom. Repeat for each point on the strip to create a crisscross pattern.

3. While the glue is drying, flip the felt over and create a polka-dot pattern by dipping the cork into the paint and then stamping. Let the paint dry.

4. To complete the crown, glue the ends of the strip together. To wear the crown the other way, just turn it inside out.

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