Wednesday, January 2, 2013

DIY Felt Play Food Bread


If you have a play kitchen, and you need some play food, bread is a necessity!  All kids like making sandwiches etc.  This is the easy, no sew, cheating way to make them (thats me) lol.
Note:if sewn instead of glued, would look nicer :)

Need:
construction paper
white felt
tan felt
hot glue gun and glue

Start by making a pattern
I drew my bread slice out on construction paper, and cut it out.


trace and cut 4 white bread shapes per slice, stack together


cut long skinny strips out of the tan


i made 4 slices. . . here are all my pieces


next, with 4 pieces of white stacked perfectly together, start, very carefully, glueing the tan strip (crust) around the bread

Note: if sewing, sew to top and bottom bread slice pieces


finished piece


tada!!  they feel real!


Saturday, December 29, 2012

DIY play food. . . felt food for our play kitchen!

Well the play kitchen is complete, and we needed some cute accessories to go in it.
Looking online i fell in love with felt food, mostly because it is hand made and cheap, and also because it looks real and is washable.

This is a list of the felt food (and accessories for the kitchen) that i have made.
My daughter LOVES them, when I handed her the green beans this morning she told me in her excited squeely girly voice (and i quote) "oh mom!, you can make any food look real!"

strawberries (tutorial here)




Fried Eggs



Bread



Strawberry Jam
 



I mixed craft paint and purple glitter and painted inside of smallest (clean dry) jam jar, to look like strawberry jam. . . I also cut out glops of "jam" from matching colored felt, that we keep inside the jar.
(i know. . . its glass. . . but she is 7, no, i wouldn't recommend keeping glass jars for toddlers ;))



the sandwich fixins to go with the bread.



yum!



her cookie jar



chocolate chip cookies
 



cheap shaker set (again glass) filled with old salt and old coffee grounds, cap filled with hot glue, then glued on. . . she can shake all she wants and nothing comes out!



my personal favoite:  Donuts
one each strawberry, chocolate and vanilla glaze




mini cinnamon rolls  (rolled up felt in tan and brown with white fabric paint (puff paint) on top)




Popsicles in the freezer 



I have kept all these for her, washed them well, and gave them to her.
All are miniature versions of the same we keep in our fridge at all times! lol

orange juice and mayo have been painted inside to look real


a cake with 4 slices (really hard to make without a pattern as i did, i recommend downloading a pattern)

i stuffed this like normal and it was bulky. . . so i had to add cardboard inside to keep its shape



 And last but not least. . . the green beans

i used a mini can of green beans (i have the fancy can opener that cuts under the edge so once cut open nothing is sharp:)


rolled up rectangles of green felt for the green beans and placed inside can


more tutorials to come!!! check back to see how i made a pretend play birthday cake they can decorate over and over!!

Thanks for stopping by!


DIY Felt Food . . . Carrot tutorial

Felt Carrots


Adorably realistic carrots, made of felt.


I drew these patterns out myself on construction paper (as always :) and cut the pieces out of felt.
You can very easily mimic my pattern seen below in yellow :)
one carrot piece and two leaf pieces for each carrot.

Sew lines on the leaves to resemble veins

 Trim the thread

fold stem part over, then over again (like rolled) and sew it up to leaf

my unperfectly perfect leaf :)
repeat for other leaf
 

sew little lines here and there on carrot piece to add real carrot texture
then trim loose threads
 
Next fold right sides together and sew carrot base together


turn carrot inside right. . . you should have these 3 pieces


stuff carrot (i use left over felt pieces diced up)
using embroidery floss, or doubled thread, sew a base stitch around top of carrot.  Do not cut or tie off yet!


Place leaf pieces inside carrott


Pull thread to gather top together


Once pulled very tight, tie it off, then sew back and forth thru the leaves a few times so they can not be pulled out


Repeat for each carrot you wish, and that is that. . . delicious looking carrots!


The DIY Play Kitchen



 The evolution of my play kitchen:
1: inspiration
    My daughter (nearly 7) asked for a kitchen that (and i quote) "I don't have to bend over to play with."
 This my friends, was impossible to find.  Every kitchen set I found in every store was too small. (she is tall)
Thus the need to build one for her. I began looking online to draw inspiration and found nearly exactly what I was dreaming up in my own head at "Britt and her boys".
     I loved her little kitchen and drew several aspects of Cali's from there. I first planned it all out on sketch paper, then got to work.  I scaled mine a bit bigger, and used 1x12 shelving board, all of which i cut out myself with a miter saw and jig saw (so its not perfect lol)




Here is one with the counter top in. I found a metal bowl in my cabinet and traced it onto the counter, then jig-sawed it out :)  The faucet was found in my friends garage :) it was a perfect fit!



I wanted the fridge inside to be white, like most are, and inside oven to be like a real oven, thus all the different paint colors.  I chose a brown base color, for one because I had it left over, so it was free, and also because the pink and brown cupcake paper i wanted to use as the backsplash.


The knobs I cooked up in my brain after a bit of thinking.  I glued a regular old wooden knob onto a baby food jar lid


Turned out a good size, i put it on as normal, but loose, so it wouldn't unscrew when turned.


I painted it with same spray paint i did the metallic doors, and drew on it to look like knobs
The oven display I did just as Britt did with the microwave panel here.  Made it on the computer myself, printed it, and modge podged it on.


Here is the microwave 



Here is finished produce (before extras added)
Used metallic spray paint to resemble stainless steel



The cute cupcake backsplash is actually wrapping paper, i coated a piece of luan with modge podge, glued the paper to it like wall paper, then coated over the top with it, and let it dry good before adding a second coat.



Finally a kitchen big enough for a 7 year old!


She loves it!  (showing off her felt icecream)
I added small white hooks to underside of shelf to hang cups/etc on, and a couple on the side for her aprons and mitts



and what is in the oven? A birthday cake of course!! Wait till i show you how i made it!! :)