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Crafts & Hobbies - General & Miscellaneous, Go Green!, Environmental Conservation & Protection
Recyclables (Let's Create! Series) by Staff of Gareth Stevens Publishing β€” book cover

Recyclables (Let's Create! Series)

by Staff of Gareth Stevens Publishing, Parramon's Editorial Team Staff
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Overview

Make a milk-carton cow or an egg-carton tree. Put a pudding-cup snout on a bear or paint bottles for bowling. Cardboard, paper, or plastic, throw-aways are important craft materials -- and recycling is a responsibility. So let's create with recyclables!

Provides step-by-step instructions for turning plastic egg cartons, cardboard tubes, frozen food containers, and other disposable materials into craft projects, including easy variations.

Synopsis

Make a milk-carton cow or an egg-carton tree. Put a pudding-cup snout on a bear or paint bottles for bowling. Cardboard, paper, or plastic, throw-aways are important craft materials -- and recycling is a responsibility. So let's create with recyclables!

Kristin Harris - Children's Literature

The "Let's Create" series of craft books are reminiscent of another era. The projects and materials are unusual. The books were translated from Spanish, which may explain the unfamiliar supplies and old-fashioned projects. These twelve art projects are made from things people throw away every day, egg cartons, paper tubes, plastic cups bottles and Styrofoam trays. Tissue paper is glued onto a Styrofoam tray. Fish are cut out of Styrofoam and attached to make a deep blue sea scene. A milk carton is turned into a box with an image of the front of a cow on the front and the back of a cow on the back. An egg carton is cut up and reassembled to make a palm tree. A cardboard egg carton is soaked in water to make a bowling ball. Plastic bottles are painted and numbered to become bowling pins. The most intriguing project is a cardboard movie machine. A long sheet of paper with drawings on it is pulled through the box to simulate a television or movie screen. A paper towel roll is painted and turned into a jet airplane. Each project is on a spread that is illustrated with large photographs. Most of the supplies required for these activities should be readily available. This series of books was apparently developed for another culture and are not well adapted for a contemporary American audience. 2003, Gareth Stevens Publishing, Ages 5 to 9.

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Editorials

Children's Literature

The "Let's Create" series of craft books are reminiscent of another era. The projects and materials are unusual. The books were translated from Spanish, which may explain the unfamiliar supplies and old-fashioned projects. These twelve art projects are made from things people throw away every day, egg cartons, paper tubes, plastic cups bottles and Styrofoam trays. Tissue paper is glued onto a Styrofoam tray. Fish are cut out of Styrofoam and attached to make a deep blue sea scene. A milk carton is turned into a box with an image of the front of a cow on the front and the back of a cow on the back. An egg carton is cut up and reassembled to make a palm tree. A cardboard egg carton is soaked in water to make a bowling ball. Plastic bottles are painted and numbered to become bowling pins. The most intriguing project is a cardboard movie machine. A long sheet of paper with drawings on it is pulled through the box to simulate a television or movie screen. A paper towel roll is painted and turned into a jet airplane. Each project is on a spread that is illustrated with large photographs. Most of the supplies required for these activities should be readily available. This series of books was apparently developed for another culture and are not well adapted for a contemporary American audience. 2003, Gareth Stevens Publishing, Ages 5 to 9.
β€”Kristin Harris

School Library Journal

Gr 4-6-Attractive, child-friendly titles. Sharp, colorful photographs accompany step-by-step instructions for 12 crafts. Papier-m ch projects include a bird, a hot-air balloon, a Little Red Devil, a colorful bowl, a rocket, a mask, and an Easter bonnet. Among the recycling activities are a palm tree, a bowling game, a movie machine, and a concertina. "Another Good Idea" is an additional boxed feature to expand on and/or modify each activity. Like Renee Schwarz's Papier-Mache (Kids Can, 2000), Susan Moxley and Juliet Bawden's Papier Mache (Two-Can, 2004), Joe Rhatigan and Heather Smith's Awesome Things to Make with Recycled Stuff (Lark, 2003), and Laurie M. Carlson's EcoArt! (Williamson, 1993), these books will prove useful and popular.-Augusta R. Malvagno, Queens Borough Public Library, NY Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 2004
Publisher
Gareth Stevens Publishing
Pages
32
Format
Library Binding
ISBN
9780836840186

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